I expect so, but do you expect it to ever convince anybody to change their view, other than the occasional rare exception?The debate itself will forever be on fire. — Modern Conviviality
What details? I'm simply asking whether you are telling us something about yourself - which is how the OP reads - or making a judgement on anybody that feels differently, in particular, people who believe in some deity or other. — andrewk
If it's just telling, then thank you. It's always rewarding to know more about others' thoughts and feelings. If on the other hand it's a judgement, and especially a judgement that people who believe in a deity are irrational or in some other way poor thinkers, whom are you judging, for what beliefs, and what are the grounds for your judgement? — andrewk
But "I don't give a damn about whether or not God exists" is not the same thing as "God? What is that?" (with or without the shrug). The first is true indifference. The second is curiosity. If your current example is supposed to replace the first one, then I have no further comment to make about it. (While still commending curiosity on all sides -- of all questions -- as the best intellectual stance, even though I recognize that we cannot be curious about all things, we must select, and selecting non-God stuff is a perfectly fine selection). — Mariner
If you say so. I just resent what I saw was the hinted suggestion that one cannot have any kind of autonomous space apart and extricated from the space of religious argument. As if this counted as some kind of intellectual 'handicap' or 'incuriosity'. As if people don't have a right (loosely taken) to ask religious argument to STFU and leave them alone, including (and sometimes especially) arguments from 'atheists' all too willing to play the God-game. — StreetlightX
There is no set meaning for "god" which I'm going by, so it makes zero sense to seek one from me. It's flexible. I believe that what I've said covers all bases, and if you disagree, then present what you consider to be an exception. But please don't just present again what you've already presented, because I have addressed that already. — S
I just resent what I saw was the hinted suggestion that one cannot have any kind of autonomous space apart and extricated from the space of religious argument. — StreetlightX
- S, you are talking about dogs, but I don't know what you mean by the word. What is a dog?
- I'm flexible. There is no set meaning for 'dog' that I am going by. It makes zero sense to seek one from me.
If this is how you approach queries about the meanings of words that you use, there is not much to be said. To request from me an explanation of the word that you are using is quite wrongheaded, of course. (So much so that it would be a sure recipe for confusion in any debate about anything if it were universalized).
But I won't insist. — Mariner
If their belief isn't hurting anyone - ideally I'm not trying to ritually sacrifice myself - then I wouldn't really have any reason to. And if I am trying to sacrifice me to the Gods I think I have bigger issues than theology. — StreetlightX
Only if one is curious about that, which seems to bring things back to Mariner's point about curiosity.It would make sense to first examine why they believe what they do, wouldn't it? — S
but do you expect it to ever convince anybody to change their view, other than the occasional rare exception? — andrewk
Only if one is curious about that, which seems to bring things back to Mariner's point about curiosity.
Is that the purpose of the thread - that you are curious about other people's religious beliefs and why they hold them, and you want to learn more about that? — andrewk
Several people here hold the view that philosophical arguments about the existence of God are pointless because they don't convince very many people. — PossibleAaran
Your four instructions, or whatever you want to call them, haven't done a thing. We're no further towards any kind of meaningful or productive discussion. — S
Such arguments could be useful if they reveal to us that nobody can prove anything on either side. If we used such debates to discover that we are ignorant, and then we continued from there to look for ways to put this abundant resource to good use, that would be constructive. But of course, this rarely happens. — Jake
1) You've quoted the wrong instructions, illustrating that you were paying no attention when they were provided, even though you responded to the posts where they were provided. — Jake
2) We have accomplished something meaningful and productive. We've discovered that you aren't actually interested in challenging atheism in the very same way you reasonably challenge theism. More specifically, you aren't actually interested in my assistance in such a process, or you have done the tiny little job I gave you so that we could discover whether you are actually interested in such an analysis. — Jake
What you want to do is what you're currently doing. You want to have an entertaining ego contest flapdoodle. Ok, this is a Internuts forum, so go for it. If you'd like me to call you name I suppose I could do that much so as to advance your REAL agenda. — Jake
One of the problems with theist/atheist interactions is that they usually don't take the time to sort out the proper use of symbolism in discourse, and plunge into the debate without realizing that they are speaking different languages. — Mariner
The God of the philosophers is the only interesting God. — StreetlightX
Blessedly, no. And even if I did I wouldn't try and ween them off their belief, which would just be a recipe for disaster. — StreetlightX
Would you mind posting the correct instructions? — praxis
.Michael says:
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”Can you understand that science and logic don't apply to the matter of faith?”
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Epistemology certainly seems to apply, at least if the faithful one is making propositional claims about what does and doesn't exist and what is and isn't true.
.A problem that I see with divorcing faith from logic and evidenciary [He means “evidentiary”] justification…
.A problem that I see with divorcing faith from logic and evidenciary [He means “evidentiary”] justification…entirely is that it leaves the content of faith seemingly indistinguishable from the content of psychotic delusions.
.In the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, a delusion is defined as: A false belief based on incorrect inference about external reality that is firmly sustained despite what almost everybody else believes and despite what constitutes incontrovertible and obvious proof or evidence to the contrary.
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I'm inclined to define 'faith' as something like 'willingness to commit one's self to the truth of a belief when that belief is imperfectly justified.'
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