Indeed, as an example of something known to be true beyond all reasonable doubt. I never said I expect theism to be able to conclude things like atomic theory - again, I can only recommend that you reread the OP. What I'm asking is whether the various claims of religiously acquired knowledge, are true. I'm not saying that they are, or that they should be if theism is true, etc.
These claims
are made by some of your fellow theists, and it is these claims I'm querying. People really do believe that the Bible has knowledge of scientific and secular things like the hydrological cycle and, yes, atomic theory. The qu'ran is said to contain knowledge of embryology, the Vedas are supposed to contain cosmological knowledge, etc.
Invariably, though, these claims are modern thinkers reinterpreting their personal religious texts to fit modern science. This thread, then, is devoted to see if any such claims really are true - and it seems the answer is a resounding 'no'.
I reject your view of the world you labeled as an atom, not the observed phenomenon of the visible animated and controlled by the spirit.
Do you, or do you not, believe in atoms, as I described in post #44? If not, then what do you think it is we see through technique likes scanning tunneling microscopy and atomic force microscopy? What is it that makes things like nuclear power plants and nuclear fusion bomb feasible? If atomic theory is incorrect, how was the Manhattan project a success?
Please, try to be explicit. Bandying around phrases like "the visible animated and controlled by the spirit" just stifle conversation. I'm excited to meet someone who genuinely doesn't believe in t existence of atoms.
The relationship among materialism, theism, and science.
Which is?