I was pointing out that that there are important philosophical differences between faiths. You disagree?
Not everyone who acknowledges the supernatural is immune to reason and empiricism. Indeed the faculties by which the two are apprehended, though they are not the same, do not necessarily conflict, and in fact may harmonize. Rationalism and empiricism, like it or not, find their roots in Christian philosophical heritage. The theory that reason and revelation conflict discloses a profound ignorance of the history of rationalism and religion.
I quoted Aquinas, not
Malebranche. Aquinas saw reason and empiricism as part of providence. He included science in his philosophy as a path to truth. Though he defended faith, he did not scorn science, and was a more exacting rationalist than anyone in this thread. I'm with Spurster: the contradiction of science and faith is false.
The first clause swims back to my point; the second describes a point I never tried to make. Faith and reason are different faculties. The two do not conflate, but this does not mean they conflict: they aim at different objects, and are operationally dissimilar.