(November 7, 2010 at 10:45 pm)tackattack Wrote: @ min
Quote:"the only difference will be in the data considered in the application of the method"1- So shouldn't you allow all data or at least all data relevant to the subject?
"An immaterial God that actually answered prayers would give us plenty of data to examine, which has been done, with no results of any significance."
You can only make solid conclusions within the scope of the trial, there have been studies of various effects of prayer, the most recent one you can find here:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16569567
"CONCLUSIONS: Intercessory prayer itself had no effect on complication-free recovery from CABG, but certainty of receiving intercessory prayer was associated with a higher incidence of complications."
That is the result we get every time prayer is studied, no matter how careful you are, how you organise the prayers etc there is no effect. I suppose God stops answering them when we start checking up on it right?
Quote:2- God is not only immaterial, he's a personal God. I can list at least 30 prayers of mine that he's answered with more than a "no" or a "wait". Your scientific experimental qualifiers are trying to objectively prove something not only immaterial, but subjective.
The results were objective in that they were related directly to recovery from an illness, there is a measurable rate of recovery relative to the control group who were told they were being prayed for and weren't.
What are these 30 prayers tack? And out of all of the prayers you've ever said (which I assume is in the thousands for a life-long Christian) does arguing for the truth of prayer based on 30 hits not stink of conformation bias to you? I could find you an astrologer who's had 30/1,000 'hits' (by the admittedly 'subjective' judgement of what qualifies), thus how can you conclude that your experiences are more legitimate? surely if 30/1,000 is a good number for you then you'd just be drawing a double standard by rejecting astrology.
Quote: I guess that leaves us with differing perspectives and an agreement to disagree because you have lack of revelation subjectively. My experiences can't prove anything to anyone but me, but that doesn't mean that they're by default delusion, rationalizations or prove nothing. I guess you just have to take a look and see if you're really not offhandedly dismissing not only relevant but proper evidence based on the subject of proof.
You are epistemically broken, that's the problem. No it does not mean that your experiences are by default 'delusions', what it means is that any other phenomenon that meets such a feeble criteria as 'i've had 30 hits' should rightly be accepted by yourself, to do otherwise is simply a double standard or arrogance in the adoption of 'well i'll only believe my own experiences'.
That train of thought is not one that tends to get at the truth of things, not compared to the methodologies that we have confirmed to be extremely accurate, so excuse me while I scoff at your feeble criteria for conformation, after all, that's the same standard of conformation that people like Andrea Yates use to justify their insanities to themselves. While i'm sure glad you're not mentally insane like her, knowing that your criteria are pretty much the same is not reassuring.
Quote:"Yes it does fall apart I'm afraid. Science is indeed open to revisions of theories that explain facts better but only insofar as they are testable, falsifiable, repeatable and of the material world. By definition something immaterial cannot meet this criteria and thus is ruled out. If it met the criteria then it would be observable and therefore of the material world and cease to be immaterial.
I covered this specifically already, stating it again doesn't refute my claim that "to observe the effects of an immaterial thing that has a causal relationship with physical reality is by no means off-limits" That is specifically what the prayer relationship is.
Quote:Just because something is subjectively observable does not mean it is of the materialistic view of the world. I'm far too tired with the time change to give this a lot of effort at this time... tomorrow... night all
And just because you experience something that you want to attribute to god does not mean that there is actually a god out there feeding you experiences.
Do you have specific experiences of the trinity or some vague sense that you attribute to God?
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