Then it follows that belief that intelligent life likely exists elsewhere in the galaxy is indeed irrational.
I misspoke. My appologies. I should have said "is not irrational".
I'm sorry, but we all act on opinions all the time.
Give me an example. I act on opinions based on experience and probabilities. If there is someone living in the house on the east side of me then there is likely also someone living in the house on the west side. This is called induction and scientist use this all of the time to explore our world. It is something that you completly dismiss and it is unfortunate. There is nothing to base the likelyhood of god on. There is a hell of a lot to base the likelyhood of ET's on. I'm sorry that you can't see the difference.
Again, I find it more irrational to spend millions of dollars searching for something for which there is no evidence on just the "hope" that it's there.
But this is a serious mischarachterization of what is happening. Scientists have been able to figure out elements in the periodic table of the elements using induction. There was no direct evidence. In your world they were behaving irrationally. However the scientists were using logic and reason. Try as we might we can't get you to see this valuable and powerful tool. For you, any opinion that also lacks direct evidence is the equivelant of hope.
Thankfuly the scientists don't view the world the way you do.
No, I'm not trying to do that. You are trying to imply that scientists who believe that ET's exist are rational because they acknowledge that it is only an opinion (albeit an opinion that they're willing to spend lots of time and money on).
For the same reason some people are willing to invest money looking for oil. There is no direct evidence of the oil. We must use induction, reason, experience and our understanding of the natural world and drill where we think it is likely. Often the oil ISN'T there. The speculators waste their money. But because the speculators are willing to risk their money based on indirect evidence and reason we all benifit.
In your world such methods would be the same as praying.
If scientists viewed such methods as irrational we would never find oil or many other because such efforts often take such a large investment and a reliance on induction in the face of no direct evidence.
No more irrational than listening for evidence of the leprechaun with a very expensive stethoscope for an hour each night before you go to bed.
Is there any reason to beleive the leprechaun lives under my bed? See, this is where you go completly off the reservation. Scientists have been using inference and an understanding of the natural world for centuries to locate things that have no direct evidence. Inference is a powerful tool but it requires SOMETHING to base it on other than simply hope and faith.
Apparently, they both do.
You think that only because you don't know that scientists have used induction to discover so many things. You don't realise that by looking around us we can infer things that we can't see, touch, hear or smell.
No, I'm saying that it is more rational to talk to a leprechaun that you believe likely exists and listens than to spend millions listening for a leprechaun that you don't believe likely exists or communicates.
Again, you are misstating the facts.
You didn't answer my question.
Those that believe that it is merely coincidence won't be praying for long. Those that believe that it might just be coincidence are less rational than those who shout praise jesus and those who decare that all glory must be given to Jesus.
I personally don't know any milktoast christians who wonder if it is all just coincidence. I'm sure they exist but I'm certain they are the exception and not the rule. The reason is due in part to a little incident that happened ostensibly shortly after the resurection (see
doubting Thomas).
Faith requires one to not doubt as Thomas did.
John 20:29
Then Jesus told him, "Because you have seen me, you have believed; blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed."