@Beckersjay
From your post;
"Spiritual search confines itself to seeking out examples of confirmation bias and ignores everything else." Maybe you're just getting hung up on religious orthodoxy again...? A true spiritual search doesn't dismiss or ignore anything - can you say the same about the atheist arguments? Non-atheists don't reject science - again note I'm excluding religious orthodoxies.."
So, you are chiding me for not fully understanding your term "spirtual search" Well, if we are to have a meaningful dialogue, you will have to define your terms. Most people understand what is meant by a scientific search. You need to define what constitutes a spiritual search, and further, you have explain why religious orthodoxies should be excluded from that term.
I think religious orthodoxy has to form part of an umbrella term like "spiritual search", because sprituality is a substantive part of the essence of any religion.
You issued a further challenge in your response.
I had said "A prayer or a seance or a meditation cannot get us to Mars, or the Moon." In your subsequent post, you asked me if I could prove it.
Asking someone to prove a negative is illogical. A quick review of our knowledge base through google will prove that we have visited the Moon and Mars using science, but, as far as I am aware, you cannot offer any proof that visiting our neighbouring planets via prayer, seance or meditation is possible. My point still stands, therefore, and your challenge is without foundation, unless you can offer proof to the contrary.
The atheist principle is not close minded -it is just very very simple and very rational. It is the premise that, given current knowledge and evidence, the likelihood of the existence of a divine guiding spirit or entity, of any description, is extremely improbable given our current knowledge.It is a lack of belief in a god or gods. That's it.
Most atheists would go on to say that if you could offer strong empirical, reproducible evidence to the contrary, they would likely change their mind.
And your point to Beso is wrong. "Science" is not open to interpretation.Rather, part of what constitutes science is the interpretation of the data and results of experiments and observations to develop hypotheses, or to support or challenge existing hypothesis to arrive at a model of how the world works.