Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Thu Feb 06, 2025 9:50 am
BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Feb 06, 2025 9:22 am
I believe putting science and religion on a continuum can nail theistic beliefs to the lower bunk near the rubbish bin of the continuum.
We can straight away rate the following falsifiability, empirical verification, testability, reproducibility and logical consistency with ZERO.
By justifying that theistic religion should be at the other end of the normal distribution facilitates objective analysis of the placement of theistic in its delusional bin.
From my experience, if not nailed and pinned to its appropriate delusion bin in contrast to the gold standard of the scientific FS, that will give theists the opportunity to eel their way around without a fixed-goal to score at them.
With a continuum approach, it is then up to theists to justify whether they can climb up the credibility and objective ladder relative to the scientific FS gold standard.
While you highlight the psychological necessity of religion for many, that necessity does not make it true. A belief’s utility in reducing suffering does not grant it epistemic legitimacy.
We have not discussed this in detail.
I have done a lot of research in this area and based on what I have found, I find this thesis very tenable.
Anything else is an invitation to contradiction and, ultimately, epistemic collapse.
Epistemology is merely a part of the grand scheme of humanity.
I adopt Kant's vision and mission for humanity, i.e.
1. Who am I? - Principles of Apperception in CPR
2. What can we know? -Epistemology - CPR
3. What should we do? -Morality -Ethics -Critique of Practical Reason
4. What can we hope for? - Highest Good- Perpetual Peace - Critique of Judgment
Your approach of positioning theistic beliefs at the lower extreme of a continuum of epistemic credibility, with science as the gold standard, is an effective tool for categorization. It provides a clear and systematic way to differentiate between frameworks based on their capacity for falsifiability, empirical verification, and logical consistency. By doing so, it forces theists to confront the reality that their beliefs do not—and cannot—meet the rigorous standards required for knowledge that reliably describes reality.
However, while this continuum is useful for analysis, the problem remains that many theists do not operate within a framework that acknowledges epistemic ranking at all. Their beliefs are not predicated on
justification in any scientific or logical sense; they rely on
faith, which by definition circumvents the need for empirical validation. The very tools of rational discourse—falsifiability, testability, reproducibility—are often dismissed as
inappropriate measures for their worldview. The danger of allowing even
one exception, of entertaining religion as a valid category of knowledge, is that it provides an escape hatch for irrationality to persist under the guise of a competing "framework." If theists could be compelled to justify their beliefs
relative to the scientific standard, they would indeed be forced to confront their placement at the bottom of the continuum. But the reality is, they refuse to engage on those terms.
Your point about the psychological necessity of religion is crucial. Theism survives not because it is
true, but because it is
psychologically adaptive. People turn to faith as a coping mechanism, a way to mitigate existential dread and uncertainty. This is why, even when the epistemic falsehood of theistic claims is
completely demonstrated, believers still cling to them—because their function is emotional, not intellectual. The problem, of course, is that
psychological utility is not an argument for truth. The fact that a belief is comforting, or even evolutionarily advantageous, does not give it
epistemic legitimacy.
As for epistemology being just one part of the grand scheme of humanity, Kant’s framework provides an elegant structure for understanding our place in the universe. However,
hope—the question of what we can aspire to—is not necessarily contingent on religious thinking. One of the greatest falsehoods promoted by religious traditions is that meaning, morality, and purpose
must be derived from a supernatural source. In reality, meaning is something that emerges
from us, not something imposed upon us from outside reality. The rejection of free will does not negate responsibility, nor does the rejection of divine meaning negate the possibility of human-created meaning.
In short, I agree with your continuum approach in terms of analysis, but I think the greatest challenge is
not just demonstrating that religion belongs at the bottom—it is getting theists to
accept that the ranking matters in the first place. As long as faith remains their primary method of "knowing," they will continue to evade rational critique. The most effective strategy, therefore, is not just to demonstrate that religion is epistemically bankrupt, but to show that
living by truth, even when it is uncomfortable, is more valuable than living by comforting illusions. That is the real battle.