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PetraG
Guest
Does the veracity of a statement depend on whether or not the hearer has the capacity to understand it and believe it? Those who refuse to believe the truth because they objectively do not have the capacity to accept it are not culpable, but they are still incorrect if they believe something that is not true rather than what is true.Those answers do not make it better to be Catholic if you do not believe that this is true.
Having said that, the reason to become Catholic is that you believe what the Church teaches is true. If you don’t believe that and have some other reason to want to be Catholic, you have some problems. (You would essentially have to lie to get in.) It would be wrong to pressure someone to join the Church who does not believe that what the Church teaches is true. You would be pressuring them to commit perjury and a sacrilege.
The reality of confirmation bias is not evidence in favor of a subjective view of reality.I agree. The responses are highly subjective, and in the end, people tend to choose the type of church (or religion) that most closely matches what they already believe is true.
Either Armstrong and Aldrin walked on the moon in July 1969 or they didn’t. What someone chooses to believe or not believe about that is irrelevant. If there was not a living soul that believed that it happened, that doesn’t change the truth a bit. Armstrong and Aldrin said it happened. They told others. Either you believe the line of evidence or you don’t.
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