1. As you are quite accustomed to belief, I see that it may be difficult to detach yourself from it — ProgrammingGodJordan
belief typically facilitates that people especially ignore evidence. — ProgrammingGodJordan
it is probable that somebody/something is utilizing your account to compose messages.
2. Notably, I don't need to believe in the probability above, to observe it as valid. — ProgrammingGodJordan
The brain isn't doing anything under Determinism. It's all determined by some bouncing particles governed by the mystical and undefined Laws of Nature. — Rich
If you really believe that everything is an illusion, then your appropriate position in any discussion is that particles are determining everything you are thinking, you can't help it, it's all meaningless, and its the Laws of Nature that are creating the illusion that we are discussing and thinking. Why particles would want to start creating illusions of discussion is beyond me, but it's not myth it's the Determinist's myth, so I let them deal with trying to explain discussions in a universe of bouncing particles.
As I said, no one on this forum really believes their discussions are illusions but they like pretending they do. Rather interesting. — Rich
There is only one interpretation, which is totally fantastical , the Infinitely Growing Infinite Number of Universe Interpretion, that would be deterministic if one could leap out of our Universe, but still keeps this universe probabilistic as must every other interpretation. — Rich
Choice is observed by everyone, everyday in their lives. — Rich
Go ahead, and continue struggling if you want. — Rich
You choose to believe this then believe it until your life gets so boring and meaningless you decide to believe otherwise. — Rich
However, just remember, there is not one scintilla of evidence that anything is determined. It is all a fabricated still story, not even supported by physics. — Rich
we have reason or the ability to reason and this enables us to exercise a type of manoeuvrability of these perceptions, to challenge them, to filter them willingly rather than the number of schema in our brain that does it for us. So, while the brain determines much of what we understand of the external world, there is still one small part in that where there is autonomy in our ability to alter our perceptions of the external world. This is the 'free-will' that I am discussing; free-will and determinism are not mutually exclusive, but rather free-will is a natural extension of determinism. — TimeLine
I have never embraced any belief fully, because I trust myself enough to take what I find in anything as part of my study of the world. Nothing is ever entirely right and so to follow something completely is to limit your capacity, which only breeds weakness. — TimeLine
No need to struggle. Consciousness is not a byproduct of the brain, and you do have Choice. Since you have a choice, just drop the notion. In so doing you will notice you do have Choice (you are not determined to believe you are determined) and you can happily continue your studies in Daoism free of this notion. — Rich
There is no escaping determinism except through consciousness (transcendence) where we have the capacity to become aware of ourselves, our person-hood as separate to the external world and it is what we do with this capacity that enables us to exercise free-will as autonomous agents. Consciousness is like the algorithm that sets the universe in motion — TimeLine
I can still move on with life and not decide which one is true and never come back to this issue — SonJnana
I don't really care about labels. — SonJnana
I don't think you have to get all technical about absolute belief and such. — SonJnana
irrational subconscious prejudice — SonJnana
Through conscious reasoning I say that the most rational position is to simply lack belief in both. — SonJnana
Are you going to make every person who claims that they are atheist say this? — SonJnana
I apologize I should not have stated it that way. — SonJnana
a very very slight subconscious irrational prejudice — SonJnana
But then we might as well say nobody knows that there is a chair in front of them because they can't be certain that Satan is tricking them into believing that. Yet we don't, we say there is a chair in front of them because it is practical. — SonJnana
If you want to go into absolutes you can go on ahead and be solipsistic. — SonJnana
I dunno, I thought that was off topic and not related to your argument. :P — Noble Dust
I was bringing up an assumption in your argument, that’s all — Noble Dust
If there are 5 red balls and 4 red balls in a bag, I may believe that it is more likely to be red so I have an inclination towards guessing red if I am forced to, but that does not mean that I believe red will be picked. — SonJnana
That is evidence that there are gumballs in front of me. That is not evidence that supports either claims of there being an even amount or an odd amount — SonJnana
That's clearly not sufficient evidence to rationalize a belief that in this jar this an even amount. Are you saying I should be more set on believing that in this jar it's even because I remember counting a jar in 5th grade that had an even amount? — SonJnana
You might have a subconscious irrational prejudice to varying degrees either way sure, but the expression of that only tells you that if you had to pick even or odd, you think there's a very very very slight chance that it is more likely that there is even than odd — SonJnana
If there is someone convicted and some evidence showed up to support that the criminal did it, that does not mean that I believe the criminal did it. That only means I believe that it is more likely. That does not mean I believe that it is true. — SonJnana
My issue is that if belief is only situated in the physical brain, it’s essentially instinct — Noble Dust
my beliefs are affected by reasoning, emotion, intuition, experience, all the while being the basis upon which all of thos faculties act. — Noble Dust
if conciousness exists outside of the brain, then the brain is just the hardware, while conciousness is the software, so assigning belief purely to the brain would be wrong in that case. — Noble Dust
The way you’re wording your argument sounds more like an argument against the idea that it’s not possible to lack belief, rather than an argument for it. — Noble Dust
If belief is just responses in the brain, and yet, a “you” exists outside this brain, then why does the “you” not have a role in belief? — Noble Dust
If it's in the dictionary and people want to use a word the way it's defined in the dictionary, I think that should be respected — SonJnana
If you look at a jar with gumballs, do you believe that there is an even amount of gumballs in that jar? Probably not, rightfully so. That doesn't mean you believe that there is not an even number (and therefore there is an odd number). You lack the belief that there is an even number and lack the belief that there is an odd number because you have no evidence for either way. — SonJnana
I think you will agree that many people hold beliefs for many different reasons, some for no real reason at all except that they have been told as a child that such and such is the case? The word belief comes in for a range of meanings rendering it utterly useless since it is also perfectly reasonable to use say "I believe one and one is two". — charleton
I only use 'belief' for matters that I am not sure about; I use "know" for things I feel happy enough to argue a case for. But hold all knowledge to be contingent on the evidence and reasons that support it. — charleton
Throwing belief out of my personal lexicon have been very useful since it had made me think more carefully about things I hold to be true, and to identify things that are speculative. — charleton
I think this is a cop-out for lazy people who find it hard to think and would rather find the easy way out of using their brain but want some excuse. — charleton
Amoral similarly indicates something without a moral content and is not the same as IMMORAL. — charleton
So I think people are "paralyzed" by agnosticism. They don't know how to live life as an agnostic. — darthbarracuda
I orient myself in life as though God does not exist. I don't expect miracles, I don't expect to go to the afterlife after I die, I don't pray or worship or any of that. All of this is consistent to what an atheist would (not) do. — darthbarracuda
Yet it could also be said that perhaps morality is dependent on God's existence. An theoretical agnostic might feel compelled to believe in God for the sake of morality. — darthbarracuda
Agnostic: I believe knowledge of God's existence is unattainable. — Abaoaqu
Yet, we see so many people engaging in criminal activities and so few involved in practicing the positive rules of society. — TheMadFool
No it means that what humans do, YOU think is bad.
Good and Evil are just value judgements. — charleton
Sure it does, because similar approaches produced similar results. — Bitter Crank
Christianity and Islam are both missionary religions. That is, they believe they can, should, and ought to convert people. Judaism is based on blood: one is born a Jew — Bitter Crank
Unlike to Koran — Lone Wolf
No one can say whether there was a more inspiring religion than the Jews, because most of the competing religions did not survive--they were crushed by the Persians, Babylonians, Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans, Christians, and Moslems. Zoroastrianism (ancient and native to Persia) has survived, while the various religions of south Asia have survived and flourished.
There isn't a lot of religious writing from the ancient world that we can compare to the OT or NT. (There was likely a large body of religious material in the ancient world, but, like the once-extensive literature of Greece and Rome, very little has survived — Bitter Crank
What's the difference? — TheMadFool
Why? Please explain — TheMadFool
If I have a choice between watching a shitty movie next to me or the best movie ever, but I have to go to the store to get, I'm gonna get my ass up go buy and enjoy the movie and be satisfied at the effort I put into enjoying that movie. Figure out how to improve your life if you can, and enjoy that if you can. — SonJnana
(on the other hand, perhaps I could see this as a chance to learn to trust my intuition). — anonymous66
That 'reasoning out' I think is an example of anamnesis, active recollection of truths inside us, versus his myth of previous lives as passive mneme, memories. — Cavacava
His position entails that we can't know other minds, or anything outside our own minds with certainly. — Cavacava
I am wiser than this man, for neither of us appears to know anything great and good; but he fancies he knows something, although he knows nothing; whereas I, as I do not know anything, so I do not fancy I do. In this trifling particular, then, I appear to be wiser than he, because I do not fancy I know what I do not know.