What is the point? — SteveMinjares
You shouldn’t care what others think and believe. — SteveMinjares
To me asking why we believe is insinuating that you have doubts about your own convictions and are considering other faith or ideals — SteveMinjares
So why ask the question, if you don’t care? — SteveMinjares
I am a Christian cause it bring me joy and happiness — SteveMinjares
Happiness shouldn’t be rationalized — SteveMinjares
Is a belief that I follow that release me from my anxiety and depression, it brings positive thinking and optimists to my life — SteveMinjares
What is so irrational about pursuing happiness? Why is this concept so hard to understand? — SteveMinjares
But don’t pass these philosophical questioning about God as intellectual reasoning you aren’t fooling any one. We all know is a desire to express stereotyping and discriminator thinking. — SteveMinjares
If believing that the Earth is flat and wearing a aluminum foil hat gives them security and happiness what right do we have to take that way. — SteveMinjares
What is the benefit or justification for assuming a proposition is false, before it has been proven true or false? Making assumptions goes directly against the spirit of reason. Every mistake in reason amounts to making some assumption. Prove everything, assume nothing. That's the motto of reason .I can agree with most of that, but I think skepticism is more than being open to something being false. I would define it more like assuming something isnt true until there are good reasons to believe it is true. The skeptic says “prove it.”. — DingoJones
What is the benefit or justification for assuming a proposition is false — Yohan
What is the benefit or justification for assuming a proposition is false, before it has been proven true or false? — Yohan
faith-base thinkers are stupid people and stero-typing them as low intelligent individuals. — SteveMinjares
As long as someone keeps their evidence-free, faith-based, merely private beliefs which makes them happy to themselves, that will make the rest of us happy, and we'll then have a win-win kumbaya shared commons happening. Keep private beliefs without public warrant private; make private assertions public without public warrants disrespects, or assaults, private/public assertions with public warrants; so one ought to avoid doing that. An epistemic imperative (WK Clifford, Peirce, Dewey, et al) — 180 Proof
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