It's been like recieving the commandments on the mount, mount olympus and mounting the kerb all at once since Bluehillside posted several of these:
IF YOUR COMPLAINT ABOUT AN EMPIRICAL METHOD IS THAT IT CANNOT BE USED TO INVESTIGATE AND VERIFY CLAIMS OF A NON-MATERIAL “GOD”, WHAT METHOD WOULD YOU PROPOSE SHOULD BE USED FOR THIS PURPOSE INSTEAD?
So lets get into it.
1: I have no complaint. It is what it is.
2: I confess to not knowing what it is you are after. How do you paint a masterpiece?
3: How do you investigate claims of a Non Material God?.....First of all, empirical methods cannot establish God and that is it as far as that is concerned. How do we investigate God? First of all we should know that we have to take a hokey cokey approach. When we are waxing scientific we take our whole self out but when investigating God we have to put our whole self in rather than Putting your whole self out then your whole self out again is sticking with science, I would have thought,
4:As you are always telling us about not knowing the providence of the universe and other stuff that it is noble to say ''we don't know''. what then would be your reaction then to I don't know how to answer your question vis a vis methodology.
What is the methodology for establishing any philosophy. How can you establish your presuppositional acts of cosmic Godlessness for instance. How did the universe come about? You don't know and not knowing is a noble thing according to you.
Your question is literally conflation of two points writ large, geddit?
1: Empiricism cannot investigate God 2. What can?
I don't think it's a conflation, necessarily - not all of the respondents necessarily agree with you that empiricism cannot investigate God, for instance.
For me, if something exists then it's feasibly within the realms of scientific enquiry - maybe not current science, obviously, but the concept of examination of phenomena and extrapolation from that observation a working hypothesis of mechanisms which can then be tested. The only way something could be somehow 'beyond' science is if it were to not exhibit any observable phenomena, at which point you have to ask in what way is that different from something that doesn't exist?
Augustine realised that he was actually putting his whole self out when it came to investigating God out of fear of putting his whole self in. ''Make me a christian, but not yet'' was the way he summed himself up not that he also didn't talk about his life of God Dodging.
However with you I have the sneaking suspicion of scientism.....that you really do believe that some how some strange how science will disprove God.
Actually, it's the opposite; I don't think science can 'disprove' very much, but implicitly if God is real science should be able to prove that it is.
All of which isn't the point of the question that's being asked. If the claim made is that science isn't the system to use to investigate gods, the question is what method do we use instead; various offers of revelation, faith etc have been put forward, but they all lack the robustness of scientific enquiry, they can't be validated or relied upon.
So what's being asked for is a system of enquiry - not a mere acceptance, not 'it is what it is', these are people who won't take an extraordinary claim at face value in part because the world is full of extraordinary claims and we need a system to judge between them.
O.