I believe the most important part in any God discussion is to identify if the belief, or truth claim is based on fact, reason, or faith. Arguments based on fact on God are not really relevant. In one says God is, is fact, it is not really worth a continued discussion. And I find the biggest disconnects when one person is making a faith based argument and getting an argument of reason back. Important that both parties are "Godspeaking" from the same basis. — Rank Amateur
Godsplaining: the act of explaining God and/or God’s actions, preferences, nature, personality, etc, usually in extreme detail.
It appears that speaking without a shred of modesty, doubt, or hesitancy about God might seem inspired or confident to some; and seem arrogant and presumptive to others. Is this just preference or a matter of taste or tradition? — 0 thru 9
All other God claims that I can think of are matters of faith - and discussions are theological not philosophical. Fun to have none the less.
I think where the theist lives in philosophy is a simple claim that belief in God is not in conflict with fact or reason. — Rank Amateur
I asked God about this, and He said it pisses Him off too. — unenlightened
If one believes the gods are real, they are always (and of necessity) inscrutable. So... explanations are in order. — Bitter Crank
As bc implies, the prior assumption of a single capitalizable (g)od is quite a leap. I love to talk about gods but God is a rather more specific phenomenon. — mcdoodle
I live in Massachusetts. People don't talk much about God in a casual way here. I've spent time in Alabama, where they do. They talk about God the way we, and they, talk about the weather, politics, or sports. It's a constantly present factor in their day to day lives and those they know. What you call Godsplaining is just the way they live. — T Clark
Also, how many people on the forum speak about their beliefs "without a shred of modesty, doubt, or hesitancy?" To a certain extent, singling out religion probably reflects what you see as important and unimportant. — T Clark
Godsplaining: the act of explaining God and/or God’s actions, preferences, nature, personality, etc, usually in extreme detail. — 0 thru 9
No, sorry if that was the impression or message you got. That was not the intent.Are you proposing that its general usefulness or otherwise could somehow be logically or empirically established? — Janus
Having the golden goose and not being tempted to open it up to find even more treasure. — 0 thru 9
And then the mysterious old woman who evidently had great magical powers said, "You can do any thing you want to do, except for one thing: Leave the golden-egg laying goose alone. DO NOT," she said--looking me dead in the eye, "I repeat, DO NOT harass, interrogate (enhanced or otherwise), annoy, x-ray, PET scan, MRI, ultra-sound, palpate, or cut into the golden-egg laying goose. The penalties will be most SEVERE!" And then she disappeared. — Fractured Fairy Tales...
I think expressing any opinion about God counts as theology; although it obviously doesn't have to be good theology.... — Janus
When anyone talks about God in any sense at all, I look to see if they have defined or qualified "God" in any way at all. Usually not. — tim wood
Some very smart people over at least 2300 years have tried to fathom the concept, and with some approach to unanimity they have concluded that God is unknowable. — tim wood
Ok, sure. That may indeed be. Personally, I would neither say that God is unknowable, nor would I say that God is knowable. Basically, any statement of others or mine that began “God is... ” is at best a provisional theory, at worst an bold assumption. Not necessarily a bad thing though. Leaps of faith are one’s soul’s choice. Leaps or lapses of logic are better not ignored. I would imagine that possibly makes for an even stronger faith, even though it is itself beyond mere rationality. — 0 thru 9
It's a reflex to suggest that nonsense can transmute into sense - it cannot, by itself. Where there is realization or epiphany in the presence of nonsense, there is always some other ingredient, some catalyst. To my way of thinking it is the catalyst that's worth capturing and making explicit.
Charity in the face of nonsense is, well, charitable. Beyond that, it's a mistake. Nonsense always comes with price tag - payment not optional. — tim wood
So the point is that when listening to God-mongers keep your hand on your wallet, your eye on your watch, your feet pointed toward the exit, and at least part of your mind actively monitoring your well-being. — tim wood
There is an apparent prejudiced in the above that beliefs held by faith to be true, have less value than beliefs held by reason. I am not sure why that is in any way true. The real tension comes when faith is in conflict with fact or reason. It which case it loses all value. — Rank Amateur
As indulgence, sure; there can be a time and place for indulgence. Just that most folks have no idea what the boundaries are for indulgence. Indulgences are for children, or for the child in us. But they require the hand of a responsible adult. Lacking that governance, indulgence becomes nightmare.one can have many model cars and toy vehicles. As long as one doesn’t try to drive them on the freeway, it is fine for all. — 0 thru 9
I might know what you are saying here. But could you expand on it somewhat when you can? Thanks. — 0 thru 9
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