Maybe! However, I would tend to think these -isms are more defined than ietsism, which picks out that supremely (and seemingly deliberately) vague, unhelpful, and frustrating reply that one's typical fellow apes give in response to whether they believe in God: "I think there must be something out there," "I believe in a higher power," or "I think there's something bigger than myself." These phrases are fit to make any philosopher fly into a rage, but they represent, in my view, the extent to which people have pondered anything metaphysical and make up the predominant belief of most people today, at least in the industrialized world. — Thorongil
The faithful say its revelation, and they believe it's true. I don't doubt their belief, do you? — Cavacava
How so? — Jeremiah
The truths that religions tell are not always easy to take. — Cavacava
"If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to them the other cheek also.", it takes faith. — Cavacava
I really don't know. I am an agnostic, but I grow up in a Faith which I practiced, until I no longer believed in it, but who knows, it certainly seems to propel some people through life. I read & think about it but I have no commitment at this point. — Cavacava
You may be too quick to dismiss these people. — anonymous66
I think that what is most striking in difference between religion and philosophy is in the approach to faith. Faith, like the two aforementioned terms, cannot be easily defined without ignoring important shades of meaning which the word takes on. It's a practice, it's a type of belief, it's a state of mind, it's a value, it's many things.
But in a religion what it does is different from what it does in a philosophy -- in a religion faith is a justification. But in philosophy, while faith can play as motive, it can never be provided as a justification. It may be an (honest, admitted) reason for a stance to some interlocutor or audience, but the expectations of philosophy is that in addressing said audience you will not expect faith to compel said audience to whatever it is you are proposing. — Moliere
Lord Agu. — Heister Eggcart
Thou shalt not take the LORD's name in vain :-* Have you forgotten that commandment? :PI don't know what religious background you've come from, but I remember telling Agustino (to his confusion) that I see myself as being Christian, but a Christian. — Heister Eggcart
Perhaps there's a grain of truth hidden somewhere — TheMadFool
There is a grain of truth in every vague ill-defined statement. For example: It is best in the winter. — Jeremiah
Assuming I understand you correctly, what is your standard for truth and meaningfulness? And how does religion fail? — TheMadFool
You want me to type out a book? I don't really think I could sufficiently answer that question on an internet forum — Jeremiah
Never said it fails. — Jeremiah
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