Actually, many do claim to know God (or Jesus) personally. But not in an objective sense. They "know" (experience) their spiritual Lord subjectively as a "feeling". And subjective knowledge cannot be proven or dis-proven empirically. That's why you have to take it on faith in the truthfulness of the person making the claim (special pleading??).However the knife cuts both ways: Theists can't claim they themselves know anything about God. Could they? How do they avoid the special pleading fallacy? Beats me! — Agent Smith
You guessed it! :blush:Neither empiricism nor revelation. What exactly are we talking about here? . . . .
Oh! It's your Both/And Principle. — Agent Smith
Theists can't claim they themselves know anything about God. Could they? How do they avoid the special pleading fallacy? — Agent Smith
I see two distinct ways to approach these issues. We can say that this appearance of disorder in the universe is evidence of not-God, or we can say that this appearance of disorder is evidence of a failing in our capacity to understand, what is really organized and orderly. — Metaphysician Undercover
So any sort of pattern is an order. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am stating a brute fact, a self-evident truth, that order requires a cause. — Metaphysician Undercover
And what's the "cause" of this requirement?Disorder also requires a cause. Everything that exists requires a cause. — Philosophim
To claim one unknown is caused by another (further removed) unknown is an emply claim because the question is merely begged and not answered.Scientifically, can we determine that God is the cause for everything's existence?
Disorder also requires a cause. Everything that exists requires a cause.
— Philosophim
And what's the "cause" of this requirement? — 180 Proof
Scientifically, can we determine that God is the cause for everything's existence?
To claim one unknown is caused by another (further removed) unknown is an emply claim because the question is merely begged and not answered. — 180 Proof
Yeah, and I and others in series or replies cogently rejected the antiquated incoherence of your "answer". :confused:
I answer this here. https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/12098/a-first-cause-is-logically-necessary/p1
— Philosophim
Yeah, and I and others in series or replies cogently rejected the antiquated incoherence of your "answer". :confused: — 180 Proof
Think of it like trying to explain yellow to someone who is blind — I like sushi
If you have had an episode of psychosis you probably understand this a little. — I like sushi
If you have had an episode of psychosis you probably understand this a little. — I like sushi
You really don’t understand what I’m talking about nor seem to understand anything about how the brain functions. Calling them ‘lunatics’ (or insinuating I’m saying that) tells me all I need to know about your ignorance. — I like sushi
Calling them ‘lunatics’ (or insinuating I’m saying that) tells me all I need to know about your ignorance. — I like sushi
This is why I generally think of the whole god/religion concept as something entangled within the human psyche. The ‘space’ between unconscious processes and conscious thought. — I like sushi
You call them lunatics. In the sophisticated guise of "psychosis". — EugeneW
I know exactly how my brain functions. That's exactly the reason I know depression or psychosis are not caused by some chemical imbalance of neurotransmitters. You can try to restore the balance by drugs, taking away the dark feeling, but that doesn't take away the cause. — EugeneW
Its incredibly important that we don't look down on or consider religious people "stupid" — Philosophim
While I agree that drugs do not take away the cause, they can take away the effect. — Philosophim
Go play with someone else on your low level moron — I like sushi
The advice was to continue swallowing them. The positive effect would take a few weeks. I didn’t do that. — EugeneW
Benzo's and other stuff work better, but they won't prescribe it. — EugeneW
Any reason why you didn't try to follow the medical advice and try it for a few weeks? — Philosophim
I tried a few days, despite it made me feel worse after the first take. I couldn't imagine that it made me feel better after taking it longer. If I had known for sure I might have done it. Like smoking gets good after one packet only. — EugeneW
Right, I think they didn't inform you of what it was supposed to do. Depression medication isn't supposed to make you high or happy. Depression is usually about not being able to function or do anything about your emotional state. You can be sad or bored, but not depressed. Depression is where doing anything outside of minimal effort is incredibly difficult. If for example you feel you need an emotional high to do anything, that's an overcompensation for depression. — Philosophim
These periods ("episodes") are rare and maybe on the verge of mania or psychosis but very intense. If you would always be depressed or know for sure it would never go away, it would be quite depressing! — EugeneW
I'm no medical professional, but maybe you should see a psychologist? I'm not sure your experiences necessarily describe medical depression. — Philosophim
For the record, I don't think of the BothAnd Principle as a rhetorical device. Instead, it's a harmonious Holistic worldview. In some aspects, a BothAnd perspective is like the modern scientific concepts of "Relativity" & "Superposition". It allows you to see both sides of coin, or both sides of an argument, in order to reach a better understanding of a complex situation as a whole system of interacting parts. So, it's also the philosophical basis of scientific Systems Theory. :smile:For theists to maintain the Islamic position on God (there's nothing in us or in the world that could be used to get a handle on God hence Islam's hard-line iconoclasm) and also to claim knowledge of God, something quite clever needs to be done, oui? Apophasis (via negativa) + Cataphasis (BothAnd Gnomon) — Agent Smith
A "restatement" of (Hegel's) dialectics https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dialectic or more generally dualistic monism https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dialectical_monism ... But why reinvent the wheel, Gnomon? How does your variation on this theme improve on Laozi, Anaximander, Heraclitus, Socrates/Plato ... Fichte, Hegel, Marx/Engels, Bookchin ...? Or the likes of Advaita Vendata? :chin:Both/And Principle:
My coinage for the holistic principle of Complementarity, as illustrated in the Yin/Yang symbol. Opposing or contrasting concepts are always part of a greater whole. Conflicts between parts can be reconciled or harmonized by putting them into the context of a whole system. — Gnomon
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.