Okay... where was I claiming that easily converging on similar notions makes them right? All I said was countering your notion that theologians don't have a decent understanding of what God is, an understanding that is adequate as far as reason can go, but no further.The point is we're an easily led species who generally tend to converge on similar notions, doesn't make them any more right. — Inter Alia
you should really speak to the hundreds of theologians who been trying to find out what God is for the last 2000 years — Inter Alia
'Theism' as it is used in Philosophy of Religion is the view that there is one supreme, perfect being who exists separately from the world, who is the creator and sustainor of the universe, who is conscious to the degree of being all-knowing; who is all-powerful, all and ever present, eternal, unchanging, existing necessarily, dependent of nothing else. In addition, Theism maintains that this being, who is called "God", loves and is concerned about humanity. It is claimed that Theism, as here understood, stands at the core of the three Abrahamic religions: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. — Mitchell
I find 4 of Feser's arguments unconvincing because they rely so heavily on Thomistic metaphysics, which I find also unconvincing. His fifth argument, the Argument from PSR, holds most promise, but his dismissal of the Objection from Brute Facts seems to me to beg the question. — Mitchell
So, what reasons do you think there are for the existence of a divine being, and what type of divine being do those reasons support? — Mitchell
Another question that I think needs to be addressed is whether there is any reason for believing some "supernatural" dimension of reality exist. This question could be independent of that of any deiity. E.g., there could be reincarnation without any deities at all. — Mitchell
Another question that I think needs to be addressed is whether there is any reason for believing some "supernatural" dimension of reality exist. This question could be independent of that of any deiity. E.g., there could be reincarnation without any deities at all. — Mitchell
Perhaps the first occurrence of "supernatural" is the Gnostic heresy? — tom
the soul is non-material, but it is certainly physical, and is subject to the laws of physics. — tom
Annie Dillard reminds us that the practice of attributing miracles to religious teachers also occurred in Judaism.Surely it is the accounts of the miracles of Jesus Christ, including walking on water, bringing the dead back to life, feeding the multitudes with a loaf of bread, restoring the lame and the blind, turning water into wine, then being resurrected from the dead and ascending bodily into Heaven. — Wayfarer
However, most rational people want to know if it's a fact that God exists, an objective fact. — Sam26
I'm curious to hear what people on a philosophy forum have to say about their own person theistic beliefs. — JustSomeGuy
If God is actually real independently of human experience, then that does not constitute an inter-subjective fact, but a kind of objective fact, even though God obviously cannot be an object of the senses. — Janus
I also see religion as a practice. There is a drama of one kind or another: a ritual in a church, chanting in a temple, or people getting together to talk or sing or dance. People emerge from such dramas with a sense of deep meaning. — mcdoodle
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