If you truly believe this, then all emotions are non-existant, since you can't test them. You cannot fall in love, because it cannot be proven that you are in love. You can feel no grief when someone close to you dies, because your grief cannot be quantified. And so on.Not-That-Bright said:If it cannot be tested then there's no reason to believe it. I would also believe I am going crazy before I believed that I had some magic feeling within me telling me that god exists, the first to me actually has some basis, alot of people go crazy. There is no way to prove God's existance, or the existance of anything with supernatural qualities (the best we can do is debunk claims such as "I can do X")... so there's no reason to believe. For me, this leaves me in a position of disbelief, while of course there can also be no proof that God, the supernatural DOESN'T exist, for everything else in my reality I generally accept it as not existing before there is proof. I.e. "There are no blue giraffes."
In response to this, reference to causality would be invalid. It is absurd to think that every emotion has a cause in 'objective reality'. Love easily destroys this theory, as does grief - both can become much stronger than whatever power their 'cause' bestows upon them.
But if you have never fallen deeply in love with someone, or experienced deep grief to the point of despising life, then I understand.
*sigh* For hundreds of years people believed in the soul. Then science comes along and cannot find it, so we give up on the notion.Not-That-Bright said:No, science cannot test vague references to things that have no evidence of even existing.
If you are interested, I can recommend you a book or two by a psychologist (so you'll understand the scientific language ) that would most likely make you think twice about believing in only what science can prove. Also remember that some of the greatest scientific minds have been mystics (Einstein, Jung, etc).
The depth of it is lost in explanations. Beyond this I won't argue about it.Not-That-Bright said:Haha I agree. I've asked it many times, what 'meaning' do these people get in their lives that they always go on about? From what I see theists create the same sort of meaning in their lives generally as I do in mine.