"Faith Argument" — Gus Lamarch
Theres something inside us that God planted in us to lead us to him. — Keenan
I believe in God because He confirmed what other men said about Him. — Keenan
Being very straightfoward, everytime I enter in a religious debate with someone who "follows" some religion (catholic, protestant, orthodox, muslim, etc...) eventually, as a religious debate tends to end, the "faithful" one, ends appealing to the "Faith Argument", that i find stupid and misleading, because this argument is supported by no base. — Gus Lamarch
You’re the one [@Keenan] who claims that all knowledge is based on faith, if you recall. This means that you cannot know that your experience was real. You can only have faith that it was real. You have to trust yourself that the experience wasn’t a delusion based on the suggestions of others. — praxis
"I believe in God because i have Faith" they say, and how can you discourse about that. — Gus Lamarch
A casual stroll through the lunatic asylum shows that faith does not prove anything.
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Faith is what people believe in when they do not want to know the truth.
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If a man has a strong faith he can indulge in the luxury of skepticism. — Freddy Zarathustra
That brings us around to the flip side of the equation. All Faith is based on Knowledge. — Keenan
I think a good response there was never any base in the first place, the arbitrary is nothing more than a ghost of imagination. — TheWillowOfDarkness
If we take a mathematical relationship, like 2+2=4, the question of the arbitrariness makes no sense because there would never be 2+2=4 (what is known here) which would be anything other than a 2+2=4. — TheWillowOfDarkness
he relationship is the reverse: no matter how similar things might be (natural numbers, different instances of atoms, different instances of human, etc.), they are each a unique difference. Even those who are the same in a representation are entirely different. — TheWillowOfDarkness
There is no isomorphism between any of them — TheWillowOfDarkness
in an empirical environment, while looking at the real, physical world, I certainly agree. In abstract, Platonic worlds, no. These Platonic abstractions are not the physical world. — alcontali
I would have thought that the whole basis of mathematical physics and indeed much of science in general, is that in finding the kinds of things, and the orderly relations between things, we are perceiving the elements of a Platonic order in the apparent disorder of sensory perception, so as to be amenable to mathematical representation. — Wayfarer
It's not as if the two realms of mathematics and physical objects are entirely divorced — Wayfarer
Mathematics only helps keeping the language of physics consistent. — alcontali
But then precisely as you say, it is not a logical argument. It is not a reason for you to believe. It is how they come to believe. It isn't failing as an argument just as an orange doesn't fail to be a bicycle. Though this seems to be what you are saying in the first paragraph above. But shifting in the second.I understand faith to be a method of acquiring belief rather than justification as your diagram seems to suggest. Perhaps people use the word "faith" in that manner and I'm not aware of it.
By definition, faith as a method of acquiring belief short-circuits the "normal" or preferred use of well-crafted logical arguments. This logical failing stands out like a sore thumb for all to see and pick apart at will. — TheMadFool
someone who "follows" — Gus Lamarch
That is science.
Science is simply another activity, and absolutely not the same activity as mathematics. — alcontali
the mathematical order of the cosmos is what makes science possible, aside from being intrinsic to the fabric of the cosmos. — Wayfarer
There is a Platonic intuition that senses that there is somewhere a connection between mathematics and the physical universe, but we (should) never make use of it in mathematics. — alcontali
If you intend to assert anything about the physical universe, you will have to experimentally test. — alcontali
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