spotlight wrote:Then there is no way to know that any particular religious viewpoint is true or not, it is merely presumed to be so.
But that is not to say that we cannot yet come to conclusions why particular viewpoints are not tenable.
I think we can know in the sense of having justified belief if the belief is true. We might not have absolute access to truth of course, but the justification principle is important.
My sense is that we agree over a lot more than we disagree. Some positions seem to either not be able to explain evidence in a convincing fashion (say the variant on young earth creationism you mention). The question is always what do we need to explain and what are the competing theories are are judging. In a certain sense it is that judging between competing theories that matters most.
Again, I think you're making a category error not clearly distinguishing "religion" (whatever you mean by that) from particular theories about religion.
Only if we are miscommunicating which seems possible. Are you not defending the truth claims (at least some of them) that the LDS church is the restored ancient church in modern times?
I think thus far in all the discussions I've only either criticized some critiques of the Mormon view for not looking at the various ways of reading the texts - some that are much more compatible with the texts to be explained - and I've defended the view that one can rationally believe Mormonism. I don't think I've defended ultimate truth claims on any particular religious claim. At least not that I can recall.
The primary reason for that is that if we are judging claims just based upon the evidence we all agree upon, I don't think the Mormon view is the most defensible view. If we go only by public strongly established evidence then one ought be an unbeliever - at best a deist, atheist or agnostic of some sort. To my mind it's only when we expand past those agreed upon facts that one then starts seeing Mormonism as the correct view. However since we don't all share those facts, there's really no way in this forum we could even establish them. I've hopefully been fairly upfront about that.
The best I can do is either talk in more general philosophical terms of how in theory private experience could ground religious knowledge or simply point out that certain critiques are really not as strong as their proponents think.
So if a church claims that there was a global flood of Noah that actually historically happened that is the sort of thing that I say can be falsified and the church along with it.
If one accepts fallibilism and rejects
de facto inerrancy though then I don't see how falsifying a global flood could possibly falsify the church. This is the point I've been getting at from the beginning. The critiques involve highly questionable premises. Premises I certainly don't share.
If however all you are going to do is prune your tree of faith and hold on to the stump and claim it is real or the truth when all that is wrong with the twigs and branches are removed then you have an unfalsifiable position and it is of little interest to engage with you if that is your strategy of defending your church.
I think you missed the point I was making with my analogy to science. If a scientific theory is discarded it doesn't mean science has been falsified. It's a category error to even think science is something falsifiable because science isn't a theory but something much broader. In the same way it's a category error to think we can falsify religion as if religion were only a collection of theories.
If you are merely speculating that there are other ways to view spiritual matters that don't conflict with science that does not constitute evidence.
Certainly not. But I've not made the claim I have evidence I can give you that Mormonism is true. Indeed I think I've been pretty forthright in arguing the opposite. I'll be completely up front and say Mormonism is not something one can know passively. That is you can't simply sit back and wait for people to give you evidence for you such that it'd be irrational to disbelieve.
But that's true of many things in life. Merely pointing out areas where that sort of passive knowledge is possible is ultimately beside the point.