Pattern-chaser
1.1k
They are not my "beliefs", mostly because I do not do "believing." — Frank Apisa
Then what word (label) do you use to describe the things you think you know? — Pattern-chaser
Pattern-chaser
1.1k
They are not my "beliefs", mostly because I do not do "believing." — Frank Apisa
Then what word (label) do you use to describe the things you think you know? — Pattern-chaser
Terrapin Station
9.1k
Fine.
YOU do "believing."
I do not.
As to the immediate question of whether any gods exist or not...
...do you blindly guess there are gods or blindly guess there are no gods?
Me...I do not blindly guess in either direction. — Frank Apisa
You do what-I-and-most-people-call-"believing" but what-you-idiosyncratically-call-something-else.
Re the question of gods, I know there are none, based on lots of different evidence. — Terrapin Station
leo
250
↪Frank Apisa
You haven't addressed any of my points, you just keep repeating again and again that you "do not do believing". This type of behavior is precisely that of people who believe strongly in something. You believe strongly that you "do not do believing".
How did you arrive at this conclusion that you "do not do believing"? Look at the dictionary definition of belief, "confidence in something", "acceptance that something is true", do you never do that? When you are confident in something, by definition you believe in that thing. When you accept that something is true, by definition you believe in it. By definition you DO believing. You just don't like to call it believing, maybe because you don't want to see yourself and be seen on the same level as the people who believe in a god.
So ok you do not believe there is a god, and you don't believe there is no god, but you believe that you can't know either way, which is a belief by definition: you're confident that you can't know either way, you accept as true that you can't know either way.
However, some people have had experiences that they interpret as being in contact with god, as feeling god, so they're not blindly guessing, they're making an educated guess, they become confident that there is a god, and they choose to believe it, to accept it as true. — leo
Terrapin Station
9.1k
I DO NOT DO BELIEVING.
I do understanding; guessing; supposing; estimating...and all that kind of stuff that others call "believing."
But I call my guesses, suppositions, and estimations...guesses, suppositions and estimations.
I DO NOT EVER CALL THEM BELIEFS. — Frank Apisa
You might not call them beliefs--that's fine, but you're doing what I name "belief" when you assert things like "I do not do believing." You can call it something else. What we name it doesn't really matter. Many of us just happen to name "that thing" "belief." — Terrapin Station
leo
249
Ahhh...practicing to be a psychologist by doing cyber-analysis. — Frank Apisa
Actually for now I'm guessing that you have some issues related to the concept of believing, that's not meant to be an attack that's an hypothesis as to why you react the way you do, and if you consider it seriously and do some introspection that might help you. But if you keep reacting like that this hypothesis might turn into a belief.
I do not do "believing." — Frank Apisa
I DO NOT DO BELIEVING. — Frank Apisa
So...I do not do believing. — Frank Apisa
That is why I say I do not do "believing"...because I don't. — Frank Apisa
I do not do "believing." — Frank Apisa
I do not do believing. — Frank Apisa
But I do not do "believing." — Frank Apisa
...I do not do believing. — Frank Apisa
But I do not do "believing." — Frank Apisa
I am not doing "believing." — Frank Apisa
Do you have a problem with that? — Frank Apisa
What is your fucking problem? — Frank Apisa
There are so many things to focus on, yet you seem most focused on making other people know and accept that you "do not do believing". I have seen you do that on at least one other thread. When people disagree with you, you respond with passive-aggressiveness, or you attack them. It doesn't take a psychologist to notice that you fixate on it and you react very strongly to it. When people stop replying to you you consider you have them convinced, but really you're just driving them away.
When a person says, "I believe there is a god"...all they are doing is saying, "It is my blind guess that there is at least one god in the REALITY"...but they are pretending they are saying something else. They are disguising the fact that they are making a blind guess by calling it a "belief." — Frank Apisa
It is not "all they are doing", because they also think and act as if this god exists, sometimes they feel him, they expect to meet him at some point, all that they wouldn't do if they were just blindly guessing.
Did you have help constructing that abomination of a sentence...or did you do it on your own, perhaps while under the influence? — Frank Apisa
In terms that you can understand, YOU DO BELIEVING, even if you don't say it, and even if you don't realize it.
I gave an example, in that example you hold a belief, the way belief is defined, so by the definition of belief you do believing. Now you keep saying that you do not do believing, but that's not in accordance with the definition of belief, because by that definition you do believing. — leo
leo
248
I don't think they are. To me...when a person says, "I believe (in) god" I think they are actually saying, "My guess is there is a god." When a person says, "I believe there are no gods" I think they are actually saying, "It is my guess there are no gods."
I do NOT see them as worlds apart. I do not use the "believe" form...because I see it as an attempt to disguise. — Frank Apisa
You seem to have some deep-seated issues with the concept of believing.
You keep referring to it in the context of believing in a god or believing there is no god, you don't like people who say they believe in a god, presumably because they have caused you some suffering in some way? You don't want them to accept something as real if you don't have evidence of it and they can't show you evidence of it? — leo
Belief is a word used to refer to various states of mind, but it doesn't reduce to a guess. When people say they believe there is a god they think and act as if there is a god, which is not the same as simply guessing. Sometimes they even see god. — Leo
You say you do not do what these people do, but you do, you just don't say it, and maybe you also don't realize it. — Leo
Say a friend of yours come visit you, and when you're with that friend you chat and have fun and let your guard down. Now it is not impossible that this person who has come to visit you is not your friend, but his twin he never told you about, or a clone, and that this person has come to hurt you. And yet you don't consider the possibility, you think and act as if this person has good intentions towards you, and that state of mind we call a belief, in this case a false belief. Now you can choose to not use that word, but that's the word we usually use.
luckswallowsall
13
Causeless effects are not possible because if an effect has no cause it's by definition not an effect. — luckswallowsall
Janus
7.2k
So, surely we must conclude that anything we believe possible - not probable or likely, only possible - remains so until more evidence clarifies matters? — Pattern-chaser
Logically and epistemologically speaking, yes. I am holding open the possibility that at least some things which we cannot prove to be impossible, actually are impossible simply due to the nature of things, in other words that at least some things may simply be ontologically or physically impossible. This seems obvious to me, and I am genuinely perplexed that others seem to be having difficulties with it, even though no one seems to be able to explain what the problem is. — Janus
Isaac
672
What is your fucking problem?
I have never expressed dissatisfaction with people who use other terminology. — Frank Apisa
But "believe" (the disguise word for guess) does cause difficulties. — Frank Apisa
...it matters, even if there are people too immature and ignorant to realize it. — Frank Apisa — Isaac
BrianW
740
...I do not do believing. — Frank Apisa
So you say. — BrianW
I do guessing and estimating and supposing and things like that. — Frank Apisa
which are 'obviously worlds apart from the processes of belief... hmm, very curious :chin:
If you cannot accept it...that is a problem you must deal with. — Frank Apisa
It certainly seems so.
Well, I shall question no longer. I accept.
BlueBanana
903
I do not do believing.
I do guessing and estimating and supposing and things like that.
But I do not do "believing." — Frank Apisa
"I won't die, I will just cease living. Thus, I'm immortal." — BlueBanana
BrianW
739
If a person is making a blind guess that there are no gods...and says "I believe there are no gods" rather than "It is my blind guess that there are no gods"...ya gotta wonder why they are doing it. — Frank Apisa
This is semantics. It's about the mode of expression instead of implied meaning. Also, the blind guess is still predicated by the law of "what goes in, is what comes out", input=output. This means the mind can only give an outcome based on the corresponding inputs. A sub-conscious process of mind is no less valid or meaningful than the conscious processes. For example, a person may choose to believe/disbelieve in god(s) for no other reason than they made a choice having been given that opportunity (no matter the name the process is designated by), and it would still be valid, meaningful and within his/her purview since he/she has such capabilities. I'm not arguing about the quality in how belief is achieved (low/high quality 'stuff' is still 'stuff'), I'm investigating what belief is and why people choose one instead of others. — BrianW
BlueBanana
902
↪Frank Apisa
This I have said so far: you have given and been given examples of things that fall under the umbrella term of belief (blind guess, acceptance of experience, etc.) and you refuse to use the umbrella term (seemingly claiming that apparently words referring to concepts are mutually exclusive, as if calling a guess a belief implies it's not a guess).
Furthermore, your choice of words does not reflect reality - if the word belief means (among other things) a guess, then guesses are beliefs regardless of whether one chooses to call them beliefs.
That's where I'm going and where I've gotten, if you claim it requires expanding tell me how so. "No it isn't" isn't a valid rebuttal of that. — BlueBanana
BlueBanana
901
↪Frank Apisa
I remember what I said, and I replied to your reply with "How so", followed by expanding on my first comment. — BlueBanana
BrianW
738
A person saying, "I believe X"...is a person doing "believing."
A person saying, "It is my blind guess that X" is a person doing "blind guessing.
If you do not understand that...not much I can do to help you.
I do not do "believing."
I really do not understand why this is causing some of you so much trouble? — Frank Apisa
First, I'm not troubled, I find it quite interesting to see where this particular rabbit hole leads to. — BrianW
Secondly, a person doing "X" and calling it "Y" is very suspicious, hence my interest.
Relativist
612
I never said or intimated that a "belief" has to be certainty.
In fact, I said that in some cases, it is nothing more than blind guessing being disguised.
We can discuss it if you like...but I do not want my position to be distorted. — Frank Apisa
Gotta wonder why they don't just call it guessing...rather than calling it a "belief." — Frank Apisa
Sorry if I misinterpreted, but bear in mind that the only response you gave to my original post was a tangential comment about my terminology, and your repeat of your position that the word "guess" should be used. That was actually off-topic, and pointless since we've been through this before. If you want to understand my point within my own terminology then ask. If you want to make a case for using your terminology, start a new thread. Otherwise, please stop interjecting your dissatisfaction that everyone doesn't use your preferred terminology. — Relativist
BrianW
737
↪Frank Apisa
Definition of belief (Merriam-Webster)
1 : a state or habit of mind in which trust or confidence is placed in some person or thing.
2 : something that is accepted, considered to be true, or held as an opinion : something believed.
3 : conviction of the truth of some statement or the reality of some being or phenomenon especially when based on examination of evidence.
This are the common meanings expressed by term 'belief' and also what I'm referring to. So, either none of them refers to what you understand by belief implying that you have you own reference other than these, in which case, we are not talking about the same thing. — BrianW
BlueBanana
900
No it isn't. — Frank Apisa
How so? For every X for which belief is an umbrella term that has been offered, you've responded that you call X not a belief but simply X - which you are free to do, but it doesn't change that X is a belief. Just like I can choose to call arms arms instead of limbs, but nevertheless, arms are limbs. — BlueBanana
That's similar to stating that I don't have limbs - I have arms and legs, and I don't need to disguise them as anything else by using hypernyms or umbrella terms. — BlueBanana
BlueBanana
899
↪Frank Apisa
That's similar to stating that I don't have limbs - I have arms and legs, and I don't need to disguise them as anything else by using hypernyms or umbrella terms. — BlueBanana
Relativist
611
Some people guess mindreading is possible; some guess it is not possible.
Both are guessing.
Gotta wonder why they don't just call it guessing...rather than calling it a "belief." — Frank Apisa
As previously discussed. I use the terminology different than you. Note how I worded my belief: "mindreading is probably physically impossible".
My beliefs are not certainties, but they are justified- based on other beliefs. Happy to discuss, if you're willing to discuss in my terms or you can provide a lexicon for yours. — Relativist
BrianW
736
Brian...what do I have to do to spell this out for you? — Frank Apisa
What's in a name?
A rose by any other name...
a minute ago
Reply
Options — BrianW
Relativist
610
The issue is that our evaluations are colored by our background beliefs. Established beliefs are not easily overturned. This is largely because our beliefs tend ti be interrelated. It is not just that I hold the belief "mindreading is probably physically impossible", as an isolated proposition. Rather, in mycase, my belief in that proposition relates to my beliefs about the nature of minds. For example, memories seem to be patterns in the neural networks of the brain. Even if the potentials of neurons in another's brain could be measured, these would not carry meaning.
Others may believe mindreading is impossible because 1. they can't do it. & 2. it has never been confirmed that anyone can do it. & 3. When it has been investigated, it has been shown to be a trick.
Therefore a single instance of a person with this alleged power is insufficient to negate the prior belief. However, I would suggest that if the alleged mindreader were to read my mind, that would be entirely different. That could be convincing.
I don't know if this was your intent, but this is similar to discussions I've had with Christians about miracles. I believe it highly unlikely that miracles (violations of the laws of nature) occur. No allegged miracle has been objectively confirmed, and many have been shown to be false, and many believers have been shown to have been duped. On the other hand, if I were to personally experience an unequivocal miracle, I could change my mind. — Relativist
Shamshir
176
Could be.
If they are guesses...we should call them guesses.
If they are "acceptance of experience"...we should call them "acceptance of experience."
Just my opinion. — Frank Apisa
Or we can just stick to beliefs.
As what even is a belief? A thought you are confident in.
The thought that you don't believe, is ironically a belief.
All our knowledge, guesses, experience - are also beliefs of sorts.
And I don't see why you attest that beliefs are blind guesses and leave yourself so distraught over it.
Because when you say "I DO NOT DO BELIEVING", all you're saying is "GUESSES AREN'T ENOUGH FOR ME"; which is fine. — Shamshir
BrianW
735
I do not disguise those things by calling them my "beliefs." — Frank Apisa
What is belief other than those convictions and frames of reference in consciousness?
For instance, if one says, "I 'believe' (in) God"...is one not actually just saying, "It is my guess that at least one god exists in the REALITY of existence?"
If one says, "I believe there are no gods"...is one not actually just saying, "It is my guess that no gods exist in the REALITY of existence?" — Frank Apisa
Belief is not absolute. Human understanding is not perfect therefore their beliefs cannot be measured by the absolute standard of truth. Our convictions can fail us; our frames of reference can be inadequate - yet they distinctly retain those identities and applications. That's why I said they should be worked on just as we work on scientific knowledge or any other aspect of our faculty of consciousness. — BrianW
Shamshir
173
Mostly, our "beliefs" are nothing but blind guesses which we call "beliefs" so that we do not have to acknowledge they are merely guesses. — Frank Apisa
Or they're just acceptance of experience. — Shamshir
BrianW
724
I do not do "believing." — Frank Apisa
Don't you have any convictions, however simple or complex they are? — BrianW
Don't you have a frame of reference for your information, perception, conception, knowledge and understanding?
The reason I ask is because even before we assert belief in the fantastic and preposterous, there is also a level of belief that is decent and natural in its application. What I'm saying is that, belief isn't necessarily something to do away with, rather it should be worked upon the way we would any other part of our faculty of consciousness.
BrianW
723
Isn't that what stage magicians do? I thought this was common knowledge. — TheMadFool
But how many people believe in that kind of 'magic'. To most people it's always a setup especially considering the other stuff that accompany such 'magic'. Anyway, one of my points is that, if humans are natural, then they cannot perform supernatural activities. Is there anything perceived by humans that is actually beyond the purview of nature? And, by what means would those people have acquired such information considering they are bound within the limits of the laws of nature?
My point is to challenge human belief because it seems we often misrepresent ourselves when we represent our beliefs. — BrianW
Merkwurdichliebe
752
Whether gods exist or not...is not influenced or impacted by whether or not the species known as homo sapiens knows...or even suspects it.
Gods either exist or not.
No way to know...unless they are personal gods and want humans to know. — Frank Apisa
You don't really believe that, do you? — Merkwurdichliebe
S
10.1k
A question if I may:
Are you suggesting that YOU get to decide who the "stuid and gullible" are?
If not...how will that be decided? — Frank Apisa
On whether or not they can spell the word "stupid". — S
Janus
7.2k
↪Pattern-chaser
Right, just to be clear I wasn't referring to the particular you with the "you" but the general you.
I actually don't believe that it is possible to prove that anything is impossible except in the logical context or within a restricted context. For an example of the latter it is currently impossible for me to levitate or walk through walls. I can prove that by trying to do it. Can I prove that it will always be impossible? No. Can I prove that it is simply physically impossible? No. Can I prove that it is physically possible? No. — Janus
Janus
7.2k
In the case of the first we can say that we know something is impossible if it defies laws of the excluded middle — Janus
In logic, the law of excluded middle (or the principle of excluded middle) states that for any proposition, either that proposition is true or its negation is true. — Wikipedia
So, for any issue where other answers are possible - such as "maybe" as well as "yes" or "no", offering just one of many possible examples - you have no answer. Binary thinking - "Answer yes or no!" - doesn't help here, I suspect? — Pattern-chaser
As I said logical possibility is one kind of possibility, epistemological possibility and ontological or physical possibility are others. If you accept only logical possibility then you will indeed rule out "maybes" as Frank Apisa seems to (insofar as I can determine what his position actually is, since he says he agrees with me and acts as though he doesn't).
So, if you say that if something has not been proven to be impossible it therefore must be possible, that is binary thinking, and you are ruling out the "maybe"; the possibility that it is in actuality impossible even though we cannot prove it.
It is impossible to prove that something is impossible except in the case of logical contradictions. So if the position that insists that if something is not proven impossible it must be possible is saying anything more than that it must be logically possible, or epistemologically possible (as far as we know) it must be saying that it is actually or physically possible. This rules out the possibility (the maybe) that it could be actually or physically (given the nature of things) impossible.
I hope that makes what I have been saying more clear. — Janus
If the entire notion of biased of reading is meaningfully codified to subjective experience as the meaningful standard.... sure I do... — thedeadidea
Insofar as it is hard to define.... well Cambridge Analytica launched a targeted advertising campaign and identified their victims well... Although I wouldn't say it is as 2+2 =4 we are getting a lot better at it.Big Data will take care of that proofing but Big Data will take over everything including democracy more and more.
thedeadidea
64
A question if I may:
Are you suggesting that YOU get to decide who the "stuid and gullible" are?
If not...how will that be decided? — Frank Apisa
Having anticipated this I have already pointed to any number of standards we have allowed to be culturally imposed in multiple ways in life. To the point of also including a citizenship test for immigration. The current litmus test is merely age.... you just need to exist and be born within a certain range of latitude and longitude and hey presto you are an adult citizen and you get a vote.
My argument is more let's not make it arbitrary anymore and tie it to any number of standards already produced whilst also promoting education in civics and critical thinking/reflection things already taught and have been taught for decades.
Moreover I am not saying this test should be a one time deal that is you fail you fail forever, you can take it infinity times... But you have to pass it much like you have to pass a drivers test in order to drive...
Given that your question just has me repeating myself may I ask a question...
Do you read what others write..... or do you more read what you want to read? — thedeadidea
Look to those who can't follow along... I am arguing something more along the lines of this stupid, gullible people should not be allowed to vote. — thedeadidea
