Belief is necessarily not a virtue over consciously knowing what not to believe. and/or is this statement already obvious enough to grant as self-evident? — A Gnostic Agnostic
I am interested to discover whether or not there is a logic that can be constructed which renders the statement:
"belief" is not a virtue — A Gnostic Agnostic
I agree there is a traditional distinction between 'knowlege' and 'belief' but these pragmatically involve 'degree of confidence', rather than that more nebulous concept 'truth'. — fresco
I thought he was getting at the idea of being without belief as a modus vivendi which is better than having (a bunch of) beliefs. But yes, he seems to be claiming superiority for parsimony in beliefs. A belief that would need to be demonstrated to be true and this would be tricky.An argument being suggested above is that 'belief' could be a whole modus vivendi equating to 'being', but that argument essentially rests on one modus claiming superiority (i.e 'correctness') over others which are demoted to mere 'belief systems'. — fresco
If you say it, and believe it is true. It is a belief.Can it not also be said "knowledge is arrived at as a subset of falsifying "beliefs" which renders one knowing of what not to "believe"? — A Gnostic Agnostic
Well, if one wants to draw a hard line between knowledge and beliefs, there are all sorts of problems unless you think you are infallible. And I think thinking you are infallible is a problem. A problematic belief.I think at best it can be said it depends on from whose perspective one is looking. From your perspective I understand "that's a belief" but from my perspective it is not a "belief", it is a knowledge. I do not find coherence in the general notion that "knowledge" requires "belief" outside of knowing (of) a particular belief(s) to be false and the reasons why. — A Gnostic Agnostic
I certainly think I am better off without certain beliefs. I don't believe that either about those books. And in fact I acknowledge the positive belief: I believe they are not the perfect....etc.As a practical example: I know not to "believe" that either the Torah (implied: Bible as it begins with the Torah) or Qur'an are the perfect unaltered words of (a) god, contrary to the claims held by the respective 'states'. — A Gnostic Agnostic
All knowing is belief but not all belief is knowing.
I think that leads to all sorts of confusions. Knowing what not to belief would still require a belief. Which is why in philosophy, knowledge is considered those beliefs that are supported by strong justification. If you have strong justification for not believing X, then you believe and know that X is not false or not justified.Can "knowing" not be the opposite of "belief" in that knowing what not to "believe"? — A Gnostic Agnostic
Faith is an example of a belief held without knowledge, faith is often held only by personal experience and hope. — Sunnyside
Crazy people trust their beliefs enough to jump off of buildings singing "I believe I can fly". — Sunnyside
I think that leads to all sorts of confusions. Knowing what not to belief would still require a belief.
Which is why in philosophy, knowledge is considered those beliefs that are supported by strong justification. If you have strong justification for not believing X, then you believe and know that X is not false or not justified.
It would mean you have evaluated evidence and reached a conclusion. And the process you went through to do this is considered well justified.
On the street people often use 'belief' to mean things that are not supported by enough evidence, something like faith. But this leads to absurd things like one does not believe what one knows. One knows it. And since we re fallible what we know today may turn out to have actually been merely a belief. Evidence may come in to change our minds.
There's a lot of work on epistemology in philosophy.I hope for the sake of humanity, philosophy as a common practice shifts its attention toward clearly defining what "knowledge" actually is - I find it has a self-imposed boundary condition that would not otherwise be there by virtue of its treatment of such stuff. — A Gnostic Agnostic
It is not that beliefs support them. I am not saying the knowledge is supported (or not) by beliefs, just that knowledge is a set of certain kinds of beliefs. Ones arrived at rigorously.I find there can be "knowns" that need not "beliefs" supporting them — A Gnostic Agnostic
Of course.In some religious buildings, "belief" can also mean things that are not supported by ANY evidence, therefor things like "faith" (established upon "beliefs") serve in its place. — A Gnostic Agnostic
This whole section shows that you have not read much epistemology. Nothing you say here about the problems of belief, faith, the difference between beliefs that are not knowledge and knowledge is even slightly controversial in philosophy.In some religious buildings, "belief" can also mean things that are not supported by ANY evidence, therefor things like "faith" (established upon "beliefs") serve in its place. Else: knowledge of the evidence that clearly undermines the "belief" - to which they would not be bound - had they known (of) the evidence available to them, accomplished by way of the conscience having the ability to inquire, investigate, learn, discern and eventually graduate a "belief" into either a known of that which is true, or a known of what (ie. claim, worldview, belief etc.) not to "believe" by virtue of it being known to be untrue.
And this is where I think philosophy is dead: mishandling of what knowledge is. — A Gnostic Agnostic
Unless you are saying you are infallible when deciding 'known A' is true, then it may turn out to have been a belief that was not true.
This whole section shows that you have not read much epistemology. Nothing you say here about the problems of belief, faith, the difference between beliefs that are not knowledge and knowledge is even slightly controversial in philosophy.
You're tilting at windmills.
Now of course you don't have to take on philosophy's use of the terms. But 1) this will cause confusions in philosophy discussions, here for example in a philosophy forum and 2) your final separation of belief and knowledge entails an implicit claim of infallibility.
But I'll leave you to it. It seems to me you are basing your beliefs not on the evidence.
I am not concerned about philosophy's feelings or honor. I don't know what to say otherwise to someone who raises a number of concerns about knowledge and beliefs that philosophy misleads people about, when in fact the concerns are very carefully looked at within philosophy and are part of basic texts on philosophy, basic articles and essays on epistemology. What should I say to a person making accusations about philosophy that clearly show that person has not read or has forgotten fairly basic stuff. I don't think I am the only person raising similar concerns in the thread. You can go boldly forward in part based on assumptions that are false, or you could consider the possibility that you don't know what you are talking about in this particular area. Up to you.Oh, well, please send my apologies to "philosophy" for not treating it as an authority on any real matter whatsoever. It may be pleased to "know"... whatever that means. — A Gnostic Agnostic
I am not concerned about philosophy's feelings or honor. I don't know what to say otherwise to someone who raises a number of concerns about knowledge and beliefs that philosophy misleads people about, when in fact the concerns are very carefully looked at within philosophy and are part of basic texts on philosophy, basic articles and essays on epistemology.
From the top down.
What should I say to a person making accusations about philosophy that clearly show that person has not read or has forgotten fairly basic stuff. I don't think I am the only person raising similar concerns in the thread.
You can go boldly forward in part based on assumptions that are false, or you could consider the possibility that you don't know what you are talking about in this particular area. Up to you.
I think what you mean by "logic" here is known irrefutable facts.
Couldn't I say that I don't know anything other than this fact (that I don't know anything (else))? Everything else that we know is based on some assumptions that we believe in. We could go run a bunch of scientific experiments that tell us all sorts of interesting things, but all of that is based on some assumptions.
The line between belief and established irrefutable facts is blurry.
I could believe that there is a god that is a purple stegosaurus swimming through the universe, but I think very few people would agree with me and I don't have much evidence to convince them. I could believe gravity pulls things down, and we could spend days or years dropping thousands upon thousands of rocks on the ground until we decide the evidence is strong enough to consider it an irrefutable fact that gravity pulls things down. But, still, those rock dropping observations are based on beliefs. The difference is that the claim of gravity pulls things down is a lot more convincing than that of the purple stegosaurus god.
(Response to the first post, the opening post.)
I believe I am a man. -- what's the virtue in this?
I believe you are a woman. -- there is no virtue in this belief
I believe there is a god. -- no virtue to be found. It's nice if you are a fellow believer or if you are the particular god concerned, but virtue? In the action? I see no virtue. It's no more viruous than tying your shoe or taking out the trash.
I believe there is a proof that renders the statement "belief is not a virtue" true. The proof is finding even just one example when belief is not a virtue. That does not make all beliefs unvirtuous, but shows that some beliefs are not virtuous, while others may be.
Belief is not necessarily a virtue,
Belief is not a virtue,
In philosophy there are a myriad of 'handlings' of knowledge. There are many, many different takes on what knowledge is and how it should be handled and how one achieves knowledge. So which of the various ideas about knowledge in philosophy do you consider a mishandling of knowledge and which philosopher or school is this associated with?It is not intentionally misleading, it is due to a mishandling of 'knowledge'. — A Gnostic Agnostic
In philosophy there are a myriad of 'handlings' of knowledge. There are many, many different takes on what knowledge is and how it should be handled and how one achieves knowledge. So which of the various ideas about knowledge in philosophy do you consider a mishandling of knowledge and which philosopher or school is this associated with?
As far as my own epistemology, I notice that I use a number of different methodologies to arrive at what I consider knowledge. It seems to me other people do that also, though they seem to, generally, argue that route X is the only way to knowledge or knowledge is only Y, all the while acting like there are a number of ways to get to knowledge and a number of different kinds of knowledge. So I have no specific approach. I notice a more ad hoc approach in myself. And in general I am satisfied
it never is. — S
For mature adults, it is. — tim wood
The beliefs that accompany religion are poster-child for this topic; I have my own, and trust me they're considered and chosen. But included as well are beliefs about sports teams, love, almost anything else that might be subject to belief. Or, to take clothes, admittedly most of us don't make clothes, but we do choose which to buy. I think you have to provide an account for how, as you say, — tim wood
Those a fair criticisms, but it seems to me you have an anti-religious ax to grind.
But to give you some benefit of the doubt, and as your screen name includes 'gnostic', what do you think 'gnosticism' amounts to?
How is it different from 'mere belief'?
Is it a form of valid knowledge, and if so, knowledge of what?
Do you think gnostics have beliefs, or do they have knowledge?
I find the problem to be "belief" itself, but also acknowledge that there is certainly a particular "belief" on the planet responsible for the deaths of hundreds of millions of people via genocide. — A Gnostic Agnostic
That is demonisation, which is just the kind of thing that those who you're accusing engage in.
I find your analysis unconvincing and shallow.
There are good reasons for criticising the manipulation of belief, but you're not making a case; you're basically stating a single idea over and over again.
You're not showing any understanding of the meaning of gnosticism, other than a platitude about gnosis being knowledge.
I could say more, but I sense you're here to talk rather than to listen, so I'll desist.
Good points of course.
It is my experience that religious preachers and proselytizers are here to reinforce their own 'rationalities'. Its another aspect of the incestuous relationship between 'word magic' and 'religious belief' which inevitably involves repetition. Shallow 'questions' like this one are mere vehicles for those self reinforcement exercises.
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