BigMike wrote: ↑Fri Dec 27, 2024 12:06 pmWell said, Will! Your focus on the pragmatic foundation of science is spot on, especially when paired with its remarkable predictive power. The formulas derived from observable patterns, like those describing falling stones, don’t just explain—they predict future behavior with precision. That’s the strength of science: it gives us tools to understand and navigate the world, grounded in evidence rather than stories.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Fri Dec 27, 2024 11:54 amI can't speak for all the other secularists, but many of us take science to be fundamentally a pragmatic endeavour. It is, for example, an observable, verifiable fact that stones fall to Earth if you drop them. The science comes in when you measure things like the mass of the stone, the distance it falls and the time it takes. Repeat the experiment with different objects and heights, see if there is a pattern in the data; if so devise a formula that accounts for the pattern you have discerned. Use that formula for any purpose to which it applies, and to any purpose to which it doesn't apply, use another formula. If it pleases you to do so, make up a story about why stones fall as they do; it won't make any difference to the behaviour of stones.
There's just one rather large fail you've got there Mike, and that is that GOD simply asked for us to have faith - for those "stories" to be proven plausible (in my case that's the truth of it).
It was a binary position, and you chose not to believe in it.