Heisenberg
Well-Known Member
I had this exact attitude for a long time. I used to think that if I had an experience that convinced me of God, I would still have to question it. Since I couldn't be sure, I wouldn't be able to say it was proof, even to me. But then I figured if the experience left me with doubt, it wouldn't truly be a divine experience. So maybe without having one, I could not judge.I accept personal revelation as legitimate evidence for the person having the experience only. I can't falsify their experience, however their experience holds zero weight to anyone else unless testable.
But are there any true divine experiences? Unless something happens that is beyond doubt, it isn't divine, and I have never heard of such an experience. Unless the experience can not possibly have a natural explanation, then it must be subject to Occams razor. We need extraordinary reasons to make extraordinary assumptions. If people make the assumption that god is behind the experience, it is a result of their own irresponsibility. Even if someone did have an experience that went beyond all natural explanations like tumor, hallucinations, ect, jumping to god would still be less responsible than say, assuming the matrix or aliens implanting memories as a practical joke or a computer glitch in a reality simulation.. all these things break fewer logical barriers than God.
Of course without having an experience myself, I can not say for sure, but I am confident enough to now say that I do not accept personal experience as rationale for certainty, even for that one person.