(April 25, 2016 at 3:21 pm)Jörmungandr Wrote:(April 25, 2016 at 2:14 pm)Brian37 Wrote: No, in science the good thing is you don't have to trust, that is what testing and falsifying, control groups and independent peer review is for. Even scientists have had competing theories, which some pan out and others dont, no trust needed. That is what independent peer review does, acts as a filter to insure your own personal bias isn't skewing the data.
"Go with your feelings", no no no no. That is what screws up human logic. It is ok to have feelings and emotions yes, nobody should claim we should not, and this also not about legal rights either. Pragmatism and critical thinking and reason don't prevent one from having feelings, but they do act as a great filter to insure what your perception of reality isn't flawed and that leads you to, not perfect answers, but more accurate answers.
Bollocks. Science can't dictate how you answer the god question. Like it or not, we're all at the whims of our biases. They are what makes us who we are. You can no more choose to believe a position that you don't have a good feeling about than you can fly. Like it or not, our emotions lead us by the nose. Take into account what science and reason say, sure, but ultimately it will come down to which position you trust more. All the science in the world is not enough to nullify our prejudices in the matter. Telling someone to just trust science and logic is nonsensical advice. He can only do what's human. If he trusts science and logic, then he does trust them. Telling him what he should trust is inane advice.
Where did I say it dictates how you answer, it is a tool, not a human. Humans when using that tool DO have to be willing to go where the evidence leads, it is still the only accurate universal tool humans have, anything outside a lab is your own like and opinion. If you want that "opinion" to be more than that and to be universal, the only tool we have is scientific method.
Don't confuse human rights with the process of scientific method. We are certainly entitled to our own beliefs and opinions, but we are not entitled to our own set of facts.