And religious people dispute each other around the nature of God, for example. — Coben
It sounds like you are comparing current historians in Western countries - especially when they are not challenging things like capitalism, where the peers may be just as biased, as one example - with religious writers further back in history. — Coben
And further are not so important as say scripture. — Coben
And then you classify the religious writers, it seems, as intentionally justifying what they consider immoral and unethical. — Coben
Or if you are saying they argue for their own version of ethics and you disagree with it, that's not really in the same category as what you are saying about historians. — Coben
Ok.
Belief is the problem.
I'm probably going around in circles here so humor me.
What name would you give to the message of your OP and all that you've said?
"Belief"?
You've offered us another word, "knowing" which, if I understand you, is better than "belief", the issue here.
This makes sense to me only when you qualified "knowing" with "what NOT to believe". Am I following you?
However, you don't want us NOT to believe what you're saying here. You want us to believe you.
My question doesn't hurt your position. I think you've made your case as far as I'm concerned. I just want to know the word, if not "belief", you use to describe what it is that you've discovered and wish to convey to us.
idol worshipers — A Gnostic Agnostic
I just read gnostic agnostic as basically two words that mean the same thing — Gnostic Christian Bishop
The countries who follow different historians send the experts to do the killing, for example. And the experts are not the historians, but the soldiers. Of course, some of the soldiers may be historians, but that's not there are sent to kill. So the lay historians, politicians, working from discordant histories, go to war.Yes, but you do not see historians killing each other over their views the way the religious do. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
based on purported facts. And since you see religions as false per se, well, of course you don't see them as based on facts, unless they are interpreted in the way you, as the particular kind of gnostic you are think they should be.Historians tend to report what they think are facts and may speak of the conditions they see arising from political systems, but they do not usually debate the various forms.
I do not see religious bias as the same as the bias historians have. One is based on nothing whie the other is based on facts. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
And further are not so important as say scripture.
— Coben
Scriptures are not important at all to intelligent people who are not raised outside of a religion. They see them as myths. Some will have a worthy message and some will just be garbage. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Try and fail is different from intentionally trying to mislead. Further there is not a shrinking number of theists, there is shrinking percentage of theists.And then you classify the religious writers, it seems, as intentionally justifying what they consider immoral and unethical.
— Coben
Sure. They try and fail, as indicated by the shrinking numbers ot theists. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
This slid away from the issue the issue what you quoted from me was focused on.What I disagree with is religions hiding behind a supernatural shield which kill debate and is like arguing with brain dead children. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I can't understand how you would — Pattern-chaser
based on purported facts. — Coben
What you see in the religious, you live out. — Coben
My religion says that it is not only my duty to try to grow my religion, but that it is also my duty to fight evil. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
there is a Great Evil destroying our homes, our livelihoods and ourselves. This Great Evil is humans. Please fight them for us, and kill them all if you can. Amen. — Pattern-chaser
There is an alternative to "belief". It is to "know". — A Gnostic Agnostic
Knowledge is a qualified type of belief: it's belief for which we have some justification and which we judge to be true. — Terrapin Station
epistemologist — Coben
If you think it's so absurd, you probably haven't deliberated upon the subject enough. — Tzeentch
epistemologist
— Coben
Are you swearing at me?
I am French and cant even pronounce that without slapping myself with my own tongue; tabarnac de calisse. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
You could break it down like this. The problem with 'facts' is that what fallible humans consider 'facts' can change. The problem with provable, is that proofs are restricted to closed systems, like math, say. Empirical knowledge cannot be proven. Though one can be incredibly confident in some of it. Even in science, things that seemed proven turned out not to be true.Faith, something based on nothing concrete.
Belief, something based on something but not proven. Close to " I think so and think it true.
Knowledge, something based on facts that are provable. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Stupid is as stupid writes. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
My religion says that it is [...] my duty [...] to fight evil. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
If the difference is so obvious, please show it to me.
As far as I am concerned, in both cases one is reading words and choosing to believe them or not. — Tzeentch
Why the question marks? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
First of all, beliefs aren't chosen. — S
Secondly, the obvious difference between believing the one compared to believing the other consists in how gullible you are. The religious text is about an implausible supernatural event, and the historical account is of a plausible natural event. You'd have to be really gullible to believe the former, whereas the latter is reasonable to believe. — S
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