Tomo wrote:Here's my current favourite:

Oh dear. There is nothing wrong with faith and no reason why it has to sit in opposition to scientific method. Such a view is, quite frankly, narrow minded. By faith I don't mean a blind, unquestioning following of authority, but a firm conviction based on experience. Let me give you a personal example. I am a Buddhist, generally following one of the Tibetan models. In Buddhism (and other Eastern mystical traditions) one encounters the idea that one can attain to higher states of consciousness through meditation. These states are called Dhyana. Dhyana states start off fairly coarsely rising through the different levels until you come to the formless dhyanas (the spheres of infinite space, infinite consciousness, nothingness and the sphere of neither perception nor non perception). I have no experience of the formless dhyanas but I have no doubt in my mind that they exist. This is because I know people who have and, more importantly, I have had experience in some of the lower Dhyanas. Faith on the basis of experience.
Faith is the basis of all spiritual endeavour. In fact, in the Buddhist tradition faith, which is a rough and fairly poor translation of the word
sraddha (Sanskrit), is said to be present in every single positive mental state. Again, this is not a blind faith, but one that rests on one's own experience, which is the only thing one can rely on when it comes to spiritual matters.
Incidentally, I wholeheartedly approve of and International Blasphemy Day and would like to offer this: Avalokitesvara wept!