M
mytruepower2
Guest
Not without being certain some of the time; no.Can’t one be uncertain about being uncertain? And even uncertain about that uncertainty?
God’s oneness can’t be disproven, not because it lies outside of reason, and is therefore unreasonable, but because it’s -true.- Therefore, you won’t disprove it.Let me elaborate on the difference between articles of Fatih and non-religious knowledge. Imagine something you thought was true “The earth revoles around the sun.” Now, this could, conceivably, be disproven. But consider an elemtn of Faith- ‘God is One’. This, by it’s nature, cannot be disproven, since it is outside the realm of mere reason. So, when we talk about the Trinity, we are not trying to prove why God is three person, rather than, say four or five, on the basis of normal epistemic or dialectical rules. Rather the doctrine of the Trinity is like a Divein Mystery. It is there to admire, to contemplate, to wonder at. But not to disprove or to prove.
Now, what you -can- do, and I’ve done this myself, is to use the following argument.
P1: Creation of the universe is a form of communication.
P2: God created the universe.
C: Therefore, God Communicates.
P1: When a being is truly timeless, their actions are also timeless in nature.
P2: God is truly timeless.
C: Therefore, God’s actions are also timeless in nature.
P1: God communicates.
P2: God’s actions are timeless in nature.
P3: God’s communication is an action of God.
C: Therefore, God’s communication is timeless in nature.
P1: Communication is the activity of conveying information between multiple beings.
P2: God communicates timelessly.
C: Therefore, God communicates to multiple beings timelessly.
P1: Only God is timeless in nature.
P2: God communicates to multiple beings timelessly.
C: God is multiple beings.
Now, this evidence seems to work against divine oneness, but actually, if you study it a little more closely, while this does prove that God is multiple -beings,- it doesn’t prove that those beings -are not one.- Thus, we have good reasons for belief in the Holy Trinity, on the basis of the theological conclusion that God is both one and multiple.
Sometimes, you can say “This is good,” and be displeased by it, or “This is bad, and so I’m glad I’m not involved in it.” Or better yet, “this is bad, and even though I’ve been involved in it, I’m glad to have something to improve on.” I once told a priest in the town where I work that I’m glad to be criticized for good reasons, because it gives me the chance to improve.I find Scepticism leads to peace. Let me give you an example of how it works. Say someone is assigned a job like cleaning toilets. A non-sceptic might adopt an opinion “This is good”- and so be pleased. Or “this is bad” and so be unhappy.
Thinking thus, and similarly about all things in life, one find’s perfect peace.
But on the topic of your own view, I can’t imagine anything that would lead to greater hopelessness and despair. Skepticism is a psychological prison in this sense, because no matter where you go or what you do, nothing matters, nothing was significant. You never do anything truly praiseworthy, never accomplish anything that you have any reasonable excuse to feel proud of, or happy about, and in fact, you can never even be sure that you -do- feel happy or proud.
Worse yet, when someone cuts you off in traffic, and on instinct, you get angry at him, you have no way to know whether your anger is justified, no way to know whether he cut you off, or whether you got angry. You’re trapped in a room with flat, gray walls; all the same color, and all bare of any pictures or other decorations, just because you yourself have painted them that way.
Thank you; no. That does not lead to happiness for anyone who’s willing to seriously think about the implications of it. I’ll take the cosmos instead, please.