J
joemccarron
Guest
Leela we disagree about what it means to believe something. As I explained above to believe something means you are disposed to act a certain way when a certain set of circumstances occur. That is what a belief is as I, and Quine, understand it.I agree wholeheartedly that “what should I do?” is a more fundamental question in life that “what should I believe?” Beliefs are mental constructs that evolved later than the actions that they motivate. Beliefs are habits of action rather than prerequisites for action. Human beings found food and shelter, had sex, cooperated and fought one another, and raised children long before they had any need to create language let alone religion or gods.
What I have been saying in general on this forum is a reaction against the idea that belief or disbelief in God or gods is fundamental to human existence. You are saying that my line of thought in why God must not care whether I believe in him is a non sequitur, but it is not MY line of thought. These sorts of thoughts that you think are illogical are what follows when you begin with the idea that whether or not God exists is an interesting question. My position is not “atheism” but rather that we’d be better off if we stopped playing this God/no gods game. In arguing my position, I am just taking the theistic line of thinking to its illogical conclusions.
Best,
Leela
Now Greylorn has quoted the dictionary about belief. Certainly words change their meaning, and dictionaries reflect those changes. But for the Christian belief in the modern sense - whatever that means - is really not relevant. John wrote of the importance of “belief” But that does not mean we can look in a dictionary written 1900 years later and say whatever it means now is what he meant. No, as a Christian we have to understand what John would have meant by the term. And we know that the term in Greek stems from a word that also means obey. So he is not meaning some mental construct that develops after action but one that guides our actions.
Now I will agree that Hume was a philosopher who maintained that beliefs had absolutely no connection with action. So I do concede such a view has some powerful intellects supporting it. But that is denied in Christianity. Just read the book of James and you will see that. Christians do not think there is this big divide between belief and action.
Its not that questions of what to do are more important that questions of what to believe. These two are interwoven. My point is that questions of what we should do are more important than why such and such occurs. At least they are to a rational person.