In my understanding, it is the existence of an entity called "God" and his interaction, through revelatory experience, with me.floppit wrote: Would you mind me asking what the objective part of the experience is?
It doesn't concern you until you have had a revelatory experience with God. Then, you will determine for yourself if sufficient information exists to sustain belief. If you have some such experience, your requirements regarding empirical evidence might change somewhat. It doesn't really matter what religion states as being factual in a dogmatic sense. That is mainly for consumption by other believers, and should have no relevance to non-believers.floppit wrote: I don't state we should have empirical evidence of god, just as I wouldn't suggest we should have empirical evidence of ghosts - if a person has a whim to believe something by and large it is up to them. My own position is that it doesn't concern me until those beliefs are stated as factual and where religion does THAT, THEN I think there is a need for empirical evidence.
Revelation leads to faith, not knowledge. Empirical evidence can lead to knowledge. I view others' revelations in light of my own, so, obviously, I relate more to those which are similar to mine, which usually means within some form of Christianity. But I can't disprove anyone's revelation at all. I agree that there is no empirical evidence that would settle the issue of the existence of God, so empirically, I don't think it is possible for anyone to say "I know God exists" or "I know God does not exist." This may change in the future, but I don't think we are there now. I think there is an empirical basis for accepting certain historical facts about Jesus, but it is not so conclusive as to demand a claim of knowledge.floppit wrote: As you state here:So how do you feel about revelation compared with empirical evidence? Initially I asked about anecdote as you gave anecdote, but if the real issue is what you feel has been revealed to you personally I'd still be interested to know how you feel it compares? Do you accept anyone's revelations as reported, or all those from the same faith, church, group of friends, or is it only your own? I know you argue it is about comparing it to others but on a global scale rather than a more intimate one that doesn't work due to the number of gods and truths. None of which supported by much in the way of observable reality....this is the nature of revelation, which is personal. It's not much different than having multiple witnesses to an intersection collision or a crime. The accounts will vary, but there is a version that is closer to objective reality. By comparing and contrasting the various stories, the jury attempts to come closer to the truth. All revelation is subject to some subjectivity by it's various nature. But the believer accepts that this is how God has chosen to reveal himself. From Christianity's standpoint, there was a divine disclosure in Jesus. However, as we see, even that comes down to personal experience.