incidentally, about this dogma that 'faith is belief without evidence'. The believer will say that the world itself evidences divine providence. There may not be evidence in the sense of double-blind experimental data across sample populations of X thousand persons. But the testimony of sages, the proper interpretation of religious texts, and the varieties of religious experience all constitute evidence, although of course all of that may equally be disregarded. The will not to believe is just as strong as the will to believe. — Wayfarer
Banno, is it possible you are a little biased against me? — Fire Ologist
You sound to me like you have no idea what faith is. And no curiosity. — Fire Ologist
As long as we don't use this to settle an argument or determine that it's true for everyone — Tom Storm
:smile:I can't help it either. — Tom Storm
"Are you not entertained?""the gladiatorial theory of philosophy" — J
Banno's argument that faith may bring about immoral acts unfolds through a critical and pragmatic lens, emphasizing the consequences of acting on belief without sufficient justification. His argument can be outlined as follows:
1. Faith involves acting on belief without sufficient evidence
Premise: Faith, particularly religious or blind faith, is often characterized by belief in something without (or beyond) empirical or rational justification.
Banno frequently targets faith that forgoes critical evaluation, emphasizing that such belief is often sustained despite contrary evidence or lack of evidence.
2. Actions based on such faith can have real-world consequences
Premise: Beliefs are not isolated—they lead to actions.
Faith is not a passive attitude but something that motivates behavior, often with social or moral implications.
3. Those consequences can be harmful or immoral
Premise: Because faith-based actions bypass critical scrutiny, they can lead to outcomes that violate ethical norms or cause real harm.
Examples alluded to in discussion:
Religious extremism
Faith-driven violence or discrimination
Obedience to divine commands (e.g., Abraham and Isaac) without moral deliberation
4. Therefore, faith is not inherently virtuous and can lead to immorality
Conclusion: Faith, contrary to popular or religious belief, is not a moral good in itself. Instead, its value depends on its consequences.
Banno argues that faith should be assessed pragmatically—by its effects in the world—not held as a virtue independent of outcomes.
Supporting moves in his argument:
He challenges interlocutors who define faith as inherently good or virtuous.
He uses philosophical and theological examples (e.g., Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice Isaac) to show how acts praised as faithful might, under ordinary moral reasoning, be considered repugnant or immoral.
He stresses that if one is "never fully informed", then acting on such incomplete faith is especially dangerous.
Meta-point: Faith resists correction
Another subtle but important part of Banno's critique is that faith-based beliefs are resistant to revision, since they are often held as immune to counterevidence.
This makes it harder to check or restrain immoral consequences once someone is acting in faith.
Summary:
Banno’s structure is a pragmatic-ethical critique:
Faith motivates action
Action has consequences
Faith bypasses critical scrutiny
Therefore, it can lead to harmful consequences
Thus, faith is not inherently good and may be a source of immorality — ChatGPT
Others argue that faith is a rational response when evidence is lacking but action is required. They suggest that faith allows individuals to make decisions and maintain emotional stability in the face of uncertainty.
Some contributors redefine faith as trust in authority or societal systems, which is often necessary for functioning in complex societies. This interpretation challenges the notion that faith is exclusively religious or inherently prone to leading to immoral acts.
Another line of response views faith as an a-rational or experiential phenomenon that transcends empirical evidence. Participants discuss faith in terms of personal experience, intuition, or as a necessary component of certain practices like Zen koans. This perspective suggests that faith can be a meaningful and purposeful aspect of human experience, not necessarily leading to immorality.
Some forum members express concern that Banno's argument may oversimplify the concept of faith by focusing solely on its potential for harm. They advocate for a more nuanced understanding that considers the various forms and functions of faith in human life. This highlights the complexity of defining faith and the importance of context in evaluating its moral implications. — ChatGPT
You'd be wrong. And not just in laying the blame on David Lewis.I think... — Wayfarer
This site seems to contain a lot of strong voices advocating theism or views related to higher consciousness or transcendence. — Tom Storm
Nor do I, except that almost universally, when one points out a flaw in their position, the comeback is a denigration of the critic rather than a response to the criticism.As long as the theists are not evangelising, or abusive, I don't mind. — Tom Storm
Speculating: I think some theists believe they have read all the right philosophy and theology and have many of the answers and that modern secular culture is debased and decadent. They're probably angry about the state of the world, and when they encounter people with views they've identified as the cause of contemporary troubles, they lash out. — Tom Storm
I would claim that water was not H2O before Lavoisier. — Moliere
1. I hold X to be true
2. Therefore, I am committed to saying that Joe, who holds ~X, is holding to a falsehood
The question is, "What is Joe, according to me?" Certainly he is wrong. Is he ignorant? Possibly, depending on one's definition. Is he acting in bad faith? No, not necessarily. — Leontiskos
The problem with this sort of "argument from psychoanalysis" is that they are very easy to develop...
Such arguments might be plausible, or even true to varying degrees, but they don't actually address the real issue at hand. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Phhhh.That you are caused to so reason? — J
The problem with this sort of "argument from psychoanalysis" is that they are very easy to develop.[/quote
Of course; I quite agree. Furthermore, even if the account I gave of Klima's motivation is true, it does not impact the validity of the argument in the article.
Their use is in setting out in general terms the territory in which the discussion is taking place. Kinda like claiming that Wittgenstein on Laws is a variation on Hume or Parmenides. Or saying things such as "Moderns come to define freedom in terms of potency", as if "moderns" were a monoculture.
We have found some agreement.
— Count Timothy von Icarus
Perhaps it is worth noting that while before Cavendish announced the composition to the Royal Society in 1784, we didn't know that water was H₂O, water was nevertheless H₂O before his announcement.2. Water was not H2O before 19th century chemistry. — Leontiskos
That seem quite mistaken. And on either account of essence.I would claim that water was not H2O before Lavoisier. — Moliere
An unusual phrasing, but I supose modal logic apples to impossible worlds and is what shows them to contain the contradictions that render them impossible.If all we wish to do is save any aspect of modal reasoning so as to avoid absolute collapse, we have to show such a thing as modal reasoning exists in impossible worlds. — Hanover
Yep.That is, can I not logically reason based upon the antecedent without the antecedent being true in this world? That seems what modal logic is. — Hanover
Now, in the present, certain things have certain potentials. Joe might potentially be asleep at 10 PM or be awake then. A rock, by contrast, cannot be asleep or awake. So, we can speak about possibilities in the future according to the ways in which things in the present possess potentiality. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Of course. And it is also, after Kripke, clearly qualified with "in the same possible world". To ask what might have happened if Caesar had not crossed the Rubicon is not to ask what might have happened if Caesar had both crossed and not crossed the Rubicon.There is no problem with time. The law of noncontradiction is clearly qualified with "at the same time". — Metaphysician Undercover
I hope it is clear, and as the Roman example given above exemplifies, possible worlds can be about the past as well as the future. If we accept rigid designation, the possible Caesar who did not cross the Rubicon is the very same as the actual Caesar who did. That that is, "what might have happened if Caesar had not crossed the Rubicon" is a question about Caesar, and not about some other person in some other possible world who happens to have the same name.As you and I discussed the "possible world" is how we relate to the future. — Metaphysician Undercover
As previously explained, this is addressed in a Kripke-style answer to the sea battle problem. Will there be a sea battle tomorrow? Two possible worlds are accessible, one in which the sea battle occurs, the other in which it does not. As things stand, today we do not know which is the actual world, tomorrow night we will. But the accessibility response is not limited to temporality, in the way your response is....we need to be clear to distinguish between the "ontological possibility" of the future... and the "epistemic possibility" of the past... — Metaphysician Undercover
Then, by p(x)⊃☐p(x), I would be you in the actual world, which is false. So I don't see that Meta can get even to this."if I were you... — Hanover
Well for Meta, it must be, since it supposes the possibility that he is correct, and it must follow from p(x)⊃☐p(x) that he is necessarily correct...isn't your analysis of Meta's argument a contradiction of your argument. — Hanover
I'm happy to join in. Is ice still water? Good question.To keep whittling away... — Richard B
This is modal collapse. There are no possible worlds. It imposes metaphysical essentialism on the system. Meta’s view amounts to a denial of genuine modality.□(P(x)) for any property P that x has in the actual world.
Mostly I think it would be great if we could discuss religious topics without anti-religious evangelization constantly occurring. — Leontiskos
Evangelists: Those who must convince everyone that their religion, ideology, political persuasion, or philosophical theory is the only one worth having. — Site Guidelines
Is that "other" advised? As in, would you consider yourself an 'essentialist'? If so, may I ask what would that involve - that things have a set of characteristics which make them what they are, and that the task of science and philosophy is their discovery and expression? Or that essence precedes existence?...other essentialists... — Apustimelogist
