> Instead, the conversation is about the difference of religious experience from sheer imagination. I am supporting the position that religious experience is potentially as valid as any other experience.
Okay, but saying "potentially as valid as any other experience" is such a vague sentiment that it is rendered basically useless, so let's be more specific.
I actually spoke on a podcast with two Christians recently who asked me to speak to them about the nature of my unbelief. Both of them claimed to have had experiences in which a disembodied voice literally spoke to them, and they identified this voice as God. They said they knew the voice was God.
Do these experiences have objective differences from my chair example? Yes. They cannot access this voice at will. They cannot confirm the presence of the voice with a separate party. They cannot further inquire into the nature of this voice.
Every personal religious experience that has been personally shared with me has been nearly identical to that. Most involved a voice, some involved a feeling. I'm sure some people have or claim to have had more concrete experiences, but since I've heard so many that follow this trend, I will stick with it for the sake of this discussion.
The problem is, these people have no way of knowing the voice represented an actual being who was external to them, or their own imagination. They are literally just guessing that it was the deity they already believed in. Or the "holy spirit" that some have described when reading the Bible as proof of God, as if an emotional sensation could be validated as divine? However, many people of various religions have had such experiences even though these religions can't be true at the same time. Were their religious experiences representative of an interaction with a divine being too? Are the Muslims who have heard a voice or felt a feeling interacting with the Christian God or Holy Spirit, who inexplicably acts in such a way that reaffirms their commitment to Islam? You could say that for the sake of argument, but personally I find it pretty absurd.
I'm wondering what sort of evidence in this situation you would consider to be valid. How can science even enter this conversation? I fear that if it tries, it is no longer doing science, and so self-defeating. But I'm truly curious what your answer might be.
If I witnessed Moses part the seas, and was part of the tribe that was with him, and I could do something like talk to another person who also witnessed it, that would do it for me. If I saw Jesus turn water into wine, or come back from the dead after watching him be literally crucified and stabbed to death, that would do it for me. I think the idea that empirical evidence couldn't exist for God is kind of silly, because the Bible is chock full of incidents which -- if they occurred today in public -- would fundamentally change humanity's understanding of reality.
> You've chosen to identify two severe negatives. Let's not forget the positive benefits of religious belief as a balance to your chosen examples.
My point is not to paint religion as a bad thing, I'm simply emphasizing that the validity or invalidity of religion is a serious matter, and that it is not unreasonable to say that it isn't a matter that can be settled with the kind of casual acceptance that we would lend to someone saying they had the hiccups. It doesn't matter if it's not true and I believe it anyways.