"One's salvation" from what? And in what way, Gregory, is that task "impossible"?[ ... ] to find one's salvation one literally has to do the impossible. — Gregory
Well, even more than that. There's a difference between the written law and the actual law. The idea that the Torah (the written law) is the law is simply false, not just to liberal Jews, but to Orthodox Jews and to Fundamentalist Christians as well. — Hanover
The oral law (the Talmud) and the thousands of years of rabbinical interpretation are as primary and authoritative as the Torah. — Hanover
And this goes for Christians as well, who rely heavily on the New Testament and the traditions of their various denominations. That is, they don't just run out and try to emulate the biblical characters. — Hanover
Using the concept of "God" restricts this definition unnecessarily. Oxford LEXICO, defines it as follows: "Strong belief in the doctrines of a religion, based on spiritual conviction rather than proof.", which is much better, but it still restricts this definition unnecessarily.2. Strong belief in God or in the doctrines of a religion, based on spiritual apprehension rather than proof" — Tate
Amongst the variations in certainty listed in my last post, there is the position in which someone takes specified beliefs to be no just indubitable, but infallible. There is a way of thinking in which the believer takes the position that certain of their beliefs are true even if everything else were to count against those beliefs. These beliefs are to be held despite of the evidence, and despite their consequences. — Banno
No. The situation is one in which someone believes something despite the evidence. Authority might, but need not, enter into the situation. Your introduction of authority is a misfire.You envision a scenario where one believes X is wrong, but some authority tells him otherwise... — Hanover
What I've been trying to say is that the two directions don't have to be in conflict. They can work together. — Tate
What part of the following quote are you too trifling to understand or dispute?
Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities.
— Voltaire — 180 Proof
So what? What is it to you if other people believe falsehoods?
— baker
I'd prefer my bridges be supported by sound engineering principles as opposed to devout prayer. — Hanover
All evidence is suspect (re Cartesian deus deceptor).
— Agent Smith
And your own "suspect" for this claim ... :roll: — 180 Proof
What? — 180 Proof
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