And yet here you are.First, I didn’t think you could understand me, so why bother. — Fire Ologist
Again, if you want me to respond, link my name. A common courtesy. I'll not be going over your posts looking to see if you ask me something. You are not that interesting.Second, There are fifty things prior to my posts with Leon that you didn’t respond to. — Fire Ologist
I agree. Seems I erred in expecting curtesy from you.Third, Seems muddle-headed for you expect courtesy from me. — Fire Ologist
I honestly havn't been able to follow — Banno
4. Anything which is based on the irrational is bad — Leontiskos
First, we do not need to have at hand the essence of some thing in order to talk about it. See the "mum" example given previously. We use words with great success without knowing the essence of whatever it is they stand for. Demonstrably, since we can talk about faith wiothout agreeing on the essence of faith.
Thinking we can't use words unless we first fix their essence is muddle-headed. — Banno
What is it to have "some concept of it" beyond being able to identify it?If we can identify something we must have some conception of it... — praxis
3. Faith is irrational — Leontiskos
I don’t think anyone would say it’s inherently irrational. — praxis
I’m thinking that pretty much all a child has is the essence of mum. No words or definitions. Mum may mean security, nourishment, and the like, on an instinctual or just ‘feel good’ level. — praxis
I don’t get it. Tom doesn’t claim that faith is inherently irrational in that post or the couple of subsequent posts. — praxis
Setting some criteria of relevance, to me, is a sibling to just saying there is such a thing as a definition. — Fire Ologist
Is that the same use of "essence" as that of the Philosophers hereabouts? "that which makes a thing what it is and not another", or whatever? — Banno
"Belief without evidence" and "We only speak of faith when we wish to substitute emotion for evidence" seem like pretty standard claims of irrationality.
If you don't see faith as irrational that's great, but anti-religious folks tend to view faith as irrational. — Leontiskos
whether the "such a thing as a definition" is meant to refer to our innocuous, stipulated-for-the-purposes-of-discussion definition, or something more permanent and indisputable. — J
See Tom’s last post above. — praxis
I’m anti-religious and view faith as non-rational, though there are clearly many instances of irrational religious faith. — praxis
I’m anti-religious and view faith as non-rational, though there are clearly many instances of irrational religious faith. — praxis
That's what the anti-religious are required to do if they want to engage in philosophy. — Leontiskos
It’s painfully obvious that faith is the most abused aspect of religion, isn’t it? — praxis
Martin Buber writes of two types of faith — BitconnectCarlos
Then I would say that trust is the most abused aspect of life, and that religion is part of life. — Leontiskos
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