R
Regular_Atheist
Guest
Well, then, by that logic I suppose everyone lives their life in a faith-based way, at least to a certain extent. Though I do maintain that having trust in a pilot is not the same as having faith in a claim. Trusting a pilot is based off of evidence. After all, I know that the majority of pilots make these trips regularly and know how to fly a plane. From these facts and my own experiences with air travel, I can put some trust into the pilot. While it may be faith, it isn’t blind faith, and it certainly isn’t faith in a religious way.Then it is by a deep, abiding faith that you live, RA.
Nothing wrong with that, of course. You’re on a forum filled with faith-based people.![]()
As I’ve already said, I have some trust in pilots, but it’s a trust based on evidence and past experiences. I also fail to see how getting onto the plane suddenly means I am admitting that I think the pilot is completely competent at flying a plane. I may still be a little nervous, and I certainly wouldn’t trust them completely.That’s an interesting rhetorical question to answer…until you get on that plane. Then it becomes, “I have faith in the pilot.” Then you are putting faith in the pilot’s ability to fly you, when you have never checked her credentials.
I don’t object to others believing things through faith. I just can’t believe things through blind faith alone. You seem to be trying to compare trust in a pilot with religious faith in a deity. I don’t see how they’re comparable. By trusting the pilot I’m not stating that I believe the pilot is qualified to fly the plane. I would be fine with admitting that the pilot my be completely incompetent, and that we may crash and die in a fiery explosion. I would just think it to be unlikely. I go through life with the possibility of me being sent to a fiery place of torture when I die, so why is it so hard for you to accept that I could get onto a plane and accept the possibility of the pilot being incompetent?Again, nothing wrong with that. I’m just pointing out that you live your life in a faith-filled manner, and ought not object to someone else following that paradigm as well.
I’m sorry, but I cannot claim to know something that I can’t possibly know. Even the things I believe could always be wrong. I think it’s important to accept that.You have to make a decision at some point. You get on the plane or you don’t. You accept Jesus as a historical person or you don’t.
I’ve basically already responded to this. As I’ve said, I don’t understand how getting onto a plane is somehow admitting that I believe the pilot is perfectly competent and qualified to fly the plane. I am and would be well aware of the possibility of the pilot not knowing a thing about flying.In the end, there is no such thing as an agnostic Delta customer.
I’ve also got to stop separating the quotations up like this.