Faith is not a reliable method of justification because it is content free. — Tom Storm
can you drill down without getting too theoretical — Tom Storm
casual stroll through the lunatic asylum shows that faith does not prove anything. ~F.N. — 180 Proof
Faith is the excuse a person gives when they don't have a good reason for a belief. The real problem with faith is there is nothing you can't justify with an appeal to faith. People have it on faith that there is no COVID 19; that some races are inferior to others; that women are not as smart as men, etc. And within a single religion - in Christianity - faith is used to justify the beliefs of members of the KKK and Desmond Tutu. Faith is not a reliable method of justification because it is content free. — Tom Storm
Again, not responsive to my post. Just not what I was talking about. — Hanover
You also make a presumption that a faith based epistemology is being advocated for empirical claims. — Hanover
Different categories of questions require different methods of epistemology. — Hanover
Faith based reasoning is properly limited to how one ought live one's life in terms of meaning and value, questions science does not address. — Hanover
Please elaborate a little. — 180 Proof
1. How have you arrived at your belief that God exists? Was it after some theoretical or logical proofs on God 's existence or some personal religious experience? Or via some other routes? — Corvus
2. Why do you try to prove God in a theoretical / logical way, when already believing in God's existence? — Corvus
It’s such an easy thing to comprehend....we want atheists to comprehend it..... — Jan Ardena
agree with what you say about relationship not existence being the issue for theists, I made a similar point in the thread somewhere. — Cuthbert
Some atheists want us to comprehend that it is mere comforting delusion at best and wicked trickery at worst. — Cuthbert
The position of 'you guys just can't see what's obvious' is all too common in debates on religion. — Cuthbert
"Faith" does not 'justify' believing that "miracles" happen, only rationalizes that a belief in "miracles" does not require "justification" in "faith"-based contexts, or discourses. — 180 Proof
I take ineffable to mean something that cannot be adequately expressed in words, not "tantrum like baby-talk" which would indicate an emotionally laden immature inability to speak. For example, we may speak of the ineffable beauty of a sunset, but that would simply mean I cannot truly convey the experience to you. That ineffability, if you allow for it, and I'm not sure Witty places any significance on the unspeakable, might begin to come close to feelings of faith.Not epistemic – justificatory – whatsoever, just tantrum-like babytalk, or as Witty said more nicely "ineffable". — 180 Proof
The point here is that he knows about it in detail in the form of knowledge, although it is false knowledge. It is no longer beliefs. — Corvus
Assuming Knowledge = a Justified True Belief (K=JTB), the reason that a belief in the effectiveness of a placebo is not knowledge is because it's not True. The person had a justification (he was told by a scientist the pill would work) and he believed the person, but it wasn't true. — Hanover
From the placebo taker's point of view, it was a true knowledge? From the doctors (the giver)'s point of view, it was false knowledge. But until the placebo taker is told that it was false, to him it is true. — Corvus
If you cannot accept, for the purpose of discussion, God, it ceases to be a debate, or a nice discussion about God. — Jan Ardena
2. The beliefs that have no definite rational or inductive knowledge or ground. The beliefs that come from a private psychological state, which does not require evidence, justification or proof. Religious beliefs are in this category, and only in this case, the concept of faith should be applied to the beliefs. — Corvus
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