Spiritual beliefs are part of each person’s personal belief system. Empirical beliefs are part of sorting the confidence in a claim.
Empirical beliefs are part of the normal sorting of ideas. They are claims about the material world that can be tested through observation, evidence, and measurement. Reliable public methods increase confidence in all types of ideas when reality pushes back in favor of them. Germs cause disease. The Earth orbits the Sun. Humans evolved from earlier life forms. These are empirical beliefs because they directly describe things we’ve checked against our shared reality. In the spiritual world, an example is meditation. We can empirically measure things like heart rate when someone meditates.
A spiritual belief is different. It is a type of belief, not a truth category. Your spirituality helps you with your identity, morality, and even managing your suffering. A belief can provide hope for unknown things or provide a deeper purpose. It’s the idea that consciousness is just material or not. Karma as guiding rebirth or not. God exists or not. The universe has a spiritual essence beyond awe or not.
Spiritual beliefs may feel important, but they still need to be sorted before entering public belief. Empirical beliefs directly describe the material world and must answer to observation. Rational beliefs describe reality indirectly through logic and coherence. Spiritual beliefs often explore the rational, speculative, unknown, or unknowable parts of life. They can be meaningful without being empirically established.
So:
If a spiritual belief makes a claim about the material world, it must accept empirical testing.
If it cannot be tested, it should be held with humility. If it has been disproven, it should be released as truth, though it may still survive pragmatically as art, ritual, or personal reflection.