appolose said:
While that may be true, my scenario is a hypothetical one, one in which quantum mechanics is either impossible or unobserved. I'm aiming to demonstrate the possibility of a supernatural explanation. |
appolose, what do you actually mean by 'supernatural' explanation. I'm assuming you mean God, but perhaps you don't.
I can tell you, again, that scientific theory correctly applied will never result in the explanation that the unknown is supernatural. It simply can't.
What you really need to understand is that any time scientific process comes up short (which happens all the time BTW) the anwer is predefined and exclusive - 'more data required as we have no consistent theory'.
That will always be the result. The result will never be - 'must be supernatural'.
I guess, in a sense, the way to view it is that scientific process does not allow for anything other than an 'inconclusive evidence' or 'we have a theory' result.
You're positing a scenario which (even if the supernatural existed) would result in the answer 'inconclusive evidence'.
Try to be reasonable... its easier than you think...







