Sword,
If you were on a genuine search for truth, you would have said, I can’t find an explanation. The nature of the explanation would be irrelevant!! You would not be prejudicing the search by saying what the nature of the truth should look like.
Flat wrong. Read it again - we were talking about what
the methods of science would be capable of doing. Science is
naturalistic. That's why all it
could say would be, "I can find no
scientific explanation for this phenomenon."
If the search is for truth, then I have outlined a method, which in the absence of certainty will be an inductive one. Again, you are prejudicing the search by saying that certain techniques can be used for all kinds of truths except those that are claims about the supernatural; a bit similar to this confession.
No you haven't. You've suggested a naturalistic method - induction - but you've offered no argument to suggest why the supposedly
supernatural would be amenable to a
naturalistic method of enquiry. What makes you think that claims of the supernatural would be induction
apt?
In essence, I was trying to answer the question, "Does God (a supernatural Being) exist?" by starting with the premise that nothing supernatural exists. It was an exercise in circular reasoning.
Who said that?
Except that rather than admitting that circular reasoning is used, you are transferring the so-called burden of proof onto the religious believer to break the circularity, knowing full well that they can’t!
There's nothing to admit because there's no circular reasoning because I haven't started with that premise.
Oh, and the burden of proof problem is
still all yours. "God" is
your conjecture; it's
your job to make an argument for it.
Erm...in your question! “faith”, probabilistic. If any action is based on a probabilistic determination, then clearly there is no certainty, so faith is used. The only certainties are if the probability is 1 (certain to happen) or 0 (certain not to happen). For any other probability, faith is required.
Nope. I appear to have a computer in front of me, but "I" could just be an algorithm in a computer game programmed to believe that. The truth "computer" is therefore a probabilistic one.
There could also be invisible tap dancing pixies jumping off the keys just before my fingers reach them. I have no reason to think they're there but I can't disprove it, so the truth "no pixies" is also a probabilistic one.
Should I proceed on the basis that one of them is true, that neither of them is true, or that both of them are true?
Why?
Now swap "pixies" for "God".