"Tell us first what that is - define your term in some substantive way." And you cannot, except in terms of faith. — tim wood
God - a word about which, if it is to be a meaningful word and not a nonsense word - is all about faith. As such, it is not about philosophy, metaphysics. logic, reason, science, quantum mechanics or really anything else. These other things, to be sure, as tools can be applied to theology for the benefit of theology. But no application of them brings theology out of its own proper sphere of faith without turning it into nonsense. — tim wood
I understand the holistic approach (feel free to educate on this) is the belief in an immanent something - — tim wood
But the rock is, first, a rock. If any part of the rock is something else, what part, what something else? — tim wood
I'm struck by the substance and beauty of this metaphor. Thank you for it! Let's see how well it stands.I was talking about meaning holism. Imagine a sea of beliefs and inferences that repetitively crashes upon the shore of contemporary speech, making available elements from the distant past and from distant lands. Meaning, by this view, arises from this vast sea so that no particular case of use has clear boundaries in terms of meaning. — frank
So I was offering elements of the use of "God" that aren't about faith, but may feature in everyone's experiences. What makes the believer distinct is that he or she is calling that thing divine. — frank
The idea that God is just about faith is an idea that I think most people understand, but if it's just a belief based on faith, what makes one faith better than another. It's funny because when I ask this question religious people start using reason to defend their faith, but the claim is that reason has nothing to do with faith. So which is it, I ask, faith or reason? If it's purely faith, without reason, then I suppose I could have faith in anything I please. One faith is no better than another. — Sam26
If it's purely faith, without reason, then I suppose I could have faith in anything I please. One faith is no better than another. — Sam26
As faith qua faith, none is better, imo - you can believe what you want. But is it that simple? In most faiths there's a component of action. I imagine you would agree with me that some actions are better than others. And there is also the internal logic of any system, which is merely the application of reason - logic - to the system itself without reference to anything outside the system - usual tests being for internal consistency and the presence of contradiction. — tim wood
Faith, as distinct from merely arbitrary belief, or idle entertainment of ideas, has affective power. No one will feel devotion or love for, or be profoundly inspired by, the Spaghetti Monster or Russell's Teapot.
It is not so much that one faith is better than another but that there is real faith and then there is mere belief and then something even less significant than that. — Janus
God - a word about which, if it is to be a meaningful word and not a nonsense word - is all about faith. As such, it is not about philosophy, metaphysics. logic, reason, science, quantum mechanics or really anything else. — tim wood
There is no doubt that faith, which are about beliefs by the way, have power, but that doesn't make them true, and that's what I'm concerned with, not wishful thinking. — Sam26
I'm struck by the substance and beauty of this metaphor — tim wood
It's not enough for any criteria of meaning I know of to accept it as meaning, as meaningful, merely because someone says it. — tim wood
If someone says the rock is divine, as knowledge that's private knowledge, again, faith, or, another word, feeling, the personal attribution of a particular cause for a particular feeling. — tim wood
The purported truth, in any propositional sense, of what one has faith in is irrelevant, not even coherent, I would say. Faith is not properly held in propositional terms at all; if it is, it is mere irrational belief, some form of fundamentalism. — Janus
So to the main point neither fact, nor reason, nor faith is a better or worse basis for one to believe something to be true - with the only caveat that they can not be misapplied. — Rank Amateur
I'm not up on Camus's understanding of what truth is, either in his context or in general. But I can ask you if you distinguish between rhetorical brickbats and real brickbats. And if you do, which is the truer. And if you think Camus would, too.Camus would, I think, say one is more truthful than the other. Which to my mind is just a prejudicial selection of one option over another - neither one with any more provable truth value than the other. — Rank Amateur
As I see it, faith proper is almost entirely a matter of affect. It consists in feelings: of reverence, of awe, of love, of aspiration, of a sense of the divine, the sublime. Whatever is said as an expression of faith should be taken as metaphor, as allegory.
The existence or non-existence of God cannot be known; first you would need to understand what it could mean to say that God exists. — Janus
Not joking, it's what I believe, that what we call 'God' is the only thing that exists. So if you/I/we exist then you/I/we are God, quite simple really — TWI
Your way of thinking about it would need to be tackled in a different way. Moreover, the two main religions don't think of it the way you're thinking of faith, at least generally. — Sam26
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