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Burden
of Proof, Part 2:
What Constitutes Evidence for God?
by Mano Singham
If a
religious person is asked for evidence of god's existence, the
type of evidence presented usually consist of religious texts,
events that are inexplicable according to scientific laws (i.e.,
miracles), or personal testimonies of direct experience of god.
Actually, this can be reduced to just two categories (miracles
and personal testimonies) since religious texts can be considered
either as miraculously created (in the case of the Koran or those
who believe in Biblical inerrancy) or as the testimonies of the
writers of the texts, who in turn recorded their own or the testimonies
of other people or report on miraculous events. If one wants
to be a thoroughgoing reductionist, one might even reduce it
to one category by arguing that reports of miracles are also
essentially testimonies.
Just being a testimony does not mean
that the evidence is invalid. 'Anecdotal evidence' often takes
the form of testimony and can
be the precursor to investigations that produce other kinds
of evidence. Even in the hard sciences, personal testimony does
play a role. After all, when a scientist discovers something
and publishes a paper, that is kind of like a personal testimony
since the very definition of a research publication is that
it
incorporates results nobody else has yet published. But in
science those 'testimonies' are just the starting point for further
investigation
by others who try to recreate the conditions and see if the
results are replicated. In some cases (neutrinos), they are and
in others
(N-rays) they are not. So in science, testimonies cease to
be considered as such once independent researchers start reproducing
results under fairly well controlled conditions.
But with religious
testimonies, there is no such promise of such replicability.
I recently had a discussion with a woman
who described
to me her experiences of god and described something she
experienced while on a hilltop in California. I have no reason
to doubt
her story, but even she would have thought I was strange
if I asked
her exactly where the hilltop was and what she did there
so that I could try and replicate her experience. Religious testimonies
are believed to be intensely personal and unique and idiosyncratic,
while in science, personal testimony is the precursor to
shared,
similar, consistently reproducible experiences, under similar
conditions, by an ever-increasing number of people.
The other
kind of experience (miracles) again typically consists of unique
events that cannot be recreated at will. All attempts
at finding either a consistent pattern of god's intervention
in the world (such as the recent prayer study) or unambiguous
violations of natural laws have singularly failed. All
we really have are the stories in religious texts purporting
to report
on miraculous events long ago or the personal testimonies
of people asserting a miraculous event in their lives.
How
one defines a miracle is also difficult. It has to be more than
just a highly improbable event. Suppose someone
is seriously
ill with cancer and the physicians have given up hope.
Suppose
that person's family and friends pray to god and the
patient suffers a remarkable remission in the disease. Is that
a miracle? Believers would say yes, but unbelievers would
say
not necessarily,
asserting that the body has all kinds of mechanisms for
fighting disease that we do not know of. So what would
constitute
an event that everyone would consider a miracle?
Again,
it seems to me that it would have to have the quality of replicability
to satisfy everyone. If for
a certain
kind of terminal disease, a certain kind of prayer
done under
certain conditions invariably produced a cure where
medicine could
not,
then that would constitute a good case for a miracle,
because that would be hard to debunk, at least initially.
As philosopher
David Hume said: "No testimony is sufficient to
establish a miracle unless the testimony be of such
a kind that its falsehood
would be more miraculous than the fact which it endeavors
to establish..." (On Miracles)
But even this is
problematical, especially for believers who usually
do not believe in a god who acts so mechanically
and
can be summoned at will. Such predictable behavior
is more symptomatic of the workings of as-yet-unknown
natural
laws
than of god. The
whole allure of belief in god is that god can act
in unpredictable ways, to cause the dead to come back
to life and the Earth
to stop spinning.
So both kinds of evidence (miracles
and testimonies) used to support belief in a god are inadequate
for
what science
requires
as evidentiary support.
The divide between atheists
and religious believers ultimately comes down to whether an individual
feels that all beliefs
should meet the same standards that we accept
for good science or whether
we have one set of standards for science or law,
and another for religious beliefs. There is nothing
that
compels anyone
to choose either way.
I personally could not justify
to myself why I should use different standards. Doing so seemed
to me to
indicate that I was deciding
to believe in god first and then deciding on
how
to rationalize my belief later. Once I decided
to use
the yardstick
of
science uniformly across all areas of knowledge
and see where that
leads, I found myself agreeing with Laplace
that I do not need the god
hypothesis.
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