If you are looking for something material that you can perceive with your five senses, that would be difficult to provide since God is not made of matter but is rather the source of the materal world. It is like me asking you to give me empirical evidence that you have thoughts. You believe you have thoughts right?
But how do I know that? Can you provide empirical evidence? You can show me results of your thoughts such as this question or something you created, but can you prove that your thoughts are the source of these items?
Many thinkers have made a strong case for the existence of God mathematically and logically. Try reading Pascal or C.S. Lewis. One thing that Pascal says it that there is enough evidence for God to convince people who want to believe and enough evidence against to convince people who don't want to believe.So it really comes down to whether or not you want to believe.
Pascal also makes an excellent case for why it's the wiser choice to believe.
The best debate concerning this was between Christopher tchens and Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford, John Lennox. You probably will not see a better cerebral match up about the question and validity of religion. John Lennox as a scientist and also a devout christian who gave numerous historical references in regards to what he perceived as empirical evidence.
Most would assume considering his background in the hard sciences, he would be centered on logic and order for justification. This was were he based that irrefutable proof. However, that perspective is open to much attack and interpretation.
Richard Dawkins gives a great argument against - being a scientist himself and looking at the anti-order/chaos and randomness of the evolutionary creation of life. As a result, I do not see the empirical proof based on what senses we have as human beings. In essence, it becomes an easy cop out strategy to refer to the empirical by such bombastic highly self interpretative means of defining proof.To be honest, if empirical evidence was needed - one must first come to define what constitutes empirical evidence in light of the question.
There must be an agreement. Hard evidence no- soft evidence - yes/no depending on your belief, so in essence like the tchens/Lenox debate the answers were equally convincing but depending on your perspective unchanging.In the end, if you are religious there tends to be a more"open" definition of what constitutes empirical which in my book seems highly dubious since that very "open" perspective is not all encompassing to other facets of life. Ie: religious fundamentalism.
And so you know there is proof that thoughts and memories are not something you can see. It's been shown in studies that you can replace memories because theyre imprinted in proteins. Thoughts can be sensed as well, they're ultimately electrical and chemical transmissions.
Your counter argument is invalid.
To keep it simple. Jesus. Also look at Romans 1 vs;20.
Should answer your question.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.