Why only religious beliefs? Lets throw in all beliefs, including scientific ones. — Tzeentch
Going by Kierkegaard or Pascal, you might reject evidence in favor of the act of belief as a probability of the reward or belief alone as meaningful in itself. — Christoffer
Therefore, religious belief will always lead to hateful, dangerous ideas at some point in time and the responsibility is on all people who believe something without sufficient evidence, rejecting evidence in favor of the necessity of faith or comfort in faith.
Because of this, religious belief is wrong as long as you at the same time agree that harm, harmful behavior, murder and hate to be negative and dangerous attributes of mankind. — Christoffer
Religion as passively accepted faith (inherited lifestyle) is not something one might necessarily choose. It happens to you as a consequence of cultural pressure or personal revelation.
If you are born in some Mormon family, love or respect could be conditional upon accepting certain ways of doing things. You don't really need believe at all. You just need to act as if you believe, follow rules, otherwise you get exiled (let go).
Some Muslim households will even kill their children if they have transgressed an interpretation of religious law. — Nils Loc
It is only because of different competing values, by which society is ordered, that religious beliefs are registered as dangerous, or harmful. — Nils Loc
It might be universally desirable to do no harm if we have the choice but a sense of "having the choice" might itself be a belief that is gifted to us and that we think we ought to gift to others. — Nils Loc
The gift of free thought surely permits us to advocate for the devil in the same way God would advocate for his believers, by appeal to choice or fate. — Nils Loc
Far as I know, no real thinker has ever claimed direct evidence for the existence of God, such claims being the domain of the ill-informed, manipulated, fond, ignorant, stupid, pointy-headed, and so forth. — tim wood
Nah. This conclusion doesn't hold. Further, belief in something without sufficient evidence is required to get out of bed in the morning, and into it at night. — tim wood
Science, to the extent that one hasn't carried out the experiments themselves, is a belief. One may consider it a "rational" or "logical" belief, but that's an oxymoron. — Tzeentch
- acceptNo argument has ever been able to prove the existence of God or gods through evidence. — Christoffer
Going by Kirkegaard or Pascal, you might reject evidence in favor of the act of belief as a probability of the reward or belief alone as meaningful in itself. — Christoffer
Russel's Teapot analogy points out that if you reject evidence and go by faith alone it could lead to being made up by anything you can think of; like Teapots in space and as a result, things like "the church of Teapotism” that revolves entirely around the belief of Teapots in space. — Christoffer
By Russel’s analogy, religion can be made into whatever people can think of, then people with dark thoughts and ideas can create beliefs around pain, suffering, murder and hate. — Christoffer
If there’s a possibility that hateful and dangerous belief-systems will be created, it has a high probability of happening over a long enough timeline. — Christoffer
There is no such thing as personal belief since you do not exist in a vacuum, detached from the rest of society and other people. As long as you interact with other people and the world, you will project your personal belief into other people’s world-view and influence their choices. — Christoffer
Epistemic responsibility put a responsibility on the ones who make choices without sufficient evidence. To choose to believe is to accept a belief without evidence and risk spreading this belief-system. — Christoffer
Therefore, religious belief will always lead to hateful, dangerous ideas at some point in time and the responsibility is on all people who believe something without sufficient evidence, rejecting evidence in favor of the necessity of faith or comfort in faith. — Christoffer
not sure what this adds - will withhold judgement — Rank Amateur
Challenge - Russels argument has nothing at all to do with rejecting evidence in favor of faith. Its sole purpose was to place the burden of proof on the person making the claim. If one is holding a view by faith that is in conflict with evidence that is just a fool. And fools do all kinds of things. In the argument, what Russel is saying is, if I make a claim that there is a teapot between the earth and the sun, the burden is on me to prove that, not on you to disprove that. — Rank Amateur
Challenge - I don't see how Russels argument has anything meaningful to say about what people say they believe - based on anything. The only thing it would say is the burden of proof for any truth claims they make is on them. People are capable of all kinds of evil, and can find all kinds of basis to justify it. Not seeing the direct or unique link between religious beliefs per se and the evil. — Rank Amateur
not sure what you are saying here - there is a surety that hateful and dangerous belief systems will be created, and they will be justified by all kinds of things, including religion — Rank Amateur
We are free to believe and think all kinds of things - why is the simple act of belief without proof something to be avoided? — Rank Amateur
I understand that religion, has and might well again cause real evil. But the causal relationship is, religion is a act of man, it is a human organisation, and evil is part of the human condition. I don't see you made any kind of case that says faith leads to religion that leads to evil. — Rank Amateur
One can be told by scientists that matter consists of atoms, but one cannot be sure until it is seen by one's own eyes. Until then, it is a belief. — Tzeentch
Even if you have reasons for finding an explanation plausible, it is still a belief. Until one has seen the things take place or done the experiments, one is trusting words and pictures. — Tzeentch
The picture you linked could be a picture of anything. I could believe that it indeed shows atoms. How could I ever be sure without looking through microscopes? I might read some books, come to find it plausible, but it remains a belief. — Tzeentch
one flaw in see. How do you know that what you see is true — hachit
Religious faith and belief, or other beliefs that are held without caring to rationally explain or have evidence for them are not the same things as scientific hypotheses, which are beliefs which are never acted upon as truths before proven into theories. — Christoffer
If you can't see or understand this difference I can't help you understand the argument and your misunderstanding of the argument cannot lead to a proper counter-argument to the argument I presented, sorry. — Christoffer
You are making a metaphysical claim about the nature of perception itself. — Christoffer
If your way of arguing specific sections of philosophy with "how can anyone know that what they don't see is true", you are essentially making a nonsense argument. — Christoffer
I don't see how the fact that they are never acted upon as truths before proven somehow makes those hypotheses special. A belief is a belief. — Tzeentch
Another way of saying "If you don't agree with me, I think you're stupid."
*yawn* — Tzeentch
I'm not. I'm pointing out that pictures prove nothing. I could show you a picture of God. Would that be proof that God exists? I think not. — Tzeentch
How is that a nonsense argument? — Tzeentch
No argument has ever been able to prove the existence of God or gods through evidence. — Christoffer
Going by Kirkegaard or Pascal, you might reject evidence in favor of the act of belief
Russel's Teapot analogy points out that if you reject evidence and go by faith alone it could lead to being made up by anything you can think of; like Teapots in space and as a result, things like "the church of Teapotism” that revolves entirely around the belief of Teapots in space.
By Russel’s analogy, religion can be made into whatever people can think of, then people with dark thoughts and ideas can create beliefs around pain, suffering, murder and hate.
Hypothesis = an idea about how something might be, never acted out as truth.
Belief (religious, spiritual or convinced of a specific thing) = An idea without proof, acted out as truth. — Christoffer
What does this have to do with the ethics-argument I presented? You are just babbling about other stuff now, focus on the argument. — Christoffer
Because it has not place in ethics section, it belongs in metaphysics. You grasp basic philosophy?
If you mix everything together and just claim that you can't know anything, then there's no point in philosophy of anything. So what is the point of even talking about ethics? That's why your argument in here is nonsense.
If we were to discuss Descartes and his demon-argument under metaphysics we could have such a discussion, but this is about the ethics of belief. So do the dialectic properly please. — Christoffer
There's such a thing as proof in logic and mathematics. ...and questionably in matters of physics. But not as regards ultimate reality or Reality as a whole. So it's silly to want proof of God, for example. — Michael Ossipoff
Evidence needn't be proof. Evidence consists of some reason to believe something. There can be evidence on both sides of a y/n question. You may have your reason to believe that someone else's belief is correct. Without knowing all Theists, and all of their beliefs, and all of their evidence for their beliefs, you can't validly evaluate their evidence. — Michael Ossipoff
Then Russel was all confused. Religious faith is about the larger matter of what-is, Reality as a whole, ultimate reality. The matter of what there is in space is an entirely different sort of matter, a physical matter subject to such considerations of logic, mathematics, and the standards of science. — Michael Ossipoff
7 W (South-Solstice WeekDate Calendar)
...Wednesday of the 7th week of the calendar year that started with the Monday that started closest to the South-Solstice of Gregorian 2017. — Michael Ossipoff
Epistemic responsibility put a responsibility on the ones who make choices without sufficient evidence. To choose to believe is to accept a belief without evidence and risk spreading this belief-system.
How do you know that what you see is true
No argument has ever been able to prove the existence of God or gods through evidence.
They're both ideas without proof, thus beliefs. That one supposedly is acted upon while the other is not is an arbitrary distinction. — Tzeentch
You've limited your argument to religious beliefs. I suggested we add scientific beliefs as well. — Tzeentch
Believing the man in the white coat on the television that calls himself a scientist is the same as believing the man in the church that calls himself a man of god. — Tzeentch
It is this part of the argument that makes my argument — hachit
You standing against religion — hachit
I'm saying that if your correct, science is a based on observations then logical concussions. Observations come from what you see, but what evidence do you have. — hachit
If this is not solved it counters your frist argument — hachit
Because it would make it that the reason there's no evidence be that we can't see the truth. Therefore the evidence may be there but impossible to find. This makes the rest of the agreement mean any believe may be dangerous or not, but we have no way to tell. If we have no way to tell we might as well hold whatever believe we think is valid. — hachit
I'm not some person off the street. I know what it is . We are responsible for what we believe. There you happy with that.You might want to look up Epistemic Responsibility first.
Are you writing on a device right now that is the result of scientific research, theories, theoretical physics, engineering ideas etc. Things put together through deduction, induction, trial and error, research, falsifiability methods, cross-checking and so on.
Do you mean to say, that we cannot prove, research and rationally explain things and because of that form and change our world according to it? How then are you writing on a device that is the direct result of science and research?
What do you call that knowledge, research and science?
The premise is still true, no evidence or proof exists of any God or Gods, which means that belief in God or Gods have no truth value whatsoever and should not ethically be an influence on society and other people.
I'm not some person off the street. I what it is . We are responsible for what we believe. There you happy with that. — hachit
Science, the way we found works but it still can be false. — hachit
This was again unclear on my part. I'm saying that it is just as logically as anything else — hachit
Also I have a stance were what we see is your best way of making sense of the universe but it is not actually there. This explains why science works even if the concussion is false — hachit
That doesn't make me not strongly disagree with your last three premises. — Terrapin Station
If there’s a possibility that hateful and dangerous belief-systems will be created, it has a high probability of happening over a long enough timeline. — Christoffer
There is no such thing as personal belief since you do not exist in a vacuum, detached from the rest of society and other people. As long as you interact with other people and the world, you will project your personal belief into other people’s world-view and influence their choices — Christoffer
Epistemic responsibility put a responsibility on the ones who make choices without sufficient evidence. To choose to believe is to accept a belief without evidence and risk spreading this belief-system. — Christoffer
Your entire argument is dependent on the question can anything be known. Because if the answer is no (as I believe it is) it makes all believes dangerous. — hachit
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.