S
Sochi
Guest
Thank you for your time, Amandil.I’d take methodical faith over irrational doubt any day of the week.
That most do not have methodical faith because they do not have methodical doubt is my point. “Methodical faith” given what most people believe, of any religion, is what I claim doesn’t prevail despite what in many cases, particularly the Catholic, is a very highly developed methodology as the arguments of the Church. And that is fine, despite, well, much. But inherent in that greatly admirable edifice of intellectualism is, from my perspective, a fatal flaw. One point it might be seen to start is Mark 4, 33,34. I have in many posts named others, in particular that about the last thing the “faithful” do is critically examine the nature of faith itself, as a phenomenon. So what I’m saying here only appears contrary in some sense because it is devoted primarily to one faith. My questions aren’t.
And I really don’t care if you agree with them or not, because if you are as set as you seem to be in your faith, that is wonderful for you. But then you aren’t the one of the few I might be talking with. Faith has its use, despite many drawbacks well treated of elsewhere even than these fora. Yet it is great if it is doing what you want it to for you. But this is a Philosophy forum, and ideas contrary to the entrenched position of may may be aired here. And jeez, what if I come back to the Church by being here?