Hello. I'm a fairly new poster to this forum and this thread seems to have been going on for some time, so please bear with me if I don't have all the local protocols quite down yet, or if someone else has already made my point earlier in the thread. I will improve as time goes on.
I note a claim here to the effect that 'Religion has not provide any reliable answers,' and it was a response to that claim which has prompted my to post: ""How do you know religion has not provided any reliable answers? "
Certainly both science and religion frequently lay -claim- to high degrees of reliability. Key here is what is meant by "reliable."
For me, and, I think, for science, "reliable" means that a given answer has some usefulness beyond the imediate specific question it proposes to answer; it can be used to gain useful insight into similar, but not necessarily directly related questions -- it has some sort of -predictive- value beyond the immediate moment.
With that in mind it is important to keep in mind that in a /particular/ case it is quite possible to come to state a conclusion which is in and of itself entirely correct and valid, but which has been arrived at by completely invalid and/or spurious means. For example:
Sidewalks are usually made of concrete
Concrete sidewalks make the Earth spin from west to east
Therefore, the sun will always rise in the east
The conclusion in and of itself is true, but the means by which it is arrived at are not valid, and hence not reliable. Those means will not, for example, allow us to make accurate predictions of the direction of sunrise on other planets, based on whether or not those planets have concrete sidwalks on their surfaces.
In my experience, this is the kind of answer frequently given by religion: a true conclusion, supported by a spurious or untestable chain of reasoning which is only valid within the dogma of that particular religion, and which may not even be wholly self-consistent in that domain.
By contrast, an answer given by science -- say, that water boils at a certain temperature under certain ambient conditions of temperature and pressure -- is applicable beyond the immediate situation. Given this sort of information about water, we can use it to predict with a fair amount of accuracy the behavior of water under other conditions, and we can verify by experiment that such predictions are reasonably valid. This kind of answer is therefore reliable, in the sense that the information it gives us is consistently useful in assisting us to gain additional useful information.
Sorry, I know this is long-winded, but the bottom line is that I have to side with the poster who says that religion has /not/ provided reliable answers and science has. Given STP conditions science will always agree on the temperature of boiling water; given the same starting conditions
two religions will rarely, if ever, agree on the cause of the result, the meaning of the result, or, in some cases, even the existence of the result.
Welcome indeed to the Maelstrom!