Yes, reiki and homeopathy are pseudoscientific and make claims that are susceptible to science and have failed comprehensively. I would not put God and Religion in that category
Religion has made many, many claims about how the world works that have been shown to be in error. You might not put God and Religion into the same category as 'Healing energies and Reiki' or 'Water memory and Homeopathy', but given the apparent similarities that I've shown you really need to explain why in order for anyone to give what you're saying any consideration.
Ah , this would be the “ Religion is failed science line”
No, this is 'Religion is a failed enterprise', and highlighting some areas where the scientific method has shown some of the specific ways in which it has failed.
To which we can ask “ Which bit of science is it which fails religion?
Even if we thought that religion was a failed science, it wouldn't be that science was failing religion, it would be that religion is failing us and accuracy.
What science that I do not have but you have fails God?
Do you mean 'falsifies', rather than fails? Science falsifies numerous religious claims, leaving an ever reducing clutch of spiritual woo and reality deniers.
Are you not mistaking atheism for science?
No. Science, as in the application of scientific methods of enquiry showing that things like the diversity of life, healing from disease, the spread of species across the planet, earthquakes and the like are not the product of divine intervention, but physical processes with no apparent guidance or overall direction, in contradiction to various religious claims across history.
The atheist method, from what I recall, is something to do with which sauce to serve with roast baby depending on your wine of choice, but I'm not a drinker so I was never bothered.
Are you not mistaking Scientism for science?
Again, no. Aren't you mistaking
ad hominems for making an actual argument?
How were they supposed to work?
They were supposed to lead to some demonstrable intervention, the clue is in the name.
What criteria did they fail?
They failed to demonstrate any measurable intervention.
That's not 'been proven to be not true', they are assertions about how reality works, not truth claims - and, in that sense, they have been shown not to work to exactly the same extent that God has been shown not to work.
Exactly. A claim is made. That claim is tested. Reality demonstrates that the claim is not realised. Repeatedly. On innumerable different religious propositions, from gayness causing floods to praying for the sick making them well and beyond.
In Christianity there is contention over the virgin birth and resurrection, but, using your criterion of how successful science has been and will be.
I get you favour religion over science, but can you please at least stick to the conventions of the language - this isn't even a sentence.
Science, but not technology, has declared that life is due to the interaction of molecules and well , molecules can be made to interact.
What? 'Science', by which I'm presuming you mean the collective understanding of the scientific community, hasn't really come to a firm conclusion on a definition for life, yet, let alone defined where it comes from. Science is still content to say 'I don't know' sometimes.
No, Suspending the principle of sufficient reason because it suits, stops questions
That would be the 'sufficient reason' that decides if everything we see has a cause, and all of those causes had a cause, there must be a special circumstance that doesn't because
the Church wants your money baby Jesus. Or is the classical 'Sufficient Reason'
("The Principle of Sufficient Reason is a powerful and controversial philosophical principle stipulating that everything must have a reason, cause, or ground.") which leads you somehow to the formulation "Everything must have a cause, therefore God is the uncaused caused". I don't need a background in science to spot that might have a flaw.
Atheist, philosopher and Stud Bertrand Russell’s claim that “The universe just is and there’s an end to it” stops questions.
And yet neither science nor philosophy have stopped since that proclamation; indeed, even Russell didn't stop at that proclamation. Religion, however, hasn't really offered anything new in a couple of thousand years, just different flavours of the same old baseless claims of 'something beyond, trust me bro, all that stuff that I can't actually show you could be yours...'
O.