L
Luke_K
Guest
When a non-believer appears to have resolutely concluded that no shred of evidence of God does or can exists, the believer might feel there is no other fruitful avenue for making the non-believer question his position than to point out what appear to be flaws in his position.Whether that world is “really real” or not is completely and totally irrelevant to discussions about claims made about that world.
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And all of that wouldn’t change the fact that we know that in the world revealed by our senses, there is insufficient evidence to accept the claim that gods exist.
Now, I’m perfectly willing to discuss the last point, but if someone just wants to confuse terminology for the sake of confusing it, that person is accomplishing nothing except revealing his own ignorance and impeding the conversation for the grown-ups in the room.
Worse is when these buffoons equivocate on the meaning of the word “faith”: “But you have faith that the world is real!” they whine. “Why, then, do you criticize religious people for having faith in god?”
The answer, agfain, is obvious to anyone who is halfway paying attention. Faith – by definition – is accepting claims without sufficient evidence. No one is arguing that “the world is really real and not the Matrix.” In the context of evaluating claims about the consistent world revealed by our senses, it makes no difference whether that world is the Matrix or not. It’s not a matter of “faith” at all, not in the sense that religious believers use the word “faith.”
“Faith,” when used by Catholics and Catholic spiritual writers, is an act of the human intellect and will cooperating with divine grace. Believing is an act of the intellect assenting to the divine truth by command of the will moved by God through grace. The miracles of Christ and the saints, prophecies, the Church’s growth and holiness, and her fruitfulness and stability are motives of credibility, which show that the assent of faith is by no means a blind impulse of the mind.
St. Bernard said, “No tongue can say, no word express, but only experience can believe.” This is why I encouraged you to try praying the rosary, because without an act of will expressing a desire to experience faith you will have no understanding of what Christianity is.
But you missed the point, or I failed to convey it adequately, of what I was doing in the “Well, why?” thread. Of course there must be a reason for us to believe that something exists in order for us to believe that it exists, or in simpler terms, evidence. It’s just that it’s a more muddy philosophical system than you seem (note: seem) to think it is, especially when it’s applied in a rigid, universal, physical fashion. There’s the problem of induction, the question of whether an observation qualifies as evidence, whether an experiment was performed correctly, what evidence is available, how much evidence should be required for belief, whether evidence collected by others should be trusted, what kinds of evidence should be accepted, etc.Obviously, that statement is false – as I’ve demonstrated above, there is quite a lot of evidence that evidence-based inquiry (of which science is a subset) works.
I know you don’t like following links, but since you’re on catholic.com and enjoy repeating to the site’s members that Christianity is mythology, you may as well read this relatively short refutation of that from this site: Are the Gospels Myth?. It addresses your concerns directly.
I invite you again, friend, to test the Christian hypothesis. The experiment I proposed last time still stands. You could also try this one put forth by a former atheist: Conversion Diary: Finding God in 5 Steps. At the very least, if you are at all committed to the idea of experimentation, simply pray, as sincerely as you wish, “God, I want to find you. Show me how. I’m listening.”
And by the way, The Matrix is so last decade. It’s all about Inception now.