And before anyone hackles with this - remember, you want to know. I don't. Knowing won't bring me bread tomorrow. Neither will it help me treat others more fairly, or make society more just, nor yet improve the condition of my soul. But I do want to believe. Why? Well I find it to be a very beautiful story - as I said before, the most beautiful that can be told. It inspires me - it does improve the condition of my soul. And that's that. — Agustino
It's just a matter of whether it's a fact or not. It's a fact that a lack of bias isn't possible. I'm not going to adopt some position that's factually incorrect just because people like it better, or just because I'd prefer if the facts were different than they are.Well that's a nice way of rationalizing being prejudiced, by saying that you don't believe a lack of bias is possible. I suppose you could rationalize any form of immorality in this way, by saying that you don't believe restraining from such an immoral act is possible. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, "I believe that x is incoherent" is different than "I believe x, which is incoherent." If you're going to go with the snobby/we-disagree-because-you're-inferior-to-me approach to criticizing my views, at least have a handle on basic reading comprehension and reasoning skills.So you're saying that you believe things which are incoherent, — Metaphysician Undercover
It's just a matter of whether it's a fact or not. It's a fact that a lack of bias isn't possible. — Terrapin Station
If you're going to go with the snobby/we-disagree-because-you're-inferior-to-me approach to criticizing my views, at least have a handle on basic reading comprehension and reasoning skills. — Terrapin Station
I deem things absurd or nonsense when I believe that they're incoherent, basically. It's not at all the case that just in case I disagree with something, I think it's incoherent. But some things I believe are incoherent. — Terrapin Station
There are no facts about what (objectively) counts as perfection.Sure, and it's a fact that no human being is morally perfect, — Metaphysician Undercover
I'd suggest first following my lead by practicing reasonable reading comprehension and not forwarding straw man arguments. Want to give it a shot?Right, so we should all take you lead, try to be as biased as possible, and deem those beliefs which people hold, that are inconsistent with our own, as incoherent, absurd nonsense? — Metaphysician Undercover
No, I'm not about to start making my philosophical decisions based on what "I feel is good". — Metaphysician Undercover
Any evaluative assessment you make, so aesthetic, moral, etc. assessments, are made based on how you feel about things, so whether you want to do that or not, you can't help it insofar as you're engaging in those sorts of assessments. — Terrapin Station
It is probably the case that you do, in fact, make philosophical decisions based on what you feel is good. This isn't a bug in you, it's a feature of human beings. Emotion WILL affect how we think whether we like it or not. — Bitter Crank
I don't have much difficulty dealing with emotions in respect to philosophical decisions. I take my time, and think things through. In some other situations, it is more difficult to deal with the emotions.Emotions are part of the way we think. We can't separate them out. We just have to deal with them. — Bitter Crank
1. Was Jesus' resurrection only a work of literature with no physical grounds that such a thing occurred? — saw038
2. Was Jesus' resurrection a true story that transcended the realm of physical laws as we currently perceive them? — saw038
Emotions are part of the way we think. We can't separate them out. We just have to deal with them. — Bitter Crank
If we accept that the bible can't prove the validity of itself, since that's a form of fallacy, — Christoffer
The problem with this argument is that the Bible is a collection of writings, not one single writing by one single person. When we collect together a number of different accounts of the same event, and they corroborate each other, it may be argued that they prove the validity of each other. Such proof can never be absolutely conclusive though, as is evident from conspiracy. — Metaphysician Undercover
1. Was Jesus' resurrection only a work of literature with no physical grounds that such a thing occurred?
2. Was Jesus' resurrection a true story that transcended the realm of physical laws as we currently perceive them? — saw038
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