What's your basis for saying so?
This is a common error, so I can't be terribly surprised to see it here.You are mixing categories. The very solid idea of 'positive knowledge' runs through all science. Our world can be know and described through 'positive knowledge claims'. There, proof can be said to exist.
No, science does not "prove." People sometimes talk that way, but they are being imprecise in their language, or possibly epistemologically and scientifically naive. It's only colloquially that anybody can ever say, "Science proves X." What they can say is "Science suggests or indicates that probably X." That isn't really a controversial view among philosophers of science.
Science is empirical, which means it deals with the real world, through tests that lead to probability calculations. It does not have any "proofs." Proofs are for mathematics and other such closed symbol systems. Science is great for reducing improbabilities -- for turning from guesses and mere traditions to high-percentage estimates: but it does not issue in conclusive proof. When speaking precisely, we should say that real science doesn't even pretend to do that.
This is where we perhaps have the real divergence of opinions: you're suggesting God cannot be in the real (empirical) world. I'm saying He can. He will never be only in the empirical world, because He's always transcendent too; but he's not incapable of being in the empirical world. In fact, by definition as a Christian, I believe God did just that.But this does not apply in the same way to the being of God, nor even of God and His effects.
To illustrate, the claim "A man named Jesus lived" is an empirical and historical claim: that means it is amenable to tests of evidence. (And, of course, no credible historian today doubts it is at least true, based on the preponderance of evidence.) But equally, and likewise, "He rose from the dead" is an empirical claim positing the happening of a miraculous event: and the right way to evaluate it is likewise empirical and historical -- if He did, He did; if not, then not.
That's very straightforward, and as a method, differs not at all from what you do when you ask yourself, "Did I remember to brush my teeth this morning?" You're not absolutely sure, but you reassure yourself by means of the evidence: "My teeth are white, my breath is slightly minty, and my toothbrush is still damp..." But you just can't be 100% sure...
Those claims aren't. They are in the same domain.It is another -- and a radically different -- epistemological domain.
Well, honestly, I would be "able" if I thought it were true. I happen to think that it's far from "simple,"(if it were, everyone would already know it) and actually, in the final analysis, not true.This seems to me so simple. Yet I gather that you will not be able to agree.
That puzzles me.
That's possible. But "different" in what way?Your other declarations about the majesty and genius of the world (as proof of a designer) move me to understand such. But at the same time (and this is important) if I based my comprehension of God on the material, physical and biological world I would define a very different sort of God!
Yes, this is what I'm asking about....the contrast between a god-of-nature and the Christian God.
Are you suggesting that I would be arguing that we "read" nature, and deduce from it the nature of God? I'm not.
But are you suggesting that I'm arguing that we can look at the evidence that nature had an original Designer, and deduce from it that a Designer plausibly exists? I certainly am.