Tom_H
Veteran Member
Thank you. I love it when people to clame to be intelligent are so full of themselves that anyone who doesn't believe the same way they do must be idiots.
The same thing goes with belief in a higher power (God, Allah, etc). Billions of people believe in a higher force are called idiots by so called "people of science", just because science hasn't figured out how to prove it's existence.
Well, I haven't called anyone an idiot, and have stated that I have friends who believe all kinds of non-scientific things. I have to say, however, that you have it completely backwards. It is people who are so absolutely certain of the existence of things for which they have no scientific evidence that are, in your words, "full of themselves."
Now I didn't bring up Yahweh and Allah, you did. But since you have, lets chase that rabbit a little ways. Yes, there are billions who believe in deities (also Shiva, Buddha, Zoroaster, and a plethora of others) but that is not evidence of the existence of deities. Here is what you are not taking into consideration: the vast majority say that their own deity is real, and that people who believe in a different deity are totally wrong. They say their own deity exists, but that the others not only do not exist, they are evil lies. Not only do many consider the others idiots, some believe that the believers of the "false" deities deserve to die. This has been true of most faiths throughout history. How does one go about proving that his own deity has ontological reality and that the others are false? So citing that many people believe in deities is very unstable ground when it comes to setting forth evidence for the existence of metaphysical realities. It is not "people of science" upon whom the onus falls for proving the existence of "higher powers". Though a person of science, I do happen to believe there is something more. The thing is, I know that I CANNOT PROVE THAT. It is a matter of faith.
In like manner, neither does the vast amount of verbiage returned by a Google search constitute evidence. Each piece of writing must be examined to see whether scientific protocols were followed. Just because those who believe in water divination have posted reams of text about their beliefs has nothing to do with scientific evidence.
There are no ways to test and ultimately prove whether deities exist. Yet there are ways to test whether those claiming to be able to divine water can do so. In carefully controlled double blind studies, water witching has never been successful.
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