IF we experience it directly we don't need any confirmation through instruments.
Yes, we do. Notwithstanding things like hallucinations and neurological problems, we know that we are unreliable instruments. We detect gravitational, and because of the limitations of our sensory apparatus, we think of it like a force, but it isn't. We have no sensory capability for 'wetness', yet we think we do.
Regardless, that wrongly answers a different question - that's a wrong answer to 'why shouldn't we investigate it with science', but you aren't suggesting that we shouldn't, you're suggesting that we can't, that it's outside of science's capability somehow.
It is beyond science and therefore it cannot be measured directly.....but certain aspects of reality that science has investigated do offer hints at to their existence because reality is a spectrum. There is continuity but the nature of the reality changes. Psychological phenomena for example, are not as precise and predictable as physics.
And that 'variability', that vagueness is something that the science can accommodate; you've still not explained that claim, made again here, that this 'is beyond science'. How? How does something with discernible effects exist outside of science's at least notional capacity to investigate those effects?
You speak as though design and intelligence are automatically contraindicated just because evolution is true.
No, I'm showing that whilst design requires intelligence, evolution does not (it doesn't explicitly preclude it, intrinsically, but the practical realities do at least raise the question).
This is the idea that I am questioning. In the case of products, ideas, philosophies and so on, evolution does take place but through intelligent design and intervention. Evolution and intelligent intervention are not mutually exclusive. They can exist together.
They can, in theory, but there's no evidence that they do. Evolution does not require a guiding intelligence, and in the absence of anything from the available evidence to suggest that one is involved, why would you add in the unsupported contention of a guiding intelligence?
Introspection is not enough. Everyone introspects. If you really want to know about this in real terms....choose some guru and learn some meditation and yoga. You will see what I mean.
Ah, no true Scotsman, the most subtle of ad hominems. If you can't explain it rationally, if you need to achieve some sort of altered mental state to just 'accept' the claim sans evidence, then you've failed to adequately support your contention.
We cannot prove anything within the VR. Having an insight about the world outside the VR or getting out of the VR, is the only proof. NDE's offer some insights.
Only if you accept them at face value, and you can no more show that they are somehow a shortcut to reality than you can show that dreams strip away the layers - they are subjective interpretation of abnormal brain activity, and to try to substantiate anything meaningful from them requires a hell of lot more explanatory investigation than you or anyone is providing.
Anyone who keeps insisting on current scientific methods to investigate philosophical and abstract ideas is guilty of subscribing to scientism.
And, again, I'm not insisting on science, but I am insisting that you need more than 'it makes me feel nice' to expect anyone to take some other methodology seriously. What's your alternative? Meditate, and just presume that gives you some sort of hypercognitive insight to reality because.... what?
O.