Sunday, February 7, 2010

How do you know if your religious experience is true when you regard others experiences as false?

How you view other peoples' experiences is irrelevant. How do you know evolution is true, if you think Creationism is false?How do you know if your religious experience is true when you regard others experiences as false?
Barnum Fife, there is a mountain of evidence that evolution is correct. One does not ';believe'; in evolution, any more than one ';believes'; the comets will come back around at their appointed times. No faith is required, as one has reasonable evidence to ';know'; it instead.





Just as soon as evidence contrary to the theory of evolution appears, or evidence that the comets are behaving in ways contrary to our current understanding appears, we will address it. That's what science does: it gathers evidence, makes propositions, tests theories, and re-writes the whole damned thing when it has to. Unlike religion, which doggedly stays with the same story, no matter how flawed it is or how much evidence to the contrary appears.How do you know if your religious experience is true when you regard others experiences as false?
By reading and learing defferent teachings we should know which one is good for you and which is not relevent. With our basic knowledge you will know what is true and what is not.
I haven't heard about other religions having any actual experiences.

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