fungle said:
Why do you say that? I am not saying it is possible, but it is rather an agnostic thought in that I am an agnostic and say there may a god but where is the evidence.It may be an idea to find some scientists worth their salt and check out the idea.
This is one area where you run up against a limitation of science. Methodological materialism means that we can't
directly test for a deity. The way scientists check out the idea of deity is to test ways that deity is said to work. That is, you say "God caused a Flood that made all the geology on the planet." So scientists check out out whether a Flood made all the geology on the planet. They find that, no, a flood didn't. But that doesn't tell you God doesn't exist.
You can also say: God answers prayers for the healing of other people. So you conduct experiments to see if intercessory prayer works. You find that, yes, IP does improve health in patients in the cardiac ICU. Does that tell you God exists? NO! As the authors of one of the studies put it:
"Neither this study nor that of Byrd provided any mechanistic explanation for the possible benefits of intercessory prayer. However, others have speculated as to what they might be10; they generally fall into 2 broad categories: natural or supernatural explanations. The former explanation would attribute the beneficial effects of intercessory prayer to "real" but currently unknown physical forces that are "generated" by the intercessors and "received" by the patients; the latter explanation would be, by definition, beyond the ken of science. However, this trial was designed to explore not a mechanism but a phenomenon. Clearly, proof of the latter must precede exploration of the former. By analogy, when James Lind, by clinical trial, determined that lemons and limes cured scurvy aboard the HMS Salisbury in 1753, he not only did not know about ascorbic acid, he did not even understand the concept of a "nutrient." There was a natural explanation for his findings that would be clarified centuries later, but his inability to articulate it did not invalidate his observations.
Although we cannot know why we obtained the results we did, we can comment on what our data do not show. For example, we have not proven that God answers prayer or that God even exists. It was intercessory prayer, not the existence of God, that was tested here."
So, putting scientists on the problem doesn't help, because science itself is incapable (at least for now) of answering the question.