Err no. Honestly do we really have to go down this road i really can’t be bother will all the typing?
Though I certainly believe my point is valid (and had typed up a paragraph about it before deciding the following), no, we don’t have to go further down that road, because I have a feeling that the conversation will be useless to both sides and bring neither of us any closer to agreeing with the other.
Well clearly you have to understand the context of the conversation, and the context is clear as it has been pointed out to theists that they do not “know” there is a god they “believe”. I fail to see how the fact the theist made a semantical error in the first place has something strengthens the theist position. In fact all it means it they are incorrect twice!
No, it means that they, like anyone else, can only speak for themselves. If I even said it was possible that there is no God, I’d be lying (even if you believe there is no God, remember that a lie only has to be something the liar doesn’t
himself believe). I’m not convinced that it’s even possible, so I wouldn’t believe what I was saying if I conceded the possibility that there is no God: By definition, that would thus be a lie. If I find it impossible that there is no God, then obviously I am going to say I
know that there is a God, because that’s the
only possibility left. You may disagree with me, but that’s
you. I can’t pretend that just because you disagree, I have changed my mind, because I haven’t. I can’t pretend that Atheist/Agnostic arguments convince me otherwise when they simply don’t. Again, that would be a lie. I can only speak for what I find to be true: And I find to be true that I know some sort of Creator (whatever or Whoever may be the case) exists. If you don’t find it to be true, or if you’re not quite convinced, by all means,
you should not say you “know” there’s a God. But you cannot speak for me, nor can I speak for you.
If you find our saying “I know” to be arrogant or presumptuous, remember this: Basically, I know that my own personal brain’s working gives
me every reason to say “I know” there is a God as much as it gives me a reason to say “I know” anything at all. I am open to the possibility that someone else’s brain may not give them such reason, and it would just be a difference in how our brains work, an impasse, not that either of us is stupid or irrational. I can only work with how my own brain processes information, but that doesn’t mean I assume that others’ brians are somehow deficient if they disagree…there’s just something different about us, somehow.
By the way, do you have just as much of a problem when non-Theists claim to “know” there is no God or claim to “know” that there is
probably no God? Do you have just as much of a problem when they claim to “know” that our beliefs are ridiculous or illogical? Because non-theists make bold claims like that all the time, in fact they often totally disregard the respectful conditions of my last paragraph and use the word “know” in a condescending “religious people are idiots/in-denial and if they had a bit of rational sense they’d agree with us” manner which I do indeed find unwarranted and wrong (I don’t think Religious people should be so condescending to non-Theists either). If you have just as much of a problem with non-Theists using the term “know” as well, then I appreciate your sense of balance.
My own solution is that, on known-to-be-controversial issues like this, we say “know” only in the company of like-minded people. We can use “believe” about something we know without lying, because it’s true that to know something is to believe it, even if to believe something isn’t always (necessarily) to know it. So if I were having a conversation with an Atheist friend, I would use the word “believe.” If I were having a conversation with a Catholic friend, there is no need to walk on eggshells and I would say “know.” These are Catholic forums, though, so it is to be expected that Catholics would feel welcome and comfortable in letting their guard down and talking as they would around fellow Catholics.
Blessings in Christ,
KindredSoul