ruach, I think I can accept that some people might believe something without evidence. Part of the point I was trying to make, though, is that when in the past claims have been made without any evidence to support them, and later we've been able to test those claims, they've turned out to be false.
So while we can't assume that these untested claims are false, we have good reason to believe that the only sure way to know something is by looking at evidence.
You're free to reject that, of course. It is possible that people can just know things, without any prior basis of that knowledge. (The bible isn't a basis of knowledge, because the question just goes back one step further - how do you know that bible is true? At some point along the way we get to the answer: "It feels true.")
That's fine. I'm just saying that we have no reason to believe that "It feels true." means it's likely to be true. On the other hand, we have reasons to believe that things that aren't true would feel true. And we have evidence from the past, and the present, that things that felt true to people then turned out not to be.
On the other hand, there are some things that are defined by how we feel toward them - something is beautiful if it feels beautiful, something is awesome if it inspires awe.
There are also some things, like morality, that I think are a mix of logic and emotion, but these end up being very complicated. Basically something along the lines of "something is wrong because of how it effects the way the parties involved feel." Though that's a horrible oversimplification of what I mean, and probably beyond the scope of the conversation anyway...
Anyway, I'm just saying that we might be able to reduce a flower down to it's constituent atoms, but that doesn't make it any less beautiful. Sometimes, it's understanding how something truly came to be, and how it interacts with the world around it, that lets us see it's true beauty. Well, that's my perspective anyway.
