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you cannot apply logical reasoning to the unknowable
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Most people pick the one their parents picked, most of whom did the same, and so on. Some pick one that makes them feel good. Some, in response to guilt, pick one that makes them feel bad in the right way. Some pick one based on friends. Some pick one based on a charismatic spokesman. Some make up their own. Before you can "consider seemingly unlikely possibilities for the unknown", you have to decide what criteria you have available that actually indicates truth. None of the above criteria are considered to be particularly accurate for anything but religion, and I see no need to consider them more accurate in another area, just because in that area they can't be proven wrong. |
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Faith is more than Quote:
Ignoring the reliability of your selection criteria isn't much better than ignoring more direct evidence. |
HM - you seem to have such a negative opinion of the word. It surprises me.
Here, from wiki: "Believing a certain variable will act or has the potential to act a specific way despite the potential influence and probability of known or unknown change. * To have faith that one's spouse will keep a promise or commitment. * To have faith that the world will someday be peaceful. * To have faith that a person will pay you back. * To have faith that you will be okay despite adversity. * To have faith in one's full dependence on the will of supernatural forces or deities." Within certain contexts faith is a great thing - applied or used inappropriately it can be potentially very bad. |
It's not the word 'faith', but the concept of certainty without regard for evidence that is most problematic. The less certainty and the more subject to evidence, the better.
Usually faith in one's spouse means that you don't get unduly jealous. That is a good thing. But if you have complete faith that your spouse is faithful, they could cheat on you without worry. You would feel great, but it wouldn't be true. Usually faith that the world will find peace is more of a hope than faith. If you have absolute faith that it will happen, what is the impetus to make it happen? If you have absolute faith that someone will pay you back, it will never be the time to collect. So I'd agree with: Quote:
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My main point is, that we've learned a lot of new information and it means that the most likely solution is no longer the magic man in the sky. We're figuring out how things work, and all of our logic tells us that God was a crutch used by our forbears to explain what they couldn't figure out at the time. Quote:
Your version of "definite decision" (or perhaps what you assumed my version was) is something we can know 100% for sure. No one above a middle school level of education would argue this exists (except maybe your very enthusiastic religiouso). So in conclusion, while I don't know for sure that there isn't a magical man in the sky who created everything "just because," and that in order to test our resolve he has placed mountains of evidence contradicting his descriptions, I can assume well enough to bet my "eternal soul." Also, on a loosely connected note: If you haven't seen the movie "Man From Earth," don't read anything about it, or even the back cover, rent it and watch it. The surprise is what makes it such a great movie. It's basically a look into some possible reactions of intellectuals to information that severely challenges their world views with an unlikely possibilities. |
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A faith that refuses to acknowledge evidence is foolish. But refusing to make any choices because of a lack of certain evidence can just as easily be taken to unhealthy extremes as well. The husband who has complete and unwavering faith that his wife will not cheat is foolish, but so is the husband who refuses to have any amount of faith that she will not. |
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I don't know anyone that thinks the world will be completely peaceful. Nor do I know two people that can agree on the same definition on peaceful. Yeah, faith and illogical to buy. If they have paid you back in the past, not faith, if you have any evidence of their character, not faith. Ok despite adversity... I don't even know what this means. The last one is faith and there is no rational reason to buy anything supernatural, to date. Having faith in them is neither good or bad, it does nothing because there is nothing there to answer your faith that we know of and no evidence that it does anything at all. No one has been healed or helped in any way. Waste of energy. |
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the difference between faith and science is one of understanding.
if you drop a ball a thousand times and, every time you drop it, it falls to the floor, as a result of gravity... then faith would be the assumption that the ball always falls wheras science says, the ball will always move towards the most massive object whose field of gravity reaches the ball. this example doesn't work in every case, but in the real world, faith can often be explained just a lack of understanding. However, theists have an entirely different kind of faith. Faith in a deity is a different kind of faith, to this, entirely. It is baseless and illogical - and still can't be absolutely said to be wrong by anyone who isn't a dick. |
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