Possibility So you wish to say that you are confident without warrant... Fine. It's the "without warrant" part that is salient here.
your point being...?
— Possibility
Here's the argument in the article, in less than twenty words: add warrant to belief and knowledge; faith is belief that is neither warranted nor known. No reference to tradition. — Banno
I agree with Dawkins that faith, as an irrevocable commitment, is not reasonable when given to a false proposition. But I see nothing unreasonable in believers having the degree of commitment to their church, synagogue or mosque that they might have to a political party or social community.
It is the degree of commitment involved in faith, rather than its religious object, that is what is really objectionable;
Again, I think this is a misunderstanding of faith as interpreted within certain (most) Christian traditions. The idea that faith is an unshakeable authority... — Possibility
Faith is unshakable conviction — creativesoul
All religious belief is adopted. — creativesoul
Eh, for the majority of religious people in human history, faith wasn't much of an issue. You believed Zeus lives on a mountain because that's what the wise people said. — frank
You're putting a microscope on a quirky aspect of Christianity. — frank
Indeed, the very point of the paper is to drawn and maintain a distinction between faith and religious belief. — creativesoul
It presupposes the existence of Zeus. It shows the role of authority throughout history as it pertains to religious belief. It shows that religious belief is not in it's own category. It shows that most - near all - religious belief is learned and it leads us to...
...consider the source. — creativesoul
Faith is unshakable conviction
— creativesoul
I don't know why you think that. Faith is frequently shaken, lost, regained, etc. It can be strong or weak. — frank
It presupposes the existence of Zeus. It shows the role of authority throughout history as it pertains to religious belief. It shows that religious belief is not in it's own category. It shows that most - near all - religious belief is learned and it leads us to...
...consider the source.
— creativesoul
I don't know what you're trying to say. — frank
Indeed, the very point of the paper is to drawn and maintain a distinction between faith and religious belief.
— creativesoul
There are a number of fantastic scholars of religion to rely on. — frank
Hence... as a matter of the highest merit, one will refuse all evidence to the contrary, as a means to show and/or demonstrate their faith. — creativesoul
They're scholars — frank
"For years, believers of QAnon have been waiting for "The Storm," a day of reckoning foretold by Q during which these elites would be exposed, rounded up and possibly even executed. It seemed "The Storm" was always just around the corner.
Lily's father frantically called her days before the inauguration, imploring her to come home for her safety, she said. Her parents were so sure Q's predictions were going to come true.
But then Biden became president and nothing happened.
Lily hoped that her family would finally return to her after Biden's inauguration.
Her parents have reasoned away why Q's predictions didn't come true. "They blame themselves for not understanding what Q meant," she said. "For not being smart enough to be able to know what really is going to happen."
Now Lily, like others who have lost loved ones to QAnon, is left wondering how to move forward." — frank
In my view, this ‘evil’ is more the cornerstone of institutionalised religion. — Possibility
What role is faith playing here? — frank
Her parents have reasoned away why Q's predictions didn't come true. — frank
Why is their faith so strong? — frank
That's a psychological question. I would say that there's much more to learn by seeking to answer how it became so unshakable? — creativesoul
Combine that with a deep-seated warranted belief that politicians(most anyway) are dishonest about what's actually motivating their own decision making(public policy) — creativesoul
The universal calibrates your vision. It helps you see patterns. — frank
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