Only habit justifies it. It is a natural habit, but a habit. — David Mo
Have you considered bigamy? — David Mo
but in no way do habits justify anything — TheMadFool
Jesus responds by saying, "blessed are those who have not seen, yet believe". Although some people seem to draw the conclusion that Jesus is saying it is better not have evidence and believe (blind faith), this is not at all within the text. — Daniel Ramli
So, from the coherentist perspective, appeals to faith should not really be rejected on the grounds of circularity since this is a pernicious effect that could happen in any instance where one has to give an account of justification for one’s beliefs. — Jjnan1
But it _is_ _their_ argument.Faith is not an valid argument. — Gus Lamarch
religions — baker
And yet they rule the world.The dogmatic view of certain religions kills the individual and transforms the herd's view in such a way that their actions, reactions, and emotions are almost made unconscious. — Gus Lamarch
So all our philosophical resistance is futile. — baker
"That modern secular individuals are prone to cling on to beliefs about science, in the same way that their ancestors turned to the gods, carries no judgment on the value of science as a method but simply highlights the human motivation to believe." — Pantagruel
So you're optimistic like that? Tell me more!So all our philosophical resistance is futile.
— baker
In the short term? Yes.
In the long term? Maybe. — Gus Lamarch
You don't "believe" in the device you are writing on; you see, hear and feel it. — Janus
... and you believe that sense experience constitutes reality, no? Perhaps not much different than believing our ideas about a G/god are representative of any reality. — TLCD1996
The world that we experience via the senses just is reality for us
We experience objects of the senses and we can talk about them; pointing out aspects of them that we will all (well most anyway) see, hear, smell, feel, taste and so on.
It's only a certain kind of skepticism, based on mere logical possibilities that we can imagine, that leads us to question the absolute reality of the world revealed to us by the senses
On the grounds of what do you think that our philosophical resistance is not futile in the long run? — baker
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