"Faith" is nothing but an anti-anxiety placebo, at most, that does not add anything substantively epistemic to claims made on that basis. — 180 Proof
If a belief cannot be warranted and yet is claimed to be true, assent to it is unwarranted, or indistinguishable in the circumstance from being false. It's patently false to claim a mere idea (i.e. unwarranted belief, opinion, fantasy, etc) is warranted when it is not. — 180 Proof
"False belief" (i.e. make-believe, delusion) is "faith" — 180 Proof
We can also agree that bread alone is bad. "Faith" may be a viable suppliment, it's just not a necessary or indispensible one, and doesn't sustain either body or mind for very long compared to bread (& water). Reason, contemplation, aesthetics (e.g. literature, music), friendship, love, family, scientific inquiry, etc are viable alternatives to "faith" separately or in combinations. I've never had need of "faith" even, so far, in my darkest, most harrowing moments (which, raised and educated Catholic yet never relapsing to / overwhelmed by subconsciously "religious" imagery or feelings, has surprised me ). — 180 Proof
I also try to live by Hillel the Elder's golden rule. So what does "faith" have to do with any of that? — 180 Proof
Evidence warranting assent to this statement is, I think, overwhelming: living by faith alone, a person will starve long before s/he'll starve from living by bread alone. — 180 Proof
↪180 Proof Placebos do require faith. Without it they don't work
— Janus
This one.
— 180 Proof
10/10
Let the faithless behold! That's made my day. :) — bert1
I would take issue with the first sentence of the quote. I must have faith in the Covid vaccine to allow it to be administered. Lots of people have this faith. People who lack faith do not take the vaccine. There are people for whom no amount of evidence will instill faith and they will still refuse. So faith is necessary. But I am sure that this need for faith does not prove the vaccine's inefficacy. — Cuthbert
“If one must have faith in order to believe something, or believe in something, then the likelihood of that something having any truth or value is considerably diminished. — Corvus
Jefferson apparently had more ideas in his head than he knew what to do with. — Bitter Crank
Frederick Wiseman has made a series of films like those you describe: His camera observes people going about their day in various institutions--mental hospital, emergency room, welfare office, high school and numerous other places. There's no narration, no comment, no interpretation provided. The films are a history, not the history. — Bitter Crank
1776 or 1619? Either, neither, both. — Bitter Crank
under a libertarian view you can do whatever you want with your property — Oppyfan
C. It is immoral to stop someone from having sex with their dog — Oppyfan
Haven’t had a hemorrhoid flair up in years after I started squatting while poohing. Apparently we’ve evolved doing it squatting and there’s much less resistance or pressure doing it that way. — praxis
What you said here is germane to the issue I raise in this thread. Work isn't just about survival then, it also has the added feature of empowering people through money — TheMadFool
By the way, I really like your writing style. :up: — TheMadFool
What bothers me is no one really wants to work. — TheMadFool
If someone took a single drop of water of finite size from an infinite ocean would it actually be taking from the ocean? — TiredThinker
You're really young. Perhaps if you had a better understanding of what gay people have had to go through to get where they are today, it would give you a better perspective. — T Clark
People gender each other from an early age and are gendered. It's at a level of learning much like grammar. — Bylaw
Wow, I forgot about the Shriners. — Noble Dust
, I want to boycott China because of Hong Kong and the Uighurs, and I've been working towards that for quite some time now. Some things I've noticed. — Benkei
have a question:
What is the purpose of a debate? What is attempted to be accomplished by a debate — baker
hate debates. It is the folly of the age to reduce every important or pleasant activity to a mere competition. Even fishing! I await with despair the first series of The Great British Fuck Off *. — unenlightened
far as I know, Hanover is still looking for a running mate. — T Clark
It's not clear that this is what all actual monotheists mean by God being necessary (apart from those in particular who argue like the above). Rather, the necessity of God's existence in monotheism is to be understood in contradistinction with the optionality or relativity of human existence, as in: God is necessary, but man is not; man is only optional. — baker
If God is a necessary being, his existence is entailed by the rules of logic.
— Hanover
I'm not so sure. Kripke broke the link between necessity and the a priori; do you want to put it back? Do we have grounds to do so? — Banno
You are doing an Apollonius. Or however he spells his name. Reducing an argument to bare naysaying. — god must be atheist
Then it was a third party that made the rules and the debating partners agreed to heed to them. — god must be atheist
