triadboy said:
It seems to me you are comparing apples and oranges.
In the Mills statement you have an institution - the church - who believe in invisible creatures, strange curses put on mankind, completely ridiculous phenomenon like virgin births and resurrections, people who can make "the sun stand still", an assnine explanation for the variety of languages...The Tower of Babel incident, an amazingly short timespan for the universe, etc. (I could go on and on and on)
...fighting against a discipline that uses experimentation and a prior knowledge base to systematically (carefully) come to a conclusion. THEN they throw the conclusion out to others to examine and disprove! Only after it withstands world analysis does it become a 'theory'.
Theology tries to discover what happens in the "afterlife". Which is a place for frightened people who can't face their own mortality.
I am not in any way comparing apples and oranges. At least, if I am comparing apples and oranges then every comparison of non-identical things is forbidden. In that case, we should give up speaking and thinking (one wishes that some who have given up the second would cease with the first).
To disregard your moronic claim of 'Theology tries to discover what happens in the "afterlife"', I will use the scholastic definition (as I understand and remember it):
The natural scientist considers an object as what it is in particular. A geologist studies a rock as being a rock.
The philosopher considers things not as what they are in particular, but what they are in general. A philosopher would being with the rock as being something that 'exists' and endeavor to find what it means to say that something 'exists'.
A theologian considers an object in how it relates to God.
Each science begins with a certain set of assumptions. Each works with a certain set of facts (for instance, I would argue that free will and original sin are so obvious that you would have to resort to philosophy to argue against them). Each draws conclusions. Each makes mistakes. Each is, to some degree, self correcting.
Now, what I think you would say is that I have a Creed while you have facts. In truth, I have a Creed that I believe. I know it is a Creed and that I believe it and that I have not proven it. You have a Creed and think that is a fact that you have proven. I may be dumb enough to believe the Nicene Creed, but at least I'm smart enough to know that it is a Creed.
I'm sure you could go on and on. You seem quite good at that. Let me set this out: Christianity once held that things like the Noachian Flood and the Tower of Babel were historical events. Most of Christendom now believes that not to be true. I would argue that this indicates one and only one thing: when the facts have indicated that a change in a position was needed, the Church no less than the sciences has been willing to do so. Has Christendom been slower than it could have been? You could make that argument. However, if the question is whether it is in any substantive way a valid search for truth, the only question is whether it does make progress. The answer, by your examples, is clearly yes.
You state that belief in resurrections and virgin births is rediculous. Why, if I may ask, is that? I suppose that you will say that 'DEAD PEOPLE STAY DEAD!' and 'PEOPLE WHO HAVEN'T HAD SEX DON'T GET PREGNANT!' or something like that.
That certainly is general experience. You do realize that it was also general experience 2000 years ago. Whether true or not, the nature of the claim is that they are singular events. As such, it is foolish to argue that it is not what happens generally.
I don't know why you made the claim you did about the 'afterlife'. I assume you don't believe in such a thing. You may well be right: I will allow the possibility of anything whose impossibility I have not proven. I cannot speak for anyone but myself, but I will say this: I am not afraid of death (I am still deciding whether I prefer death to getting old). Death, so far as we know, does not hurt at all. Dying, as we do know, often hurts like the Dickens. I am afraid of dying, but not death. I do believe in the afterlife. Of course, you might say that deep in my psyche I have a fear of death that I am not consciously aware of that leads me to believe in the resurrection. If that is true, how do you know that your subconscious has not deluded you?
I do have one general thing to say. Chesterton (a favorite writer of mine) asserted this: There is one thing in Europe that has gone toe-to-toe with Paganism. It is Christianity. Everything else, even anti-Christianity, is of Christian origin. I mention the quote because of one obvious fact: It is the historically Christian countries that have made the great leaps forward in the sciences. I do not offer that statement in as descisive, but can you throw it away as irrelevant?