3017amen
2.3k
But you really out to put the "syllogism" to a logician...and see what he/she says.
— Frank Apisa
I'm not following that Frank. Take a deep breath and think about what you just said. You critiqued the syllogism by ranting. In other words, you claimed foul, then suggested that you're not even knowledgeable enough to understand that which you disapproved. Frank, I'm starting to get worried brother...sorry, but how old are you again? — 3017amen
3017amen
2.3k
↪Frank Apisa
It's okay Frank let it go ... let it go... breathe deep... — 3017amen
The conversation is pathetic. As evidenced by the very post to which this is a reply. Neither of you has the sense ot back off in the face of the other's idiocy, resulting in mere acrimony. — Banno
Perhaps; but consider, my being an atheist makes no difference to the shite you and Frank have swapped over the last few days. I consider it a brilliant exposition of how Christians such as your good self actually put into practice the injunction to turn the other cheek.To be honest, I think it's because you're an atheist; — 3017amen
dumb & dumber. — 180 Proof
This thread is embarrassing, not just for 3017amen and for @Frank Apisa, but for the forums that spawned it. — Banno
I would simply suggest putting your money where your mouth is and join the conversation. But perhaps you'll strawman the response... I hope I'm wrong.... We shall see. — 3017amen
DoppyTheElv
59
↪EricH
Im not a theist. Im not an atheist either. I just dont know.
But I never even once agreed with the notion that having a belief in God, faith, is entirely devoid of reason and logic. That just flies against all experience, which I grant is very little compared to a lot of you. I have had with belief personally and with others I have met.
Who in their right mind can honestly hope or believe in something without reasoning about it.
Yes God and religion can act as emotional support. But I could never ever convince myself to have faith in something without good reason. I cannot. I am also not convinced that arguments cannot rationally lead someone to sincerely believe God exists. I dont care about convincing others at all. I care about my own worldview and whether or not it is informed.
I simply feel that the brushing away of a serious philosophical view in such a manner is not right. Even if its in an academic minority.
Ive said many times that I barely know what I'm talking about and that its probably missing lots of philosophical vigour. So when I say I disagree with something its on a prima facie basis. I dont see how God and exist cannot be used in a sentence together. I dont see how it is a contradiction. Especially when, as evidenced in the ongoing discussions, we dont even have a proper definition of God around here. — DoppyTheElv
Once a man was asked, “What did you gain by regularly praying to God?” The man replied, “Nothing…but let me tell you what I lost: Anger, ego, greed, depression, insecurity, and fear of death.” Sometimes, the answer to our prayers is not gaining but losing; which ultimately is the gain. ***
This is beautifully written. But it is not philosophy. — EricH
Now to the point - if you want to convince someone that your religion is worth believing in, it is pointless for you to engage in these types of conversation. If you want to convince someone that your religion is worth believing in, you can simply say “Yes, my religion is illogical, all religions are illogical. But just take a look at how my religion can help you be a better person and deal with life” — EricH
DoppyTheElv
64
↪Frank Apisa
Ah, sorry Frank I didnt notice this. Well I agree with your qualms with supernatural for the same reasons but I still dont see why, if we use that definition. Eric would say that its contradictory to say he exists. — DoppyTheElv
All well and good, Frank, but your mantra in no way is incompatible with, or even invalidates, the claim "I am certain that I do know [ ... ]" the very same things you insist you don't know - which amounts to a distinction without a cognitive difference. And, despite whatever you call yourself (i.e. whatever self-"descriptors" you use), you've long since confessed that your modus vivendi is indistingishable from that of any garden-variety "atheist", so you're just another godless nonbeliever, in practice, like (most) forum members.I am certain that I do not know [ ... ] — Frank Apisa
180 Proof
1.6k
I am certain that I do not know [ ... ]
— Frank Apisa
All well and good, Frank, but your mantra in no way is incompatible with, or even invalidates, the claim "I am certain that I do know [ ... ]" the very same things you insist you don't know - which amounts to a distinction without a cognitive difference. And, despite whatever you call yourself (i.e. whatever self-"descriptors" you use), you've long since confessed that your modus vivendi is indistingishuable from that of any garden-variety "atheist", so you're just another godless nonbeliever, in practice, like (most) forum members.
*Happy Apostasy Day*, Old Man. :halo: — 180 Proof
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.