this materialist orthodoxy or that pseudoscientific theory — Daniel Cox
tim wood
2.2k
↪Frank Apisa
I agree.
But I want to add that some beliefs are held not as guesses, but for their employment in certain kinds of thinking. For these beliefs, which I think include all religion, it's not the business of the belief to be proved, notwithstanding the confusion of many, many people who keep asking if "God is real." Indeed, proof in any of the religions would destroy the religion. The business of these beliefs, then, is not to be proved, but to be believed. The Christian creed, for example, starts with, "I believe...".
Thus about 99.99% of discussions about religion, are 100% nonsense. Maybe fun, although not really. Maybe good exercise. But whatever, all nonsense.
The exceptions are discussions of what religion(s) do and how, and what they're for. Religions in principle and for the most part are a good thing. If only there were a way to keep bad people out of them.... — tim wood
At the moment, though, I see more value in the agnostic take. — Frank Apisa
tim wood
2.2k
At the moment, though, I see more value in the agnostic take. — Frank Apisa
Perhaps more value for you, which in the nature of you could easily be a complicated subject. Is that what you meant? Because as awful as nearly all religions have at times been, at the times when they weren't being awful, I hold, they were the repository of most of the good of the world, including being thoughtful about what the good is, and how to accomplish it.
That is, if you mean that there is some significant value in agnosticism, then what is, are the value(s) you "see"? — tim wood
Let the seed grow where planted. Agnosticism speaks the unvarnished truth. Agnostic means "I don't know," yes? Is that the truth you're referring to? That, "We could explore that a bit more...but it would be far outside the intentions of the OP.
Perhaps somewhere else. — Frank Apisa
We do not know if any gods exist or not. — Frank Apisa
The moral of the story is that OCDish adherence to principles is a bad idea.
That doesn't mean that the content of a principle is a bad idea. But just adhering to it or interpreting it in an OCDish, theory-worshipping manner is a bad idea. — Terrapin Station
tim wood
2.2k
We could explore that a bit more...but it would be far outside the intentions of the OP.
Perhaps somewhere else. — Frank Apisa
Let the seed grow where planted. Agnosticism speaks the unvarnished truth. Agnostic means "I don't know," yes? Is that the truth you're referring to? That, "
We do not know if any gods exist or not. — Frank Apisa
In what sense do you not know? What does it mean in this context, "do not know"? Are you referring to existence as a thing of some kind? Does a god survive as a god the revelation of his existence?
Agnosticism on a foundation of knowledge makes some sense. This fact or that fact pertains, but which I do not know - I'm ignorant, but also agnostic in that I commit myself to neither. Agnosticism founded on ignorance is a different species. Some fact does not pertain. But I claim it could - without giving any account for how it could.
Maybe the best place to start is a clear statement from you as to what you mean by "god" - a definition of the term. Mine is that "god" is simply a useful code word for a body of ideas and kind of thinking further developed in (a) religion. And on my understanding, I side with St. Anselm. — tim wood
Daniel Cox
11
↪Frank Apisa
Hello Frank,
It's my position we can believe in what we have evidence for. We can believe in what we find worthy of that belief, and it be empirically true at the same time. I know God exists, I'm being held in existence by God, and at the same time I can choose to doubt God, and or, choose to know God exists.
The biggest problem I'm faced with as a minister is not convincing believers that God exists but that it is God's will to take away their pain, suffering and grief. For some reason people hold their own sin against themselves (?).
I'm new here and apologize if it's against the rules to provide a link: Dfpolis #37 Knowledge & Belief - YouTube. — Daniel Cox
This is a philosophy site; says so right up front. If you say, "I know," then you should get some reaction; and you should expect it. It seems to me you're using "know" and "believe" interchangeably. People do that, I know. But it's a mistake that does violence to the concepts behind both words, and can lead to further mistakes. But let's start from the beginning. At the least we may by navigation know where we are if among the things we know is where we started from.I know... — Daniel Cox
Question: how do you know that, and on the assumption that it's knowable, how do others come to know it? And this isn't "is it?" but is instead how is it. That is, the account of the thing known such that the how of the knowing is made explicit.I know I'm being held in existence by an "Entity" (Supreme Being), and I know that the only way my existence would cease is if that "Entity" deemed it to be so. — Daniel Cox
None do. The phrase is "justified true belief. And even in its correct form it's problematic. The rest of your reply can speak for itself.Most philosophers claim knowledge is a type of justified belief. — Daniel Cox
So, it's the "God" part that we're disagreeing about, not the fact that we're being held in existence? — Daniel Cox
You whole OP is an contradiction. What would it mean for some private consciousness to be deceived, diminished, or deranged if there weren't some way things actually are as opposed to how they appear? What does it mean to be deceived? How would anyone know whether or not anyone is deceived unless someone had access to some truth? What do you even mean by "subjective" if not that there is a certain state of affairs independent of some other state of affairs, or that some state of affairs isn't representative of some other state-of-affairs (a category error)?Blah, blah blah. Blah blah. Certainly private consciousness can be deceived, confused, diminished, or deranged; Blah blah blah blah blah. — Daniel Cox
No dispute on my side. You're professing a belief as knowledge, absent any pedigree of knowledge. If you were only saying that you know what you believe, no issue, although that, instead of the more straightforward, "I believe," is in my opinion disingenuous and viciously so. Vicious because intended to be taken for something it is not."God" and "being held in existence" have no referents in the world. - you.
That's what we're disputing. I know.... — Daniel Cox
Right, and an appearance is part of the world and something that can be talked about or referred to with language. I can talk about the apple as it is, or how it appears to you or me. In your OP, what parts are referring to how the world appears to you and what parts are how the world actually is? If there is any part that refers to how the world actually is, then how did you acquire that knowledge? How do you come to understand what is true without using a combination of sensory data and reason?Hi, how something appears is different depending on one's orientation to that thing. How things are is how they are. — Daniel Cox
What I meant was, how do you know that you, or anyone, is being deceived without someone knowing the truth? It seems to me that for "deceived" to be coherent, one must assume some truth.What does it mean to be deceived? Most people cling to beliefs and assumptions rather than the truth. It's not that we're looking to be deceived but we cling to what makes us feel better about ourselves and there are not so considerate people who raise up on them. — Daniel Cox
You're telling me?! This seems to be the topic of the month here and people are still trying to make things so much complicated than necessary.People don't generally understand what it means to be subjective. — Daniel Cox
The problem is Chalmer's dualist notion of reality - of "physical" and "non-physical" systems that can't interact. His question basically amounts to "How does a physical system give rise to a non-physical system?" without understanding that the problem is his own use of language and he doesn't properly define what he means by "physical". Our minds are shaped by the world and the world is shaped by our minds. It seems incoherent to talk about our minds and the world as two separate things that cannot interact.David Chalmers established a baseline for the naturalist's view in his book, Consciousness Explained (1996).
How could a physical system such as a brain also be an _*experiencer?*_ Why should there be _something it is like_ to be such a system? Present-day scientific theories hardly touch the really difficult questions about consciousness. We do not just lack a detailed theory; we are entirely in the dark about how consciousness fits into the natural order. - David J. Chalmers, _The Conscious Mind,_ p. xi.
Apparently it's the naturalist's rationale which is formless. I'm not a naturalist, I'm a mystic & a philosophical theist. — Daniel Cox
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