Its just, some of us have learned to know better, while others are still searching. And I guess that's all there is to it. — colin
I don't really wish to elaborate on the details of my experience. Although I would like to point out that I've had several of these experiences. And I continue to experience them, even this afternoon at church. — colin
The coming upon what may be right should bring about a journey, a journey of exhaustively flagellating and fighting with a profoundly unsettling idea that could, in time, deeply shape the living of one's future life. In contrast, it would seem that you, Colin, have come upon something very easy, something distinctly simple — Heister Eggcart
My point is, it takes work. You have to earn enlightenment. Otherwise, it would lack any meaning. — colin
See, from my perspective, I find religious beliefs completely absurd, and I don't have any dissatisfaction with my present worldview. So I have zero motivation to "try my best and see if I can't find God."But I was determined to at least know that I tried my best and couldn't find God . . . — colin
In this case, Granny has offered us some specifics. Mister Paws was on her bed. But we might know Mister Paws was buried in the ground, dead, with a cement block on top. So with a few other premises we can deductively conclude that for some reason granny is not giving us accurate information. — Metaphysician Undercover
When the description is a description of one's own personal inner experience, how are you, as another, able to identify that experience in order to verify what is being said about it? The only access which you have, to enable identification, is through the means of the other's description. You can only identify that experience through the other's description of it. The described experience can be assumed to be no other than the description of it, without an accusation of lying. So how could you say that the description is false unless it contained inconsistency, or blatant contradiction?
I don't find atheism entirely plausible, meaning I find the notion that the universe, and all of its composition, all of its laws, all of its evolutionary principles, consciousness, beauty, etc. all just appeared from nowhere. — Hanover
What you've demonstrated here is that you really think that if we think we have sufficient eason to reject a person's claims about contact from the supernatural, then we reject their claim, and explain what they say they experienced according to our own alternative explanation. — Brainglitch
The point being, that in the case of Colin's op there was no sufficient reason for rejection, only a bias concerning the nature of the thing which Colin referred to as "God". — Metaphysician Undercover
What you describe as atheism, I see as agnosticism. Your epistemological standard seems relaxed here, and it's really more of a pragmatism. It's not that you have a firm justification for your belief. It's that given option A versus option B, A seems the least problematic, so A it is. I think I can agree with you that A is less problematic but still insist I don't know that A is correct, so I just concede agnosticism, as opposed to you who believe that that the results of your weighing test of two bad options offers you a justification for a clear conclusion. — Hanover
The new atheist critiques work well against the common conception of God as some kind of intervening sky father, touted around by evangelicals across the world. — darthbarracuda
Additionally, God is typically not seen as "complex", but rather necessarily "simple". — darthbarracuda
I'm beginning to think you have such a stringent notion of "classical theist" that only a very select few can qualify as one. If that's the case, then one can hardly complain if classical theism flies under the New Atheists' radar. — Arkady
After all, I did come here to spread positive feeling... — colin
I find it best to label myself an Ignostic, for mere agnosticism or atheism doesn't quite encompass all of my leanings. Have you considered this position? — Heister Eggcart
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.