I suppose for some people it could be self-delusion. For others it's personal preference. I think of it like people who like Coke or Pepsi. Is someone who likes Coke and thinks Pepsi is absolute swill more right than one who thinks Pepsi is the best thing since sliced bread? No, they just detect different things in both beverages that they like. It is the same for people in spiritual matters. Some people are just more sensitive to whatever their religious preference is. I tried to be a good Christian when I was a kid, but I never could shake the feeling that I was really praying to thin air, and not to a deity at all. Maybe someday I'll come across some spiritual truth that grabs me, but for now, I am content with where I am.
As for other beings that we have no knowledge or record of, even if they are measurable: our inability to detect them does not have a bearing on their existence or lack thereof. How many species on our own planet still exist without us knowing? They don't care, they go about their business and their lives undisturbed. The thing with science is that all scientists know that there are a host of things yet unknown and undiscovered, and the hope is that with enough time and experimentation, we will add to the body of knowledge that we have.
Science cannot measure the supernatural because science depends entirely on observation and experimentation. How does one observe and experiment on god, and get reliable results that other labs can replicate? The thing is, it cannot be done. God and other supernatural things are above the laws of nature. (hence super-natural).
This is not to say that spiritual study and scientific study do not overlap at times. The origin of life is one of those times, and to get a full view of it one needs both the nuts and bolts of science (how things work) and the inspiration of spiritualism (why things work). It is vitally important, however not to confuse the two or make the one try to explain the realm of the other.
As for other beings that we have no knowledge or record of, even if they are measurable: our inability to detect them does not have a bearing on their existence or lack thereof. How many species on our own planet still exist without us knowing? They don't care, they go about their business and their lives undisturbed. The thing with science is that all scientists know that there are a host of things yet unknown and undiscovered, and the hope is that with enough time and experimentation, we will add to the body of knowledge that we have.
Science cannot measure the supernatural because science depends entirely on observation and experimentation. How does one observe and experiment on god, and get reliable results that other labs can replicate? The thing is, it cannot be done. God and other supernatural things are above the laws of nature. (hence super-natural).
This is not to say that spiritual study and scientific study do not overlap at times. The origin of life is one of those times, and to get a full view of it one needs both the nuts and bolts of science (how things work) and the inspiration of spiritualism (why things work). It is vitally important, however not to confuse the two or make the one try to explain the realm of the other.
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