As an Orthodox Christian, then you must make a place for nonmaterialistic explanations for certain phenomena. The line between "dead" and "alive" is fundamental. We can both agree that it is exists, even if the borders of when this binary state switches from one to the other.
Please show me where, with measurements, I can determine the existence of the soul, or at the very least, human will?
The whole point of religion is that you believe in something.
All other things, outside your religion, need to be known, so have to be proven.
So, I believe in God, soul, eternal life, free will, and other transcendental stuff. Orthodox Christianity gives a complete consistent and logical picture of transcendental side of our existence. All other things need hard scientific proof.
Since there is nothing in my religion about psychology and around, psychology have to be scientifically proven, beginning from its right to exist at all.
Psychology obviously does not sustain even first step of questioning.
NOW, just NOW, we are getting somewhere.
As an Orthodox Christian, then you must make a place for nonmaterialistic explanations for certain phenomena. The line between "dead" and "alive" is fundamental. We can both agree that it is exists, even if the borders of when this binary state switches from one to the other.
Please show me where, with measurements, I can determine the existence of the soul, or at the very least, human will?
The whole point of religion is that you believe in something. All other things, outside your religion, need to be known, so have to be proven.
So, I believe in God, soul, eternal life, free will, and other transcendental stuff. Orthodox Christianity gives a complete consistent and logical picture of transcendental side of our existence. All other things need hard scientific proof.
Since there is nothing in my religion about psychology and around, psychology have to be scientifically proven, beginning from its right to exist at all.
Psychology obviously does not sustain even first step of questioning.