I believe that both the cosmological and ontological arguments are the application of reason. — Rank Amateur
.”Incorrect. If it's not in conflict with established fact, or in conflict with reason, then it's reasonable.” — Michael Ossipoff
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What a pointless "if". It is, by its nature, in conflict with reason, else it wouldn't be a matter of faith.
.”The matter of God, or the matter of the nature or character of Reality as a whole isn't amenable to, or a topic for, proof, reason or logic.” — Michael Ossipoff
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No, that's not true with regards to the matter of God. This very discussion, as well as others, attest to that.
.I suspect that your error here is treating the matter of God as if it is the matter of God as per your personal take on it, whereby you've made it such that God is a special exception. You don't get to have exclusive say on God.
.“And, regarding a matter that logic and reason don't apply to, the only way to be in conflict with reason would be to try apply reason to that matter. ...as you're attempting to do.” — Michael Ossipoff
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No, you don't seem to understand that a matter of faith, by nature, conflicts with a matter of reason.
.They are chalk and cheese. If where I live were a matter of faith, which it clearly isn't, then there would be no conflict with my faith that I live on a boat in France, even though reason leads to the belief that I live in an apartment in England. Is a boat an apartment? Are England and France the same country? No, the two sets of beliefs, as well as how they were obtained, clash. They are in conflict.
Your problem is that, as a Science-Worshipper, you firmly, faithfully, and unshakably believe that matter is all of reality, and science covers all. — Michael Ossipoff
What's interesting about this phenomena is that it illustrates how faith is a human issue, not a religious issue. — Jake
There's no fundamental difference between vehement theists and vehement atheists, it's the same process at work in both cases.
Well, andrewk. Firstly, I'm not a theologian. I'm a metaphysicist. — Lucid
Yes, and, in particular, a social issue and an image issue. There are a lot of people, some of them here, who need to perceive themselves as the scientific debunkers, champions of science. — Michael Ossipoff
As Searle pointed out, Materialism (or Science-Worship) is the prevailing religion of our time. In the minds of a lot of people here, proclaiming and championing science establishes one's credentials as one of the scientific, rational people. There's a perception of status in aligning oneself with the prevailing belief-system. .more scientific than thou. — Michael Ossipoff
Yes, I sometimes suspect that the people who are loud Atheists and Materialists now, would, in medieval days, have been loud and aggressive persecutors of accused nonbelievers in the official authoritative-perceived religion of that time. — Michael Ossipoff
You’re confusing “different from” with “in conflict with”. — Michael Ossipoff
It’s off our topic, and I’d have to write another 10 or 20 pages. — Michael Ossipoff
It is, by its nature, in conflict with reason, else it wouldn't be a matter of faith.
Faith is believing something when there is insufficient evidence for a more formal conclusion. Sometimes when there is no evidence at all. Much of the time, this is reasonable. — Pattern-chaser
.”You’re confusing “different from” with “in conflict with”. “ — Michael Ossipoff
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No I'm not.
.Many or most vocal Internet atheists are actually heretics to their own chosen methodology. They're eager to apply reason to the other fellow's beliefs, but not to their own, which reveals they're not actually interested in reason at all, but have instead confused it with ideology.
.You're confusing line spacing with full stops.
.Your "Atheist Science-Worshipper!" over the top rhetoric
I intend to come back through and reply to those who have replied to me. I will admit, I'm not quite sure how to respond, in some cases.
For now, a question. When a writer writes a book. Are they condemned as evil for the horrors in which the characters experience? Unless the book is merely just a cover for the author to live out some fantasies, no. Why is this? Because adversity makes the story interesting, in a most cases.
Yes it's possible to have stories without any conflict or adversity, and yes they can be enjoyable; but they're often short, and simple, and thus proclaimed as children's stories.
So when the author writes of this crazed psychopath who unleashes his killing rage and murders hundreds of people, what makes this acceptable? Not merely the fact of it being a story, because if it was clear that it was just the guise for murderous fantasy, and held nothing in the way of plot or resolution, we would be sickened. — Lucid
If we lived in a perfect world... We'd die of boredom or lose our capacity for intellectual examination of life, much as the creatures in hg wells the time machine became simplistic and juvenile after completely dominating their environment. — Lucid
Many people have brought up various diseases. But isn't it the point of a disease for us to overcome it?
It's when we are in the story and unable to see the true scope of things that we find evil so tragic and intolerable.
Since when does a Roomba care if you turn it off, or accidentally spill water into it, or if it falls downstairs?
Have the wisdom of a Roomba.
Sure we care about what happens to us--enough to do our best to achieve what we like, want or prefer, and, to that end, to last as long as we can.
But we're about our likes and preferences--as we act on them, when it's time to act on them.. We're not about the outcome when it happens.
Kentucky Buddhist Ken Keys pointed out that we don't have needs.. ...only likes and preferences. — Michael Ossipoff
Imagine a world where there was NO adversity. No problems of any kind. No bad weather, no conflict, no natural disasters, no famine or death... You know what would inevitably occur? The analytical centers in your brain would essentially begin to atrophy, having Nothing To Process. Meanwhile, more and more of your brain would be used to process enjoyment and creativity. Eventually all rationality would be lost until all that was left was a brain that could only operate on instinctual satisfaction of desire. — Lucid
The point is that adversity, struggle, and conflict are an essential part in what has given us the intelligence and awareness we so appreciate, and without which, we would be little more than animals with a sense of wonder. — Lucid
Faith is believing something when there is insufficient evidence for a more formal conclusion. Sometimes when there is no evidence at all. Much of the time, this is reasonable.
— Pattern-chaser
Yes, when there's also no proof or convincing evidence to the contrary.
Yes, that's what Sapientia doesn't seem to get at all, because Sapientia is using his own personal, unusual definition of "conflicts with", equating it to "is different from". — Michael Ossipoff
Since when does a Roomba care if you turn it off, or accidentally spill water into it, or if it falls downstairs? — Michael Ossipoff
Reason is in fact the path to faith, and faith takes over when reason can say no more.” Thomas merton — Rank Amateur
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