Nephi wrote:marg wrote:Religion is not a tool to a reliable truth claim.
For the individual, it is a reliable tool for truth claims of spirituality for the individual. It is not for reality, though.
I was contrasting religion with science. A claim is akin to a conclusion, a theory, a decision. In science, accepted theories gain reliability. You pointed this out yourself, theories can be used to predict results. And with repeated successful outcome predictions one develops an appreciation that the theory is reliable. Now if an individual claims a scientific theory which can not be duplicated or only on occasion can, it is not going to be considered reliable by any objective standard, based upon the say so of the claimant.
Look at the def'n of reliable from answers.com
re·li·a·ble
adj.
-Capable of being relied on; dependable: a reliable assistant; a reliable car.
-Yielding the same or compatible results in different clinical experiments or statistical trials.
As I wrote about religion, claims of truth are anyone's guess. There is no established reliability in claims of the spiritual. What exactly do you mean by spiritual? Is it something beyond the experiences generated by your mind? If not, then it is emotions and perceptions generated by the brain. But you certainly are not clear what "spirituality" is. You claim you met God while tripping on acid. Is this a reliable claim, that you met God? Is it likely the perception generated by taking the drug gave you the sensation of meeting a God rather than it indicating a reality outside your mind, a concept by the way you already had some imaginations of.
Your say so, and anyone else's of their subjective experiences does not make their claims
reliable. There needs to be some consensus of objective evaluation. You've not established any reliability with regards to "religion as a
reliable tool for truth claims of spirituality". Your sentence/claim is essentially nonsensical.