Buffalo wrote:Historical events certainly CAN be tested for veracity.
They can be analyzed for evidence as to whether something did or did not happen or could or could not have happened. This is irrelevant though and I purposely avoided it because history is not one of the sciences.
Science works by looking at what is happening in the real world and then hypothesizing as to why that is. Then you use a set of controlled experiments to verify or refute the hypothesis. If history were a science you'd verify the battle of Waterloo by getting Napoleon back somehow, setting up the terrain and geography exactly the same, giving him the same men to fight with, and have them battle it out to see what the results are. For various reasons we do not do that.
So even if you are right (and you're not) saying that history beat out religion does not mean SCIENCE!!!! won.
The Book of Mormon and Book of Abraham have already failed the test, by the way.
I disrespectfully disagree.
Anyway, a good example of this is faith healing. It has been scientifically demonstrated to have no more value than a placebo.
Okay, since I don't believe "faith healing" (or what this term usually means) ever worked as advertised I don't care for this at all.
More examples: the creation of the earth as described in the Bible, the global flood, the tower of babel, the exodus,
History, not science.
near death experiences and out of body experiences,
That certain changes occur in the body does not prove that these do not involve something leaving the body. I am personally undecided on whether it happens at all anyways.
special creation by an intelligent designer,
Science has proved this now???? Wow. Did they create a Universe without an intelligent designer? Only way I can see to test the theory.
the shape of the earth,
Silliness. The Christians knew the Earth was round. This was known since around 600 BCE at least.
the nature of the solar system,
What nature? You mean that the earth wasn't the center of the Universe? Huh.....and here I was thinking those Jewish and Christian writing about other worlds might actually mean something?
diving rods (a.k.a. the "Rod of Aaron"),
Aaron was a diver?
miracles of any kind, etc.
Since miracles are by their very nature an intervention into the natural world that cannot be repeated on command they can't be tested scientifically. You can't recreate the situation and test for it and expect it to happen again.
If you define religion as pseudoscience that would mean something. I don't. I don't learn much science or pseudoscience in Church. It is not what religion is about.
Nice try though.
"Surely he knows that DCP, The Nehor, Lamanite, and other key apologists..." -Scratch clarifying my status in apologetics
"I admit it; I'm a petty, petty man." -Some Schmo