beliefs that do not incorporate understanding thereof are based on tired and meaningless fallacies people use to provide themselves comfort.
oh, i agree. but it does not necessarily follow that in a dispute between science and religion, science automatically wins. for example, science can't possibly countenance the idea of Divine Revelation (or even inspiration) or indeed the idea of the supernatural, let alone the Metanatural. i call this the "angels don't show up on radar" argument, a famous example of which was the announcement by yuri gagarin on the first trip into space that he had proved soviet atheism by going into space and failing to spot G!D. i would characterise the idea that there is nothing beyond science's understanding as a similar tired and meaningless fallacy. it may help you be a better scientist, but it won't make you a better person.
However, if the Torah were to make the claim at some point that, for example, that all insects are orange, that statement would be scientifically and rationally *incorrect*.
well, the Torah doesn't make such claims. the Torah is well known for not giving reasons for things. and, if you're talking about incorrect claims understood in the literal sense (such as the universe being Created in "six days", at least one "day" of which occurred before there was a sun to measure "days" by) then i would suggest that it is the understanding of the Text that is faulty and incorrect rather than the Text itself.
there's nothing wrong with logic or reason except the tiny word "axiom". but it is rather an important word - and the axioms of Torah and logic are different. it's a different system of thought - parallel but not inferior.
We observe phenomena that we do not understand and attempt to replicate and interpret it.
the jewish religion is an attempt to observe a Text that we have and attempt to reconstruct and interpret the system that it drives. the entire Oral Law is an attempt to record the reverse-engineering of the system.
There is no statement anywhere in any Jewish text that claims you have to pick one Pharisaic or Rabbinic philosopher and worship them like a God and agree with everything they say on every issue.
that's not what i'm suggesting. what i am saying is that you can call rambam a rationalist all you like, but you can't ignore the fact that he is also a believer in Revelation and prophecy. and, if he believes in those things, surely you cannot claim that he would be willing to ditch them for the sake of reason? certainly other authorities disagree with his 13 principles, for all sorts of reasons, but i personally think that they are a brilliant identification of the axioms of judaism, that cannot be rationalised or explained or broken down further. in other words, they can only by justified by religious belief, not by any reason or rationalisation. you cannot prove them or find evidence thereof - they can only be believed. or not.
It would be ridiculous to suppose that one has to agree with everything another person says whether they are originally willing to do so or not.
so where does that leave
na'aseh ve-nishm'a - "we shall DO and [then] we shall understand"? look, there are certain things that are obligatory whether we understand them or not or whether we are willing or not to do them. of course, this is only a position held within "orthodoxy" (horrid word, should be "orthopraxy").
Do all Reconstructionist Jews accept every aspect of R. Kaplan's theology? Absolutely not! Do all Conservative Jews agree with everything R. Hirsch taught? Not at all.
but that's the point. do all orthodox jews accept the authority of r. joseph karo, author of the shulhan aruch? yes, absolutely. whether he is the final word on an issue, however, is an entirely different matter. i had an argument recently with someone who is a black-hat wearer, when i asked what authority made it compulsory. it turned out to be the "chofetz chayim", who is C19th and ashkenazi. now i can't see how that can possibly be a binding commitment for me - i'm not even ashkenazi. the point is that "orthodoxy" is a somewhat more fluid (not to mention recent) concept than the kiruv organisations and artscroll would have us believe. halakhic authority, however, though similar in many ways, is not, at least to my way of thinking, up for grabs for anyone whow wants it. certainly, if i want to know something and i can't work it out for myself (or am not willing to risk getting it wrong) i ask my rav, or someone who knows their stuff.
How do you test if what a prophet who speaks of the future says is true? Well, the Jewish way has been to wait until something happens and see if the prophecy actually happened.
that's the empirical way. the jewish way is to follow the halakhic procedure codified, at least in part, by rambam.
However, failing to attempt to understand natural phenomena that we can observe and test is nothing but presumptuous in the face of our G!D.
this is also an ancient halakhic principle known as
ha'olam noheg keminhago - "the world carries on according to its custom". what that means is that the cosmos has been Designed to work a particular way and to function according to certain natural laws, ie, the laws that scientific endeavour is devoted to discovering, like, say, gravity. the sages say that you should expect these natural laws to go on functioning regardless of your actions. in other words, if you fall off a roof, all the prayer in the world is unlikely to affect the operation of the applicable physical laws. don't expect to be able to observe the flouting of these laws - the world just isn't like that.
b'shalom
bananabrain