Faith comes from within us. Therefore anything attributed to faith has its origins in us. At the same time not in fact - or we would be being informed by fact. — tim wood
God - a word about which, if it is to be a meaningful word and not a nonsense word - is all about faith. — tim wood
And it's crystal clear that many participants on TPF do not understand that simple point. Practice faith. Think about what it means to believe in and practice that faith. And practice goes to conduct. There's plenty in that. But all efforts to find God in science, or logic, or semantics, or anywhere else except in faith, cannot succeed. — tim wood
In short, there can be philosophies of religion and theology. This is just thinking about the thinking about these topics. But that's the limit of what is reasonable. Attempts to prove existence, or presence, or anything else, outside of theology, is nonsense. — tim wood
In faith, you can have whatever your faith calls for. — tim wood
God - a word about which, if it is to be a meaningful word and not a nonsense word - is all about faith. — tim wood
fideism
/ˈfʌɪdɪɪz(ə)m/
noun
the doctrine that knowledge depends on faith or revelation.
But all efforts to find God in science, or logic, or semantics, or anywhere else except in faith, cannot succeed. — tim wood
Do you mean that all fantastic claims must be true, absent "concrete proof which reveals otherwise"? Janus, above, mentions Russell's teapot. You might want to give that a google.As such, it would account for the many faiths, religions, etc and would be impossible to invalidate without concrete proof which reveals otherwise. — BrianW
Clearly, we all believe that we are being informed by fact, — Metaphysician Undercover
Demonstrate what, first? If you need any evidence that "God" is a chief ingredient in the nonsense of a lot of people, just read on this site!God - a word about which, if it is to be a meaningful word and not a nonsense word - is all about faith.
— tim wood
Demonstrate this first. — Noble Dust
Yet isn't that what happens in faith? All kinds of people claiming all kinds of things are true? Science has criteria. What criteria does faith have?That's a facsimile of faith that precludes it's very definition. I might as well say that, in science, you can have whatever your science calls for. — Noble Dust
What criteria does faith have? — tim wood
How does "faith" differ from "hope" or "delusion"? — Harry Hindu
What if the individual basis for believing something is based on how it makes them feel, as opposed to consistent observations and experimentation? How does the concept of god NOT conflict with fact or reason?I would define faith as an individual basis used to believe something is true — Rank Amateur
How does the concept of god NOT conflict with fact or reason? — Harry Hindu
Having knowledge itself isn't proof of anything. Knowledge can be wrong - just like faith. To say that "I know" is to say that "For the moment, this is what I believe". And I'm sure you've had situations where your faith in someone had failed you — Harry Hindu
I don't believe I being informed by fact, rather, I believe I'm being informed by beliefs and opinions. I take it all all so called'knowledge' with a pinch of salt. — TWI
Yet clearly we are not in fact always informed by fact. On this we agree, yes? And I suspect there are some - perhaps many - who do not believe we are always informed by fact. "Always" my word; I believe you implied it, I merely wished to make it explicit. — tim wood
To be brief, faith (itself) tells us nothing. Faith comes from within us. Therefore anything attributed to faith has its origins in us. At the same time not in fact - or we would be being informed by fact. Nor in reason, for reason would be informing us, and reason speaks of facts. To denominate any as "true" requires a definition of true. Except that one definition won't fit. Each will require its own truth. — tim wood
Thank you for providing a definition of the word! The short reply is, with respect to faith, shouldn't it be? If God isn't a matter of faith, what is it? Next there's the notion of knowledge. In respect of faith, "knowledge" needs a careful definition or qualification. Give it a try?That definition, forgive me for so saying, is rather fideistic.
fideism
noun
the doctrine that knowledge depends on faith or revelation. — Wayfarer
No disagreement here.The importance of practice and of anchoring one’s understanding in the lived reality of faith can’t be over-stated. Though practice one learns a dimension of existence and experience that simply can’t be learned by any other means. One cannot, after all, learn to ski by reading books about skiing.
Where do you draw the line between religion and psychology? By psychology I mean mental health and being mentally strong and healthy. It seems to me that, as with so many words used in connection with religion, that even "religion" needs a careful definition. It may even depend on context. Give that a try?I will say that one facet of spirituality that mainstream Western denominations are weak in, is the ‘experiential dimension’. But I say that as one of those who sought out spiritual experience, only to realise that any worth having requires that one adopt certain attitudes and dispositions which would customarily be designated ‘religious’ . There’s probably no escape from that particular regress, but I still maintain that religion as it is propagated in Western culture has become estranged from the experiential aspects without which it is indeed simply meaningless verbiage. I think one reason is because the metaphors and myth is in which religion is embodied are now so remote from the reality of post—industrial civilization.
If only!What criteria does faith have?
— tim wood
that it is in no way in conflict with fact or reason - — Rank Amateur
You're right! My bad. Your criteria was the impossibility of invalidation, lacking concrete proof. Question: Do you accept as valid any and every claim you cannot invalidate? And I might as well ask what you mean by "valid." I assume you mean some variation of true with respect to selected criteria, but not the whole thing, and this I buy.I'm not talking about truth or falsity. Why would anyone do that when we're not dealing in facts? I'm suggesting that it's primarily about a certain relationship with information we have regardless of evidence. For example, I don't have to be religious to know and to relate with the concept of a religious God or religious anything. What I need is the relevant information and to understand the context. As such, at least, I can claim to have decent perspective in the matter. — BrianW
Amen. You're kind with "ignore." I think ignor-ant is more accurate (actually stupid, understood as applied ignorance in the face of facts). But that includes a lot of people for religion as well. And that's mainly what I'm on about, the debate between different factions of stupid. If only ignorance-stupidity came with a warning dashlight, so that practitioners would know to carry on off-stage, such discussions of their's being profoundly ob-skena (off-stage), obscene.Imho there's often very little adherence to logic by those who argue against religion because most of them ignore a significant portion of what religion is. — BrianW
every argument against a faith based belief that is not in conflict with fact or reason - is just another faith based belief. — Rank Amateur
Do you really mean knowledge? I accept the Pythagorean theorem, though I have yet to feel consoled by it. Nor would a reasonable person accept that faith, hope, and delusion are alike, except perhaps iin some very narrow way. Likely you've a point to make, but you haven't yet made it. Write a little more?How does "faith" differ from "hope" or "delusion"?
Isn't "faith" simply accepting certain knowledge with no reason to other than it is consoling? — Harry Hindu
Now just here is a problem. There are folks like me who would hold that knowledge can't be wrong. People can be wrong about what they believe is knowledge. It's a useful distinction. Is it one you would have made?Knowledge can be wrong — Harry Hindu
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