Orrr wrote:
That does seem similar to what I posted.
If general relativity was belief in God, and quantum mechanics atheism, would more people believe in GR because it is easier to explain.
And how can I infer something useful from that.
Well..for starters my advice to you would be to stop fighting against yourself like you're doing here, and reverse your thinking- try coming DOWN the ladder of abstraction rather than going UP the ladder of abstraction (if you wanna to either explain things to others, or grasp things yourself).
You're wresting with one abstract dichotomy (theism, atheism, and the certainty of either of those) by using an analogy to another even MORE complex, and more abstract dichotomy ( Einstein vs quantum theory). That way lies insanity.
My suggestion would be to bring things down to earth, and make things more tangible. Break things down before you trying building things back up again..
Take something more basic:like the question of "is the Earth flat, or round?" as an analogy.
For extremely primitive people the evidence available was that the earth was flat. But even in ancient times it became clear that there were indicators that the earth is round. And of course now we have space travel and can actually see that the earth looks spherical. So today the simplest hypothesis that explains the available evidence is that the earth is in fact spherical. If you wanna persist in being a flat earther you have to construct convoluted complicated stuff to explain away the evidence that its round. So round is simpler, and flat is more complex. So yes most folks buy into the round idea partially because its simpler. So yes folks are more persuaded by a simpler theory (as long as it explains the data you have). And not only that- according to Occam (in his "razor")-thats exactly what folks SHOULD do:the simplest theory that explains what you're seeing is usually (not sayin that there are not exceptions) the right explanation.