C
Charlemagne_II
Guest
Planty
**
But all of these examples are pointless in this debate; just because many theists or atheists throughout history have been intellectuals, that says nothing about whether they were right.**
They are not pointless examples because they show that a great many great intellects found God to be be approachable by way of the human intellect, a position you denied in your previous post, quoted below:
I don’t expect to be able to know God with the intellect alone, but an intellectual basis for even thinking God exists is a prerequisite to knowing him with the heart.
You can dispute the conclusions of those cited, but you cannot dispute that they found an intellectual basis for thinking God exists. When you haughtily dismiss such an intellectual basis in the future please try to remember that men with greater intellects than your own were able to see something you could not or would not see.
By the way, Einstein did dismiss the Christian God, but he also dismissed atheism and was rather definite about that.
“I want to know how God created this world. I am not interested in this or that phenomenon, in the spectrum of this or that element. I want to know His thoughts, the rest are details.” (Einstein, as cited in Clark 1973, 33).
**
But all of these examples are pointless in this debate; just because many theists or atheists throughout history have been intellectuals, that says nothing about whether they were right.**
They are not pointless examples because they show that a great many great intellects found God to be be approachable by way of the human intellect, a position you denied in your previous post, quoted below:
I don’t expect to be able to know God with the intellect alone, but an intellectual basis for even thinking God exists is a prerequisite to knowing him with the heart.
You can dispute the conclusions of those cited, but you cannot dispute that they found an intellectual basis for thinking God exists. When you haughtily dismiss such an intellectual basis in the future please try to remember that men with greater intellects than your own were able to see something you could not or would not see.
By the way, Einstein did dismiss the Christian God, but he also dismissed atheism and was rather definite about that.
“I want to know how God created this world. I am not interested in this or that phenomenon, in the spectrum of this or that element. I want to know His thoughts, the rest are details.” (Einstein, as cited in Clark 1973, 33).