The Dude wrote:I never heard of the Zero-Knoweldge Proof, so, thanks for that link. Interesting idea, and obviously useful.
If by "fatal" you mean "different from the way science works" then -- yes it is fatal.
My ZKP is only different from other science in the sense that while one might be able to prove it to onesself, one cannot prove it in front of other scientists. The vital distinction with ZKP is that it allows for justified knowledge while yet being unable to prove this to other people. Yet despite the inability to prove the knowledge to a third party, the one experiencing it could know for certain (or with great probability) that the knowledge is correct.
With that caveat hanging over your experiment, the method of religious experimentation is perfect pseudoscience.
Why did the palm reader get my mother's birthday wrong? Because there was a skeptic in the room. Or because she's having an off day. Or because the stars are out of whack. Or because her familiar spirit has a hairball.
I don't' completely have the answer, but I think instead of wrong answers, God may simply refuse to answer. Peggy simply wouldn't come down. Instead we have people mistaking Peggy's sister for Peggy. I think it takes effort to attune yourself to the Spirit and knowledge from God. I know that allows for big mistakes in the beginning, but I think it's more like learning how to be a good hunter/tracker. One can eventually become quite skilled in discerning the Spirit.
I also believe that it is falsifiable. However, I do not believe that others can falsify it for me. It was only personally verifiable and so it is only personally falsifiable. I believe that one could know it was false one truly and sincerely (in their own honest estimation, not mine) tried to follow the commandments and found that it didn't work--that the promises were not true--that they do not find happiness and enlightenment from it. A palm-reader scenario wouldn't work because it's out in the open for others to verify.