Sriram,
I am not saying anything against science. I am merely reinforcing the idea that human observation and perception have natural boundaries that we cannot surmount even if we want to. We have discussed this before...and torridon brought it up above. The idea of maya (illusion) and Plato's shadows in the cave come to mind.
It's more nuanced than that. You don’t know whether or or not there are such “natural boundaries” - maybe one day our species will know everything there is to know. The real problem though is a philosophical rather than an investigative one – regardless of what we may some day know, there’d be no way to eliminate the possibility that there’s something else we don’t know - the “unknown unknowns” problem in other words.
(Which problem would also by the way apply to an omniscient god - even if this god did know everything, how would it
know that it knew everything?)
Acknowledging that fact does not discredit science.
It’s not a fact it’s a conjecture, but ok.
But it does allow room for speculation on what these unknown realities could be and how we could try to understand them.
Of course it does. Most of science has begun as speculation (or guesses as Richard Feynman famously said). The problem though comes when the religious in particular overreach from speculation to fact with no connecting reasoning between them. That’s what AB does – he just asserts “god”, “soul”. “spiritual” etc but has no method to verify these assertions (or even to tell us what they mean).
This is where subjective methods are considered more reliable than objective methods that once again rely on our limited senses.
No they’re not – or at least they’re not by people other than the thinking impaired. They’re precisely
unreliable for epistemological purposes because there’s no way to distinguish them from just guessing.