You know, I just thought of an interesting analogy to compare with the theological existance of God. Latenight will probably know exactly where I got this analogy from.
Rationalists like to think God doesn't exist because we have no recorded evidence of His existance. We have no sample or measurement that supports that He is actually out there somewhere, therefore science cannot confirm His existance. That is the foundation of science afterall, what can be measured or observed.
Now, lets talk geometry and physics for a moment. Let's say there is a point in space that has no volume. It has no length, no width, and no height. It is merely an empty point in space that can't even be filled in with matter without adding volume to it (which means changing it into something that is no longer a point). Such single points cannot be measured, recorded, or observed because they do not exist in our 3-Dimensional world or the 2-D world. However, they logically exist on some level that is far beneath our own dimension of space. According to a book by
Robert Bryanton, there are as many as 10 dimensional levels that we currently recognize in quantum physics.
Science can measure something that is on the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th dimensional level because these levels can be actively observed. Now, if God is truly as omnipotent as many of us believe, it is prudent to assume that He is on a dimensional level that is far above the 4th dimension, making Him impossible for us to actively perceive unless he comes down to our level of existance. With that, it is not that God doesn't exist. It's just that our science is currently not sufficient enough to measure beyond our dimension and those neighboring it.
This is all merely speculation, of course, but it adds an interesting twist on the typical perspective. Next time someone says that you can't prove God's existance because science can't prove it, tell them science can't prove a single point in space exists either, but we all know they do.