Hope,
bhs (and NS), I think the issue is that I don't regard human wisdom - be that in the form of science, or logic or reason - to be the sole arbiter of reality. I have had sufficient expoerience to see that, alone, they don't 'cut the mustard'. In a way, this has to do with my belief that all human attributes are intentional and not things that have arrived by the quirk of nature called evolution.
I don't know what you mean by this, but if you're implying that morality isn't an emergent property of our evolved selves then you have all your work ahead of you to make an argument for it
As such, the debate is somewhat moot since, as I've said on so many occasions before, we are coming to the table from such different viewpoints.
Yes. Mine is that logically false arguments are always wrong arguments. You on the other hand seem content to rest your conclusions on false premises.
My viewpoint doesn't dismiss science, logic or reason - after all, they are attributes and skills that God has given to humanity to enable them to look at the real world and use the brains we have to investigate, theorise and make conclusions.
And right on cue you deploy the reification fallacy. Again. The "after all" etc is just your personal faith belief, not a demonstrated fact.
For me, there is no divide between science and faith. They are complementary processes that deal in different aspects of human life. It is the likes of you who seem to want to 'divide and rule' as it were.
Fat wrong. They are no more "complementary" than, say, science and astrology are complementary. Science is just
indifferent to religious faith (as it is to astrology) because faith offers nothing with which the methods of science can engage. The problem though for faith when it wants to establish truths of its own is that it has no methods of its own to distinguish its claims from just guessing.
Often too the claims of faith not only are not complementary to science but they flatly contradict them when the religious use their faith to make assertions of fact - young earth creationists, or those who ascribe surprising medical outcomes to the effect of prayer as examples.