said all those things in my reply to you above, it's just that now I've numbered them. — Bartricks
Sure my point is you can tell him that he himself is an irrational being, and therefore he has no argument for your ( or anyone's ) belief in God. — 3017amen
And moral prescriptions are among the prescriptions of reason, are they not? For instance, if an act is morally prescribed, then we necessarily have some reason to do it, don't we? Well why? Because for an act to be morally prescribed just is for it to be being prescribed by reason, and what it is for us to have reason to do an act is for reason to be prescribing it. — Bartricks
If my community values something it is not necessarily morally valuable — Bartricks
don’t think we could know whether it is rational or not without understanding your reasons for doing so. What is the scientific research? — NOS4A2
In other words, did he refer to the Christian God? — 3017amen
96% positive results should put it beyond the region of mere coincidence but something else behaves similarly - bias. — TheMadFool
Most decisions are made by such non-rational, not irrational methods. Which is fine. — T Clark
Did it hold out to your scrutiny? After careful examination of the evidence did it establish the fact that birds can aid in decisions — TheMadFool
I think this is a case of ambiguity arising from lack of information that is confusing some of the other posters. — Judaka
What’s irrational is seeking or expecting a verifiable objective account of a decision making process by that which is not, and can never be, a first-person perspective. — Mww
I agree, I think we need more information. OP can you please share more information? — 3017amen
In terms of purely instrumental rationality, it's not irrational. In terms of rationality as a more general faculty of applying your mental resources in an effective (for solving problems) and non-contradictory manner, it probably is irrational. — Echarmion
People who behave in the way you describe are working from a set of beliefs that they haven't subjected to scrutiny. People who reject such a worldview have. — TheMadFool
Well I believe on the basis of walking out my front door many times that there is no danger of falling into a fiery pit if I walk out of my front door. — unenlightened
But I guess it rather depends on what decisions, and what research. If you are a hunter, it might be reasonable to base your lunch recipe on what bird you come across. — unenlightened