T
Techno2000
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Because, I believe deep down, in some way, everyone is looking for Heaven.Besides, other than social/familial pressure why would one want to believe?
Because, I believe deep down, in some way, everyone is looking for Heaven.Besides, other than social/familial pressure why would one want to believe?
Some I suppose, perhaps those whom believe but don’t practice. But honestly I’m not sure imminent doom is a great motivator towards faith anymore. Obviously, I could link to pictures of various atheist soliders but that doesn’t seem like the right thing to do.Thanks for this question as it adds a bit of relevancy to my rants about the Last Days of the World. As the cliché goes, “no atheists in foxholes.” The whole world is going to become a battleground.
Imagine how people will feel if they think a nuclear armed ICBM is on its way to their city. This kind of thing will surely shake men and women out of their complacency.
Interesting. Oddly, one thing I’m certain of is my uncertainty of everything.BTW, in my opinion, none of us here really “believe” as much as they purport to, and none disbelieve as much either.
That’s a good start, we can work with that…do you ever wonder how you and the Universe came to be?Interesting. Oddly, one thing I’m certain of is my uncertainty of everything.
Yes, as do many others. I do not claim to have the answer and accept it will continue to be a mystery for a long time. The answers or theories I’ve encountered (religious and otherwise) aren’t convincing.That’s a good start, we can work with that…do you ever wonder how you and the Universe came to be?
Would you be so kind as to educate me
On what basis do you either doubt the existence of God [gods] or deny the existence of GOD [gods]?
Thank you,
Patrick
As I understand it, Belief is the same as “to be convinced of”. You are either convinced or not convinced. There is not middle ground. Same with belief, you either believe or you do not believe. It’s not a choice you can make as well. Ex: sit in a chair and then, based on all the information you have about reality and your understanding of logic, then choose to believe you are not sitting in a chair. You can’t. No one can. You can lie to people and tell them you believe you are not sitting in a chair, but you can not lie to yourself.Would you be so kind as to educate me
On what basis do you either doubt the existence of God [gods] or deny the existence of GOD [gods]?
Thank you,
Patrick
So MY friend, would YOU care to see “the burden of proof?”As I understand it, Belief is the same as “to be convinced of”. You are either convinced or not convinced. There is not middle ground. Same with belief, you either believe or you do not believe. It’s not a choice you can make as well. Ex: sit in a chair and then, based on all the information you have about reality and your understanding of logic, then choose to believe you are not sitting in a chair. You can’t. No one can. You can lie to people and tell them you believe you are not sitting in a chair, but you can not lie to yourself.
Lets say someone presents the argument 3+1=2. The 3+1 is logically correct and consistent with how we know to use mathematics. But the conclusion that someone presented there as 2, does not follow. So you would be justified in not believing that 2 is there based on that logical presentation but the conclusion seems flawed. Now if the presentation was 3-1=2, then you would believe that 2 is there. But the theists go further. They claim that 3-1 = magic. Well, sorry as an atheist I don’t see how that logically consistent argument necessarily concludes magic because at this point we can not investigate that magic is actually any different than being ignorant of how this reality actually came into existence. Since we have no way yet of determining which is correct, we have to stay with the default position of, “I don’t know” and we’re pretty sure you don’t know either regardless of what conspiracy theory you come up with because we can not investigate that claim or falsify it yet.
Atheist are only saying we don’t believe your claim. By not believing someone’s claim, have they by default agreed to a counter claim or presented any claim about what they do think about this topic’s solution at all? No, no they haven’t. Do you understand the difference between “I don’t believe you” and “I believe you claim is wrong.”? The second has a burden of proof, the first does not because it is not a positive claim about reality.
Sure, present your arguments, evidence, etc. I may not be qualified to make a judgment on them, but plenty of other people are. There is the James Randi foundation, where for the last 40 years has offered a 1,000,000.00 prize for anyone able to present what you are claiming to have. Also there is the peer-review process of the scientific community as well and gaining the Nobel prize for revealing what other’s have not been able to demonstrate for the past 100,000 years. Just trying to make sure you gain all the notoriety for your claims that you have come to conclude and your research gets rewarded. Your time isn’t free after all.So MY friend, would YOU care to see “the burden of proof?”
Blessings,
Patrick
There are not degrees of surety??? Degrees of belief???You are either convinced or not convinced. There is not middle ground. Same with belief, you either believe or you do not believe. It’s not a choice you can make as well.
I’ll use your wife’s story to clarify. She says she loves you. All her actions indicate that sometimes she loves you and sometimes she doesn’t but for the entire story you know about your relationship with her, you conclude that she loves you. You do have examples where you can point to where you could conclude that she didn’t love at that point, but over all, she loves you. The “love” is the conclusion to the story. Belief and disbelief is the conclusion to the story, the equation. It’s the resulting point the story was arguing for. You can have varying levels of certainty about the conclusion you reached that she loves you but it is definitely a logical disconnect to say you believe and disbelieve that she loves you. It’s one or the other. There are varying levels of one or the other, but it can never be both.There are not degrees of surety??? Degrees of belief???
Per you, I know my wife loves me with the same certainty I know my mailbox is black, with the same certainty I know quarks are real?
Total nonsense. Any argument flowing from that inane premise is, by rule, nonsense as well.
Good grief man, read what you write before hitting “submit”.
My friend, If the Randi foundation were truly objective, they would be Bankrupt by now for paying out so many evidences. So it is MY opinion that it not a lack of evidence, but TRUTHINESS, that like a plague in our time, has subjectively insisted on some “right” [authority never provided] to redefine TRUTH to what I have come to term “MEISM”” What I Want, What I think, what I choose to accept and believe. Each of which is only subjective personal unsupported opinions.Sure, present your arguments, evidence, etc. I may not be qualified to make a judgment on them, but plenty of other people are. There is the James Randi foundation, where for the last 40 years has offered a 1,000,000.00 prize for anyone able to present what you are claiming to have. Also there is the peer-review process of the scientific community as well and gaining the Nobel prize for revealing what other’s have not been able to demonstrate for the past 100,000 years. Just trying to make sure you gain all the notoriety for your claims that you have come to conclude and your research gets rewarded. Your time isn’t free after all.
This will take some time to respond to each point, so I’ll start here. As I understand it, belief is not a choice. It is the result of applying data/knowledge about reality and applying a logic process to that data to come to an understanding/belief/conclusion about it. Such as A + B = C. The “A” and “B” are just data of reality we experience, ie: knowledge/facts/etc. The “+” and “=” are our application of logic to that data. The “C” is the concluded result, the belief, what we are convinced about the data. IE: A person can sit in a chair + I am a person = I am currently sitting in a chair. Everything I understand about reality from it’s (name removed by moderator)ut and my understanding of how reality works all makes me conclude/believe that I am actually sitting in a chair. It’s not a choice I can make. If someone comes by with more information about reality in the next minute that I can understand and convinces me I am not sitting in a chair, then my belief will change to not believing I am sitting in a chair. Beliefs are just the conclusion, the results of being convinced. There is no middle ground between I believe X and I do not believe X. You can believe and disbelieve to varying degrees, but you can’t hold both belief and disbelief about the same idea at the same time.So my friend; you’re an atheist; and choose NOT to believe in God
This is nonsense.As I understand it, belief is not a choice.
CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS POST
DISCOVERING GOD THROUGH HIS CREATED UNIVERSE
[10] St. Thomas Aquinas:
The Existence of God can be proved in five ways.
Argument Analysis of the Five Ways
web.mnstate.edu/gracyk/courses/web%20publishing/aquinasFiveWays_ArgumentAnalysis.htm]
The First Way: Argument from Motion
The Second Way: Argument from Efficient Causes
- Our senses prove that some things are in motion.
- Things move when potential motion becomes actual motion.
- Only an actual motion can convert a potential motion into an actual motion.
- Nothing can be at once in both actuality and potentiality in the same respect (i.e., if both actual and potential, it is actual in one respect and potential in another).
- Therefore nothing can move itself.
- Therefore each thing in motion is moved by something else.
- The sequence of motion cannot extend ad infinitum.
- Therefore it is necessary to arrive at a first mover, put in motion by no other; and this everyone understands to be God.
The Third Way: Argument from Possibility and Necessity (Reductio argument)
- We perceive a series of efficient causes of things in the world.
- Nothing exists prior to itself.
- Therefore nothing [in the world of things we perceive] is the efficient cause of itself.
- If a previous efficient cause does not exist, neither does the thing that results (the effect).
- Therefore if the first thing in a series does not exist, nothing in the series exists.
- If the series of efficient causes extends ad infinitum into the past, for then there would be no things existing now.
- That is plainly false (i.e., there are things existing now that came about through efficient causes).
- Therefore efficient causes do not extend ad infinitum into the past.
- **Therefore it is necessary to admit a first efficient cause, to which everyone gives the name of God.
**
The Fourth Way: Argument from Gradation of Being
- We find in nature things that are possible to be and not to be, that come into being and go out of being i.e., contingent beings.
- Assume that every being is a contingent being.
- For each contingent being, there is a time it does not exist.
- Therefore it is impossible for these always to exist.
- Therefore there could have been a time when no things existed.
- Therefore at that time there would have been nothing to bring the currently existing contingent beings into existence.
- Therefore, nothing would be in existence now.
- We have reached an absurd result from assuming that every being is a contingent being.
- Therefore not every being is a contingent being.
- Therefore some being exists of its own necessity, and does not receive its existence from another being, but rather causes them. This all men speak of as God.
The Fifth Way: Argument from Design
- There is a gradation to be found in things: some are better or worse than others.
- Predications of degree require reference to the “uttermost” case (e.g., a thing is said to be hotter according as it more nearly resembles that which is hottest).
- The maximum in any genus is the cause of all in that genus.
- Therefore there must also be something which is to all beings the cause of their being, goodness, and every other perfection; and this we call God.
PERMIT ME MY FRIEND TO END WITH A QUESTION:
- We see that natural bodies work toward some goal, and do not do so by chance.
- Most natural things lack knowledge.
- But as an arrow reaches its target because it is directed by an archer, what lacks intelligence achieves goals by being directed by something intelligence.
- Therefore some intelligent being exists by whom all natural things are directed to their end; and this being we call God. END QUOTES
IS IT THE NORM FOR ATHEIST TO REPLY ON OTHERS TO “DO THEIR THINKING” FOR THEM?
Certainly others HAVE taught me my FAITH; BUT I was able to PROVE for myself what they taught as TRUTH. Is that not a reasonable response?
God Bless,
PJM
Could you define what you mean the label, “god” or “deity” first though before I get to your points of evidence you presented for why it should be there at all.
I disagree.This is nonsense.
Synonyms for “belief” from Oxford:I disagree.
I described my understanding of how belief is used and gave the scenario of where I apply that descriptor for that scenario as I understand it. If you don’t like that label for what I am describing, fine. Tell me the label you would use and I’ll use that so you know what I am trying to communicate. I don’t care how people use that word differently from me, I’m just trying to communicate my understanding of how I understand the world. Use what ever label you want for those ideas I presented.Synonyms for “belief” from Oxford:
opinion, view, viewpoint, point of view, attitude, stance, stand, standpoint, position, perspective, contention, conviction, judgement, thinking, way of thinking, thought, idea, theory, hypothesis, thesis, interpretation, assumption, presumption, supposition, surmise, postulation, conclusion, deduction, inference, notion, impression, sense, feeling, fancy, hunch
faith, trust, reliance, confidence, credence, freedom from doubt, optimism, hopefulness, hope
ideology, principle, ideal, ethic, conviction, doctrine, teaching, dogma, tenet, canon, article of faith, credence, creed, credo, code of belief
So I take it that you think these things lack an element of choice.
I’m assuming that you got this idea in your reading of Dawkins, as is the popular source for this line of thought. I think you should give fair air to the critiques of the idea as well - even those from fellow atheists.
The notion that “belief is not a choice” is nonsense. The existence of conversion between religions and sects within a religion (or, really, the notion of conversion between ANY set of ideologies) refutes the errant notion pretty flatly.
I’ve been registered as a Republican and as a Democrat. I was an evangelical Baptist, then reformed, now Catholic. I’ve believed Mercedes made the best car, now I believe Toyota does. And others disagree on all points while looking at the same data.
Belief is absolutely a choice. The Dawkins-esque, deterministic assertion otherwise is axiomatic and absurd. It is an internally consistent system that is void of absolutely any independent and external proof - just like most “religion”.
Russell_SA;14787498 said:This will take some time to respond to each point, so I’ll start here. As I understand it, belief is not a choice. It is the result of applying data/knowledge about reality and applying a logic process to that data to come to an understanding/belief/conclusion about it. Such as A + B = C. The “A” and “B” are just data of reality we experience, ie: knowledge/facts/etc. The “+” and “=” are our application of logic to that data. The “C” is the concluded result, the belief, what we are convinced about the data. IE: A person can sit in a chair + I am a person = I am currently sitting in a chair. Everything I understand about reality from it’s (name removed by moderator)ut and my understanding of how reality works all makes me conclude/believe that I am actually sitting in a chair.** It’s not a choice I can make**
I suppose some could be convinced that Brown is Black or Grey is Blue, if they are not open to OBJECTIVE reality, as ones often evidences these days.[MEISM: What I want; What I choose to belief: What I; What I……ect.]If someone comes by with more information about reality in the next minute that I can understand and convinces me I am not sitting in a chair, then my belief will change to not believing I am sitting in a chair. Beliefs are just the conclusion, the results of being convinced. There is no middle ground between I believe X and I do not believe X.
OK; PROVE IT!Everything I have ever presented about what I believe about a deity is 0. I have only ever responded to the positive claims of what deists are making about justified belief in a deity and why that does not convince me.
The first position is weak; to the second, if you disbelieve only because you want that to be your position; with no OBJECTIVE evidence to support your position; you’re not being true to yourselfThere is a difference between “I don’t believe X.” and “I believe X to be false.” So if person A comes to me and gives bad reasons for believing in a deity, I’ll say I don’t believe they are correct for that argument. Also if person B comes to me and gives me bad reasons for not believing in a deity
Everyone else did though. Same thing with the idea of a deity. It is either the case that a deity exists or does not exist. But since I believe no one can know this, I don’t see how anyone can make a claim to know that it exists or does not existI haven’t told anyone what my position is on the topic of a deity’s existence, only ever pointed out their reasons seem to be insufficient for the claim they are making. Example: Jar of gumballs that no one is allowed to investigate. There can only be an even or odd number of gumballs. The theist is claiming there is an Even number of gumballs. I’ll tell them I don’t believe them. Some else comes along and says there’s an odd number of gumballs. I’ll, also, tell them I don’t believe them. Now, what is my position on the even or odd number of gumballs? I never made one
And WHERE my friend did you come up with that idea? Believers in God by and large have for “ever” insisted on evidence of their beliefs. YES some beliefs do require FAITH, [through grace alone] as miracles and mysteries are just that….miracles and mysteries…. BUT through the history of humanity GOD has made it possible to know that at least a superior and GOOD “Power” that we choose to “our God” exist, that is why “gods” have been found in every land, no matter how primitive.As I understand it, we cannot investigate the supernatural in any way, so we are not justified in making any conclusions about how it can interact with reality and how we can determine a causal justified link of event in our reality leads back to the supernatural
THANK YOUFeel free to respond here, but I’m going to continue on with the rest of your points and it may take a while to pick back up at this point
As the expression of those ideas are dependent upon the very words you use, I’m still trying to figure out what exactly it is you’re saying.Use what ever label you want for those ideas I presented.
Precisely! In the example, they form differing beliefs from a common source!As to the car point, you do know that people assess the same data differently correct?
Do I really need to point this out? I’m pretty sure you know this.
Fair enough. But most of the traction I’ve seen for it was after Dawkins’ publication. He’s not the originator of the idea (very little new under the sun), but I’d about bet my socks that your source is a secondary of Dawkins. He made it far less obscure, unfortunately.I haven’t read a single book from Dawkins. So sorry, that point doesn’t really apply to me.
Fine. My objection here is that you also “know” that you’re sitting in a chair. The attempt to divide “know” from “believe” as it pertains to you being in your chair strikes me as completely arbitrary and, thus, of little truth value.As to the choice point, I’ll use my chair analogy
If what you’re saying is true, then that’s a world where “bias” wouldn’t exist. In this one, however, it does.But the conclusion is not something you choose.
As the proposition you’re trying to describe strikes me as nonsensical, “nonsensical” would be the best I could come up with. That’s not intended as a “shot” at you, personally.What other word should I use for you then?
A REPLY TO RUSSELL on definition of God, god and deityCould you define what you mean the label, “god” or “deity” first though before I get to your points of evidence you presented for why it should be there at all.