If your opinion was changed by an experience doesn't it mean a new kind of experience can change you back to where you were? — Benjamin Dovano
Necessary conditions for my notion of personhood include consciousness, self-consciousness, non-predictable response to stimuli, possession of emotions, preferences and making plans for the future — andrewk
it would not seem to be possible to experience the absence of God. — John
I'm surprised that some of you don't seem to understand that Colin's testimony was never meant to be an argument for the existence of God. I don't think Colin would expect you to be convinced on account of his experience. His testimony was to the effect that the nature of the experience was such that he could not but be convinced by it. I understood it as a kind of exhortation to others for them to invite that kind of transformative experience into their own lives. — John
I cannot see anywhere in the OP where he gives a process of reasoning for his belief in God. He specifically says his belief is simply on account of experience. — John
And now no amount of well-conceived and consistent argument would detract from that. I now know God exists. It's a certainty in my eyes. And there can be no alternate understanding for me any more.
These experiences have rendered the arguments of atheists quite laughable, and almost desperate to me. Where I used to find them somewhat compelling and impressive. Extremely impressive, but never convincing. Very well constructed bullshit basically. — colin
No, I don't read it that way. I would say that, if the honesty of his account be granted, he became utterly convinced at the moment of experience, and that his testimony is merely a retrospective account of that. Other possibilities are ruled out simply because the utter conviction that had its inception with the experience remains, and the other possibilities pale into insignificance for Colin, on account of the strength of that conviction. — John
His account is still not a good reason for others to believe in God... — John
...but it is a good reason to be open to the possibility of transformative experiences as foundations of the deepest kinds of conviction. — John
I'm surprised that some of you don't seem to understand that Colin's testimony was never meant to be an argument for the existence of God. I don't think Colin would expect you to be convinced on account of his experience. His testimony was to the effect that the nature of the experience was such that he could not but be convinced by it. I understood it as a kind of exhortation to others for them to invite that kind of transformative experience into their own lives. If you haven't enjoyed that kind of experience yourself, then it would seem to be unjustified to reject it, or the beliefs that proceed from it, out of hand. — John
You've said both (1) that unless there's internal inconsistency or blatant contradiction in what a person claims, the experience can be assumed to be no other than the description of it, and we have no grounds for saying it's false, AND (2) that we can reject a person's claim if we think we have "sufficient reason" to reject it.
So which is it? — Brainglitch
I agree, in the case of a tree, provided we have not witnessed the destruction of the tree*. And I agree in the case of an uninterested God, like the one that is associated with some varieties of Deism.We can posit that a tree of some very precise description does not exists anywhere in the universe, but we cannot experience its non-existence — John
Your examples and attitude seems so typical of what I call the 'intellectual mediocracy' as to be somewhat laughable. Although I have to say I find mediocrity more tragic than laughable especially when it comes to good intellects. — John
If Colin's own experience is not the best foundation for his beliefs then what is? — John
The opinions of others who don't even know the nature of his experience? The opinions of the majority or "common sense"? — John
Yes, unless you have had such an experience, you understandably would not be able to imagine it. It would be like a man deaf from birth trying to imagine music. — John
If Colin's own experience is not the best foundation for his beliefs then what is? The opinions of others who don't even know the nature of his experience? The opinions of the majority or "common sense"? There's mediocrity and its intellectual mediocracy in operation right there! — John
So, his judgement is not a matter for him, but rather
a matter for... who?,,,You? — John
Whose reason? What kind of evidence? This is hilarious! :s >:O :D X-) >:) ;) :-} :-d — John
No, he posted here to let would-be philosophers know that he has come to a belief which is precisely not up for discussion because it has not been arrived by a process of deduction, induction or abduction but rather by a leap of faith based directly on experiences he has had. If he presents a deductive, inductive or abductive argument then for sure he would be open to critique. But as it stands, with the information he has given, any attempted critique will necessarily be 'talking out of an arse'. — John
What is reasonable? Reason, thought as logic, must be valid. But arguments are always based on premises, which cannot themselves be demonstrated. — John
People may believe for reasons; that is a different matter. Instead of taking an unsupported premise, and assuming that, constructing a valid argument from it, one can simply take an experience, an intuitive feeling and count that as a reason for belief; in fact one can be so certain of a belief on this kind of basis that they cannot be touched by the doubts of others. Others simply don't know the experience and the intuition on which the certainty is based. — John
But, you probably won't experience this kind of certainty, because you seem to be desperately worried about the possibility that if you veer form the dictates of mediocratic 'reason' a terrible tragedy might occur; you might actually turn out to have been wrong! ;) — John
Without identifying what has been claimed to have been experienced, how can you have sufficient reason to reject the claim?
Here's the difficulty. We have only the person's words to refer to in order to make that identification. The person said "I had an experience which makes me know that God exists". The experience has been identified as the experience which has resulted in me knowing that God exists. The person has only given us, as a description, or identifying features, that the said experience makes him know that God exists. All we have is the outcome of the experience, the result, the effect, we have absolutely no description of the experience itself. It is impossible that we have sufficient reason to reject the description of the experience, because we have no description of the experience. What we have is a description of the effects of the experience.
The effects of the experience are described as "I know that God exists". The only way that we have sufficient reason to reject the claim that an experience could cause one to know that God exists, is if we know that God does not exist, or if God's existence is something which cannot be known from experience. Then we could say that no possible experience could cause one to know that God exists. Therefore we could reject the identified experience, the one which results in the individual knowing that God exists, as impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
Brain, I think the mistake you are making lies in thinking of the 'entities' encountered in mystical experiences in terms such that they must be either determinate quasi-empirical beings or else merely imaginary. I can tell you that for the person who experiences such presences, this either/ or question completely misses the mark. It is simply irrelevant to the question of their belief for the person who has first hand experiences of this kind. You are attempting to project your own kinds of worries and concerns onto another for whom such worries and concerns have no significance or importance at all.
You are in effect, saying, "you should be worried about, consumed by, these kinds of epistemic issues like I am". The question is: why should they be concerned with such issues, when such issues no longer matter to them at all? What do you actually think these people are losing? Not everyone is obsessed with the idea of avoiding being 'hoodwinked'; if you are like that then you will likely never have such an experience to be in the position to feel and assess firsthand its power to convince you. You will remain forever on the outside looking in, so to speak. — John
Surely you are skeptical of uncountable reports of such experiences--those, for instance that don't feature your own favorite supernatural characters? — Brainglitch
And I think that consistency, which includes avoiding special pleading, is important, and seems to favour atheism, since questionable exceptions to a more sceptical position often seem to be made by non-atheists with regards to the existence of God. — Sapientia
Are you similarly encouraging of openness to the possibility of encountering Big Foot or the Lock Ness monster? — Sapientia
ignore questions — Brainglitch
What precludes that there might be a plurality of spiritual beings, or that the reality of those beings might be linked to the different spirits of different cultures? — John
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