1. All humans have these traits.
@Gravage --
Nope, science works, and we have proof. The proof, as they say, is in the pudding, and in this case the pudding is that the products of science work, consistently. If your computer is plugged in and there are no hardware issues, it will consistently turn on when you flick the switch.
@wynn --
I disagree. Normal humans possess the same traits in roughly the same measures, the differences lie in how people use these traits.
@LG --
I'd be more than willing to discuss the tool we're supposed to use, but how am I supposed to discuss something if I don't know what it is.
How are you supposed to discuss what tool one is supposed to use when you are already convinced you have the right one?
then why balk like you did in post 340?@LG --
Bullshit.
I have already stated that I've accepted, for the sake of the discussion, that science isn't the right tool.
@LG --
Bullshit.
I have already stated that I've accepted, for the sake of the discussion, that science isn't the right tool. Then I asked you why it isn't the right tool and what the right tool is. You have yet to answer either of those questions.
Until you answer one or both of those questions I will refuse to do anything but repeat those questions.
So. What is the proper tool to use to evaluate and understand spiritual/religious claims? Why does this tool supposedly work better than science?
In other words, explain yourself and thoroughly defend your assertions which have remained completely undefended up until now.
@wynn --
Because both you and LG have asserted on many occasions that science can't be used to evaluate spiritual/religious claims. I have asked why you assert this and what tool we're supposed to use in it's place.