SotS,
Oh dear ... Another of your arguments not based on truth.
And for those of us working in English?
Your claim abandoning reason and evidence in favour of faith is a loaded phrase. It assumes that the only acceptable method for establishing truth is one that assumes natural causes and explanations. Like to hide that one away, don't you.
Wrong again. It “assumes” that, in the absence of an alternative method, there’s no way to distinguish the truth of any one faith claim from the truth of any other. If you think that there
is a way to do that though why not finally tell us what it is?
Furthermore…
You can’t have a “furthermore” when you’ve just crashed and burned so comprehensively.
[qupte]…,it assumes that anyone employing a religious belief does not use reason and does not consider evidence.[/quote]
No it doesn’t. That’s what
religious people themselves say – only for some unknown reason they tend to elevate their personal faith above the epistemic value of reason and evidence, calling it “reductionist” and such like.
I see no evidence for that in Gabriella's posts even though her religious belief is different to mine!
Gabriella is careful to acknowledge that faith does not justify claims of objective fact.
Why aren’t you?
You continue to refuse to accept that people who have any kind of religious belief reasons on the basis of the tenets of their belief.
Again, in comprehensible English?
The same can be said for those of no belief.
Nope, no idea.
Everyone looking at evidence needs some kind of framework to interpret it. And since you will probably challenge that, I'll use the example of statistics as to how the same set of numbers can in some cases lead to diametrically opposing conclusions. How do you explain that if evidence is supposed to be so powerful?
Very easily, as you know. Interpretation applies to the conclusions drawn from looking at a data set. It’s still reason and evidence based even when the interpretation varies. Religious faith on the other hand claims a higher, better, more robust guide to “the” truth – faith. It abjures the reason and evidence stuff in favour of personal conviction.
Short version – they’re not analogous.