Any and all belief that is based upon logical possibility alone.
I've explained. — creativesoul
You haven't explained... — Janus
In any case, religious beliefs, the subject of this thread, are not based on logical possibility alone... — Janus
I'm beginning to believe that you are not arguing in good faith. — creativesoul
You've just said that that Trump's claims that the election was stolen is reasonable but not warranted, because it is not based on logical possibility alone. — Janus
...for Kenny religious faith is not unreasonable; does it not follow that it is reasonable? — Janus
"...in the absence of adequate evidence".Faith, then, resembles knowledge in being irrevocable, but differs from it in being a commitment in the absence of adequate evidence.
...theological propositions cannot contradict each other in the straightforward way in which empirical propositions do. Hence, there is not the head-on clash between different theologies, and different religions, which has been used to justify the persecution and killing of one religious group by others.
Faith, as I understand it, is the acceptance of the testimony of a sacred text or of a religious community. The two, in fact, go together, because if the sacred texts are taken as guides to practical life, their authority is inseparable from the authority of the religious officials whose role is to interpret them.
This agrees with what I said; yet...In terms of what it can compel people to do. There have been many evils committed in the name of religion. Just now I heard that in some English ethnic groups people are refusing COVID vaccination ‘because their pastor told them’. I think that is what Kenny has in mind. — Wayfarer
And this:
Faith, as I understand it, is the acceptance of the testimony of a sacred text or of a religious community. The two, in fact, go together, because if the sacred texts are taken as guides to practical life, their authority is inseparable from the authority of the religious officials whose role is to interpret them.
Moving beyond exegesis, faith places the faithful beyond reasonable discourse. They are to believe regardless of the evidence, and follow their religious officials.
Fundamental to the Abrahamic religions is the myth of the binding of Isaac. That story extolls blind obedience to authority. This evil is the cornerstone of religion. — Banno
“Faith is not, as theologians have claimed, a virtue, but a vice, unless a number of conditions can be fulfilled.
I’ve found that accepting the testimony of a text (sacred or otherwise) is quite different from accepting the testimony of a religious community’s interpretation of that text. — Possibility
Faith, as I understand it, is the acceptance of the testimony of a sacred text or of a religious community. The two, in fact, go together, because if the sacred texts are taken as guides to practical life, their authority is inseparable from the authority of the religious officials whose role is to interpret them. In the Judeo-Christian tradition for instance the very notion of “the Bible” as a single entity depends on the various authorities throughout our history who have established the canon. However impressive individual books may be, to see them as elements of a single revelation containing some or all of the other books is already tacitly to accept a religious authority that defines the canon.
Faith is acceptance of an authority - a text or community. Faith is irrevocable; merit comes from belief despite the evidence. — Banno
Then address this:
Faith, as I understand it, is the acceptance of the testimony of a sacred text or of a religious community. The two, in fact, go together, because if the sacred texts are taken as guides to practical life, their authority is inseparable from the authority of the religious officials whose role is to interpret them. In the Judeo-Christian tradition for instance the very notion of “the Bible” as a single entity depends on the various authorities throughout our history who have established the canon. However impressive individual books may be, to see them as elements of a single revelation containing some or all of the other books is already tacitly to accept a religious authority that defines the canon. — Banno
Faith runs counter to the intellectual attitude that simply admits that one does not know.
“Faith is not, as theologians have claimed, a virtue, but a vice, unless a number of conditions can be fulfilled.
I would add a third condition; that faith does not condone, let alone encourage, an action that is repugnant - such as sacrificing one's son.
The conclusion, that faith is not a virtue, seems unavoidable. — Banno
He’s referring to a tradition, which in itself is not authoritative. It is the enforcing of authority, not faith - in tradition, text or community - that is the error of institutionalised religion. — Possibility
Why isn't that shifting the topic? No, he's referring to faith. He doesn't mention tradition.He’s referring to a tradition, — Possibility
‘Fear of God’ is mistaken here for obedience to authority, but any illusion of ‘authority’ is given freely by Abraham, not demanded or taken by force. — Possibility
Why isn't that shifting the topic? No, he's referring to faith. He doesn't mention tradition. — Banno
In the Judeo-Christian tradition for instance... — Banno
"God said 'fear', but meant 'trust'"...?
Not convincing. — Banno
From the article Banno linked...
To explain the origin of life, Dawkins invokes a planetary version of the anthropic principle. He states it thus. We exist here on Earth. Therefore, the earth must be the kind of planet that is capable of generating and supporting us, however unusual, even unique, that kind of planet is. However small the minority of planets with just the right conditions of life may be, we necessarily have to be on one of that minority, because here we are thinking about it.” (GD, 135) On the face of it, the planetary conditions for our support are immensely improbable and call for explanation. No, says this anthropic principle, far from being improbable they are necessary; and necessary truths call for no explanation.
No acceptable enforcement of authority in tradition, text or community alone, no. — Possibility
Seems to me the discussion went astray here:
...for Kenny religious faith is not unreasonable; does it not follow that it is reasonable? — Janus
As a matter of exegesis, Kenny is not saying faith is not unreasonable; he is saying that faith and reason are incommensurate. See p.394, and the conclusion:
Faith, then, resembles knowledge in being irrevocable, but differs from it in being a commitment in the absence of adequate evidence.
"...in the absence of adequate evidence". — Banno
"...in the absence of adequate evidence".
Indeed faith is to be maintained despite, and even in the face of, any evidence. — Banno
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