W
Wesrock
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Damian. If you go back up to my post you can click the teal “D” to link back to the post I was directly replying to.
This matches with my use of the word, “Hope”, since we have evidence in reality of other people behaving well for other people. Since Bob is a person and we have experienced socialization of people, we can be justified to infer that Bob has the capacity to treat people well and not to treat others unwell without a reason we have been exposed to and understand.I might know my friend Bob exists. I might not have reason to trust him or put my faith in him. If I don’t have good reasons for that, best not to. If I do, then i can put my faith in him and what he says he’s going to do, even if I’m anxious or afraid for myself.
This has not be justified to hold to an atheist like me since, I can follow the logic for concluding a deity may exist, but its not enough to conclude anything beyond that. This follows like historical fiction character to me. The character has a logically consistent back story and we get to see how that character would interact with our reality, but you still can’t define something into existence.The idea of the Resurrection becomes more palatable if we have good reason to believe there exists a being capable of such a feet
Is this a reason not to believe in the Creator?So if two people hold to directly opposing views of reality on faith, how does that help us understand who is actually correct by comparing their claims against reality? Can’t you hold any position on faith regardless if it matches with reality or not?
You can present information to people that worked for you, but this information may not work for your brother. Example, if you point at three apples and your brother believes that you believe there are four apples, your brother will not believe there are four apples there, only three. Have a conversation with him so that you understand what his objects are and what he would need to change is mind and what he sees is the problem with the arguments and evidence. That is what is missing from Mather 18. It only responds with going out and finding other people like you to back up your presentation of pointing at three apples and believing it’s four. It’s not about the amount of people you bring to back up your claim to your brother, it’s the reason and evidence you supplied.Matthew 18
Well, it depends on where the logical demonstration stops. When the cosmological arguments are presented, they often conclude with something like, “therefore a first cause exists, and the first cause is what we call God.” But there are further demonstrations that can be made following this, such as a demonstration that there can be only one, a demonstration that it is eternal, a demonstration that it is omnipotent, a demonstration that it is omniscient, a demonstration that it is perfectly good (and what is meant by one, eternal, omnipotent, omniscient, and perfectly good need further definition), and how all those things necessarily follow from the original demonstration, and arguments that it follows that it can interact with the world, and an argument that based on all of these things it would not have created for reasons X, Y, and Z, an argument for why rational beings like mankind were created, and so on.Wesrock:![]()
This has not be justified to hold to an atheist like me since, I can follow the logic for concluding a deity may exist, but its not enough to conclude anything beyond that. This follows like historical fiction character. The character has a logically consistent back story and we get to see how that character would interact with our reality, but you still can’t define something into existence.The idea of the Resurrection becomes more palatable if we have good reason to believe there exists a being capable of such a feet
Example: imagine a world where fire does not exist. Now someone comes along and logically concludes that fire should exist. Great, but how do we know when an event has had fire apart of it? We have never seen markers of charcoal wood, melted metal, boiling water, etc. Those markers of fire in our environment so that we can tell the difference between event A with fire and event B without fire. We have to interact with fire and understand what it can and can not do, how it interacts with our reality, etc. so that we can understand first that it actually exists and then how we can identify events that it did interact with. Otherwise, as I understand it, event A with claims of fire interaction and event B without fire interaction are all just appeals to our ignorance of how reality actually interacts with us. We don’t know enough of our own reality to know if there is an alternate reality interacting with ours because we don’t have the tools to make a distinction from our ignorance.
See, my own rational inquiry has led me to deny atheism as it does not match the reality presented. The lack of a deity would require the denial of something like the Principle of Sufficient Reason, or the idea that effects should have causes, etc…Yes to me because they can both be wrong as well. We have to have a way to test someone’s claims against reality to see if it matches or not. The test against reality, to me, will always out weight someone’s firmly held belief that does not match what reality has presented.
Was Abraham wrong? Was Moses wrong? Was Jesus wrong?Yes to me because they can both be wrong as well. We have to have a way to test someone’s claims against reality to see if it matches or not. The test against reality, to me, will always out weight someone’s firmly held belief that does not match what reality has presented.
rcwitness:![]()
You can present information to people that worked for you, but this information may not work for your brother. Example, if you point at three apples and your brother believes that you believe there are four apples, your brother will not believe there are four apples there, only three. Have a conversation with him so that you understand what his objects are and what he would need to change is mind and what he sees is the problem with the arguments and evidence. That is what is missing from Mather 18. It only responds with going out and finding other people like you to back up your presentation of pointing at three apples and believing it’s four. It’s not about the amount of people you bring to back up your claim to your brother, it’s the reason and evidence you supplied.Matthew 18
To me, this sounds like being culturally religious. Which is fine too.I’m a Christian because the metaphysical culture that surrounds me is Christian (and conforming allows me to better interface with it meaningfully). And I’m somewhere between Catholicism and Orthodoxy because I think they’re the best representatives of Christianity that make the fewest existential assumptions.
Well, this is again the “flying spaghetti monster” argument, if much more intelligently presented, in that it confuses the First Cause as being on the same level of ontological reality as everything else, as something that could be or not be, as something that isn’t in itself absolutely necessary for there to be existence period. Not because it is arbitrarily so, but because there must be something that is is necessary, subsistent existence for there to be anything at all, and such a thing necessarily cannot be passible, contingent, changing, composite, etc…I agree you can use reason to start looking for something about reality. That the hypothesis process of the scientific method. But you can still be logically correct and factually wrong once you run the experiment and you collect more data than you had before. This is why we didn’t teach that gravity waves are part of reality until we found them in 2015. Einstein mathematically/logically concluded they should exist, but we were not justified in teaching that they are part of reality until we actually found them. That is the process I think is better for creating my internal model of reality to match actual reality. That way, I run into fewer problems of reality when I run into issues.
What is the church’s stance on having that position for belief in the supernatural? Is that being encouraged to be dismissed as an approach to believing in a deity?
Is Jesus the Son of the Creator?Believe about what? it’s too ambiguous for me to respond to.