You are mixing up several different things here.The Long Road said:For someone with such a strict definition of existence, you certainly have a rather liberal view of 'measurable'. When you start justifying your position by quantifying leaps of faith, it's time to revise your argument.
But I'll move on to other non-measurable things. What about the Higgs boson? Neutrinos? Dark matter and dark energy? These things are all currently immeasurable, and may remain so forever. Their existence is only justified based on incomplete data from other experiments and calculations. Scientists literally made something up to fill the gaps in their understanding. They could be totally wrong. Basing an idea off of a lack of data is a shaky idea at best.
Which brings me to the single most frustrating and hated idea in science: you can't prove a negative. Anyone who has taken an introductory geometry course has done proofs, and the only things that can be proved are positives. Implied proofs are the only way to demonstrate the truth of a negative, and those are simply saying 'because, to our knowledge, X any Y cannot exist at the same time, X is false because Y is true'. Even still, it relies on the idea that a positive is provably true. Since the very idea of a soul is something that transcends our reality, it would make sense that science wouldn't be able to do anything regarding it.
For one my personal definition of what should be regarded as existant is difference from the one science uses. To me the science of subatomic particles isn't more or less real than theology. Both deals with stuff that are inexperienceable to human beings, aside from an intellectual level.
Science on the other hand has different mechanics. Science works with the principle of falsification. Meaning that you can assume anything to be true until proven false. This is especially true for all that phisics stuff, like the higgs particle, that is somewhat requirred to exist, to allow other areas of physics to work.
Certainly this mechanic is similar to faith, because in the end both parties make up stuff to allow their framework of the world to be maintained.
My initial point was that that the TE seemed to imply that the existance of a soul, aside from a word with an idea assosciated to it, was debatable. It is not. Because as with many phylosophical terms it has no object of reference in the real world. It can however have an intellectual meaning, can be subject of personal belief or a philosophical debate. But that doesn't make it existant in the real world.
This puts it aside from all that physics stuff.
Most things from physics can be proven. The ones that can not be proven are reasonable to assume, based on what can be proven. This is not true for the chirstian definition of a soul. It is only reasonable to assume the christian definition, if you have accepted all the other stuff (omipotent god, afterlife blabla) as true. So yes. On a metalevel that regards cognitive pattern making religion and science are similar.
The key difference here lies in the definitions. Science has it's roots in physical events of the world we can experience. Religion is, at best, based on moral events we can experience. However moral is only constituted through social behavior, it is not constant, because it isn't delivered by nature.
That's basically the difference between Schrödinger's cat and the afterlife. Both require a certain amount of faith, but one is independent from who you are and the otherone is. The concept of an afterlife requirres an identiy, a person. Schrödingers Cat doens't requirre that. It just need any beholder, an instance of checking. Not neccessaryly a human being.