➘ #09 Source Article
Symbolic Logic Reconstruction
= Hypothesis that the Holy Spirit indwells believers and actively influences cognition, conduct, and well-being.
Annotation: represents the supernatural hypothesis.
= Hypothesis that observed religious phenomena result solely from natural psychological and social processes.
Annotation: represents the naturalistic explanation.
= Body of evidence consisting of (i) persistent doctrinal diversity, (ii) mixed or null prosocial effects, (iii) context-dependent well-being, and (iv) absence of replicable miracles.
Annotation: is the collective empirical data under consideration.
Likelihood Framework
= Likelihood of observing
given
.
Annotation: If the Holy Spirit exists and indwells believers, what is the probability of seeing the actual data?
= Likelihood of observing
given
.
Annotation: If the phenomena are fully naturalistic, what is the probability of seeing the data?
Annotation: is the likelihood ratio, measuring evidential strength.
Domain-Specific Predictions
- Wisdom
Observation:.
Thus,.
- Righteousness
Observation:.
Thus,.
- Happiness
Observation:.
Thus,.
- Miracles
Observation:.
Thus,.
Aggregate Evidence
Annotation: The cumulative evidence is more expected under than under
.
Conclusion
Annotation: Therefore, the naturalistic hypothesis is better supported by the evidence than the supernatural hypothesis
.
Fitch-Style Natural Deduction (Likelihoodist Core)
Annotation:is the hypothesis that a supernaturally indwelling Holy Spirit actively shapes believers’ cognition, conduct, and well-being.
Annotation:is the hypothesis that observed religious outcomes arise from ordinary psychological, social, and institutional processes.
Annotation: The total evidenceis conjoined from domain components: wisdom
, righteousness/prosociality
, happiness/well-being
, and miracles
.
Annotation: Observation: persistent doctrinal diversity and no systematic decision-quality advantage constitute.
Annotation: Observation: mixed or context-sensitive prosocial deltas (attenuating under controls) constitute.
Annotation: Observation: context-dependent well-being largely mediated by community/support constitutes.
Annotation: Observation: non-replication of specific, testable miracle claims constitutes.
Annotation:denotes the likelihood of evidence
if hypothesis
were true.
Annotation: The likelihood ratiomeasures whether
is more expected on
or on
.
Annotation: Ifwere true, stable doctrinal alignment across believers would be expected.
Annotation: Ifwere true, enduring doctrinal diversity is expected from ordinary hermeneutical variation and cognition.
- From 4, 10–11:
Annotation: Given observed diversity, it is more expected under
than under
.
Annotation: On, sanctification predicts clear population-level signals after covariate control.
Annotation: On, heterogeneous social/institutional influences yield mixed effects.
- From 5, 13–14:
Annotation: The prosocial dataare better predicted by
.
Annotation: A reliably imparted “joy/peace” would produce broadly elevated and stable well-being on.
Annotation: On, well-being tracks secular supports and context.
- From 6, 16–17:
Annotation: The well-being patternis more expected under
.
Annotation: On, we should observe replicable healings/signs with adequate controls.
Annotation: On, such events should not replicate beyond placebo/expectancy/noise.
- From 7, 19–20:
Annotation: The miracle recordis more expected under
.
Annotation: If each domain componentis at least as likely on
as on
, then their conjunction
is at least as likely on
(mild dependence assumptions; standard evidential aggregation).
- From 12, 15, 18, 21, 22:
Annotation: Aggregating the domain inequalities yields a strict advantage forover
on the total evidence
.
- From 9, 23:
Annotation: Since, the likelihood ratio
is less than
.
Annotation: In likelihoodist terms,is precisely the condition for
to count as evidence for
over
.
- From 24, 25:
Annotation: Therefore, the observed worldevidentially supports the naturalistic hypothesis
against the indwelling-Spirit hypothesis
.
◉ A plain English walkthrough of the symbolic logic above.
- We begin with two competing hypotheses. The first,
, says that the Holy Spirit actually dwells in Christians and should reliably shape their thinking, their social behavior, their happiness, and even bring about miracles. The second,
, says that everything we see can be explained by normal human psychology, culture, and institutions, without any supernatural intervention.
- The evidence to be tested covers four main areas: wisdom (do Christians agree more and make better decisions?), righteousness (are Christians distinctly less criminal and more prosocial?), happiness (do Christians enjoy unusually high well-being?), and miracles (do Christians produce replicable supernatural outcomes?). The combination of these four categories forms the total body of evidence,
.
- Under
, we should expect to see doctrinal unity, superior decision-making, clearly lower crime and higher prosociality, reliably higher well-being across contexts, and actual verifiable miracles. Under
, we should expect doctrinal diversity, mixed or context-bound prosocial results, well-being that depends on environment and community, and an absence of replicable miracles.
- When we look at the actual world, what we find matches the expectations of
and not
.
- Wisdom: Christians remain divided on doctrines and do not systematically outperform in forecasting or decision-making.
- Righteousness: The data on crime and prosocial behavior is inconsistent, small, or context-dependent once controls are applied.
- Happiness: Religious people may report higher well-being in some settings, but these effects disappear or reverse in secure societies, showing that social context—not supernatural joy—is the driver.
- Miracles: Rigorous studies fail to confirm healing or supernatural signs beyond placebo, expectancy, or reporting bias.
- Each category of evidence therefore fits the naturalistic hypothesis
better than the supernatural hypothesis
. Put differently, the probability of seeing doctrinal diversity, context-bound prosocial effects, socially mediated well-being, and non-replicable miracles is much higher if no Holy Spirit is active.
- The likelihoodist method says that when the evidence is more probable under one hypothesis than another, that evidence counts in favor of the better-predicting hypothesis. Since in each domain the evidence favors
, the combined body of evidence overwhelmingly favors
.
- The final conclusion is straightforward: the world we observe looks like one without a supernaturally indwelling Spirit. It does not look like the world we would expect if Christians were uniquely guided by an omniscient and omnipotent agent. Therefore, the total evidence provides support for
over
.



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