On another forum, another user responded to my following post:
Hyperion wrote:"God" is a redundant term, and that's why it is never found in any legitimate scientific theory.
God is outside the observable universe. Even if he does exist, we don't know his mechanism, or the how. Therefore, to include God in theories is to resort to miracles, to point to the unknown and say that that's God's work, and that goes against the scientific method.
His response was this:
Kinda like quantum mechanics?
I responded with the following:
Hyperion wrote:- "So how is shamanistic or theological or New Age doctrine different from quantum mechanics? The answer is that even if we cannot understand it, we can verify that quantum mechanics works. We can compare the quantitative predictions of quantum theory with the measured wavelengths of spectral lines of the chemical elements, the behavoir of semiconductors and liquid helium, microprocessors, which kinds of molecules form from their constituent atoms, the existence and properties of white dwarf stars, what happens in masers and lasers, and which materials are susceptible to which kinds of magnetism. We don't have to understand the theory to see what it predicts. We don't have to be accomplished physicists to read what the experiments reveal. In every one of these instances -- as in many others -- the predictions of quantum mechanics are strikingly, and to high accuracy, confirmed."
- -- Chapter 14: Antiscience (page 250); The Demon-Haunted World: Science As A Candle In The Dark by Carl Sagan.
His response:
So then, we don't have to understand creation or God to see what it or he did either, right?
I mean, we can clearly see that we exist, and the Pope exists, and the Catholic Church exists. So then, isn't it as valid as quantum mechanics, given that we can see the results of both?
Mine:
Hyperion wrote:God cannot be confirmed. He's outside the observable universe. I already pointed that out. Quantum mechanics, on the other hand, can and has been observed and confirmed.
Also, creationism is not a scientific theory. Even if it did somehow qualify, there's no mechanism, only appeal to authority.
Any suggestions, criticisms? What do you think I should tell him or should add? What shouldn't I have said?