A
Areopagite
Guest
No. I never said that. I never said that “one always treats one’s experience as reality.” There are plenty of people (such as solipsists) who claim that their life experiences are illusory.Putting aside our quibble over terminology, look at what you’re saying here: you always treat your experience as “reality” until you can determine otherwise, through evidence (in this example, evidence = waking up).
Depends what you mean by “no reason.” One can certainly argue that their life experiences are part of a dream and such arguments may not have any rational refutation.Are you saying that until one goes to heaven (i.e. “wakes up”), one has no reason to think that this reality is a dream?
If you answer no, you’ve demonstrated that you don’t grasp your own analogy.
How don’t I understand my analogy? Maybe I don’t. Perhaps you have refuted me on this point. But I don’t understand what you’re saying. Could you draw this out a bit more for me?
Now we get into a debate what a “being” is and what “reality” is. This of course is the realm of metaphysics … one which, I’ve gathered, you have turned your back on.Well, fair enough. Let me refine my claim: demonstrating conclusively that a being or class of beings does not exist (on any “reality,” this one or other supposed realities) is impossible.
Well, I would say, for example, “Cars that have been made by me” is a class of beings. I can prove (at least to myself) that “No cars that have been made by me exist.” This statement is a universal negative and it can be proven. Hence, even with your clarification, it is clear that some universal negatives can be proven.
A belief can be a non-belief depending on how you grammatically compose the expression of the belief.Faith, by definition, entails belief. It cannot entail non-belief.
You can believe in God. Or you can disbelieve that God does not exist. You can believe that there is no God. Or you can disbelieve that there is a God. Faith is just “the acceptance of something without demonstration.” However, that “something” that is accepted may proposition that denies the existence of something. So faith can involves belief or non-belief. It doesn’t matter.
Of course you have faith that they do not exist. You cannot disprove these things, but you nonetheless are bold enough to conclude “They do not exist” even though you cannot demonstrate that. The only way to not have any faith is to say, “Well … maybe, maybe not … I don’t know.” In other words, agnosticism. I respect atheists more than agnostics because atheists have a kind of faith, whether they admit it or not.I don’t walk around all day with the faith that Zippy the world-illusion-creating leprechaun doesn’t exist. When I hear nonsense about the Scientologists and their stories of Xenus, I don’t go around with faith that Xenus doesn’t exist. When I hear about the Loch Ness monster, I don’t go around with faith that the Loch Ness monster doesn’t exist.