Welcome to this Ship of Fools of an mb Flower Girl.
Please forgive my intrusion, and I haven't read through all the posts, but, from what I've read there seems to be a lot of debate about proof of god(s) based-or not-on physical laws.
You’re not intruding, you’re contributing – and very welcome it is too.
If we doubt God because there is no physical evidence,…
No, the “physical” is superfluous. There are countless speculations – the Christian god, other gods, leprechauns, unicorns, whatever – that conceptually at least are possible (I’m leaving aside for now by the way the definitional problems they all have). The problem for the proponents of these things who claim them to be
probable rather than just
possible though is that they need to find a method of some kind to distinguish the claim from just guessing. Call that “evidence” if you like, but absent such a method I have no basis to take any such claim more seriously than any other.
…then it seems to me that the evidence on which we rely must be fool proof, irrefutable, right?
No. Axiomatically evidence has the potential to be wrong. It justifies a belief
probabilistically, but that’s not to say the more robust evidence might not be found one day that amends or falsifies the prior evidence and so changes the prevailing paradigm. Science itself rests on this fundamental principle, and that’s why those who claim to be certain about their belief “God” and claim evidence to justify the belief are on a fool’s errand – if you think you have evidence, then you must admit to the possibility of the evidence being wrong. The only way logically to absolute certainty is to have no evidence whatsoever. That way there’s nothing to falsify.
And, we have that with Newtonian physics. This representation of reality has served us well giving us a predictable, mechanical world we can count on, well, sort of.
Not sort of – for practical purposes, actually. Newtonian physics breaks down at the scales of the very large and the very small, but that’s not to say that it doesn’t work perfectly well in between.
But, then, there is quantum physics, which defies everything we rely upon in the Newtonian world. Newtonian physics promises us precision, the ability to precisely predict outcomes. Quantum Physics defies everything Newtonian Physics has proven with mathematical, well, at best-uncertainty. The electron insists on being mysterious, undefinable, unpredictable, and omnipresent.
Others more versed than I am in the quantum have answered this already, but just to note that we use our understanding of it with quite astonishing levels of accuracy – someone once described the margin of error as akin to the width of a human hair when measuring the distance from London to San Francisco.
I agree that I'm suggesting just another God-of-the-gaps argument, but for me? I'm very curious about infinite possible realties.
Which is fine, but you can populate that space equally with gods, leprechauns and Jack Frost if you want to. The challenge though is to find a way to demonstrate any of them to be more than just possibilities.
So, here's where I am. I believe there is more than me and us and what we perceive as reality. Do I have proof? Well, yes. There is proof that basing everything we believe only on that which we perceive is misguiding. And this is based on the most recent science.
I’m not sure what you mean by this, but if you mean that there’s a great deal more to learn about “us” (and indeed about the universe in general) then I agree – that’s why people keep doing science to chip away at what that “more” actually is.