T.S.
Hi. Nope. It's like allowing others their beliefs, and their experiences without challenging them for proof every time they mention them and scoffing when they aren't able to provide any. Whether or not they ever claimed to be able to provide any.
peacefulpete: This reality is not established exclusively through experience but confirmation and analysis.
Maybe no one ever told you about thought exercises and their value for comprehension beyond their narrow confines. I will assume that is the case. In the thought exercise I presented, I stipulated that only one man ever felt a bee sting. For that man to KNOW what a bee sting feels like and to KNOW that bees can sting only required that one singular event. It did not require confirmation or analysis. That hypothetical man's experience served to garner him knowledge no one else in that hypothetical world had. He didn't only "believe" bees sting and that it hurts, he wasn't merely "firmly convicted" that bees sting and it hurts, he "knew" that to be a fact, whether anyone ever independently confirmed it or not.
Experience is a source of factual knowledge. Often, factual knowledge that can only be imperfectly communicated metaphorically to anyone outside the person who experienced it, but which is nonetheless real to the person who experienced it, not merely believed in.
The point of ALL this is that while scientists insist someone has the burden of proof where God is concerned, in the case of experiential knowledge there is never a burden of proof on any side. For the person who experienced it the matter is settled, the only reason they would have to prove it is if they were trying to convince someone else. For the person who didn't experience it, they would likely only understand the experience as described in a metaphorical way in any case and, therefore, that party also has no burden of proof.
I hope at the least that kid-A finally has been shown that believers are frequently reminded of their "burden of proof" however little time he believes scientific types have to spare. I don't have to prove anything to anyone in order to have personally experienced something I know to be true, or for my experience to have provided me knowledge (as a higher cognitive function than belief or conviction).
There is one belief I think science has yet to prove true that almost every scientist and person of a scientific bent seems to share, every concept must be proved by someone. It isn't true...I can prove it.
Respectfully,
AuldSoul