Agnostic. I would say atheist but that is only really towards certain conceptions of gods inside popular religions. I consider myself generally open to some arguments for something supernatural and do not think many of the atheistic approaches to theism meet a good standard to label theism false. — Chany
This is a critical insight. Ingenuously* is the way they were intended to be read. The narrative of scripture is compelling. — Bitter Crank
It would be wholly naive to believe that there is nothing wrong with this world and if you cared for Nature, the 'we', you would be wholly righteous, disgusted at injustice and at all things morally deplorable. This is where I have some trouble with the Stoics. — TimeLine
I don't think the Stoics believed there's nothing wrong with the world, or that the world is perfect, as that would require them to take the position that we can't improve ourselves. — Ciceronianus the White
unlike the philosophical the religious ultimately allow reference ad-hoc beyond human comprehension: e.g. "god did it!", which is philosophically unsatisfying. — jkop
What's ad-hoc and non-philosophical is the arbitrary assumption of a faculty for comprehending things beyond comprehension.The religious or mystical faculty is what comprehends this aspect of reality — Noble Dust
What's ad-hoc and non-philosophical is the arbitrary assumption of a faculty for comprehending things beyond comprehension. — jkop
What if it's not necessarily an "arbitrary assumption" at all, but a lived experience; and one that you cannot understand simply because you have never lived it? — John
To have or live the experience is neither necessary nor sufficient for understanding it. — jkop
What's ad-hoc and non-philosophical is the arbitrary assumption of a faculty for comprehending things beyond comprehension. — jkop
This quite unfairly implies that those who self-identify as atheists are not open to arguments. One can be an atheist (in the common sense of not believing in any deities or the supernatural) with an open mind, and most atheists probably think of themselves that way. — SophistiCat
34% religious on a philosophy forum! :-O — jkop
Yes, it's strange. Both this forum and its former incarnation are slanted towards atheism. In a survey of philosophers through history (which are not to be confused with people who write about philosophy -- including members of internet forums), the number of religious people would be far greater. — Mariner
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