Some theists will point to personal experiences as evidence, but these experiences can be subjective and interpreted in different ways. — Thund3r
...says roughly that beliefs are either based on empirical evidence or faith, setting up a false dilemma.1. If there is no empirical evidence for something, then belief in that something is based on faith and personal beliefs, not fact. — Thund3r
There's other arguments besides this one. And "empirical evidence" suggests that the universe did indeed have a beginning. The example of quantum fluctuation is a case in point, not in contrast.The argument for a divine creator relies on the assumption that the universe had a beginning. — Thund3r
Secondly God is not ‘based on an idea’. If anything, God is reduced to an idea or a series of propositions, which then are said to have no possibility of empirical validation. But that is a kind of ‘straw God’ in that it refers mainly to the kind of God whose only presence is as a term in Internet debates. In practice belief in God is grounded in community, in tradition, and in a way of living, which opens up horizons of being in a way that mere propositional knowledge cannot. — Wayfarer
Well, there certaintly isn't any corroborable, non-anecdotal, public evidence of or sound arguments for "theism" (e.g. the existence of any "theistic" g/G). No doubt I could be wrong about this ... :smirk:I'm not here to make the case for theism, but saying there's no evidence is just not true. — T Clark
Secondly God is not ‘based on an idea’. If anything, God is reduced to an idea or a series of propositions, which then are said to have no possibility of empirical validation. But that is a kind of ‘straw God’ in that it refers mainly to the kind of God whose only presence is as a term in Internet debates. In practice belief in God is grounded in community, in tradition, and in a way of living, which opens up horizons of being in a way that mere propositional knowledge cannot. — Wayfarer
On the one hand, I acknowledge the lack of empirical evidence for a divine being, and on the other, I cannot deny the possibility of its existence. — Thund3r
The argument for a divine creator relies on the assumption that the universe had a beginning. — Thund3r
In our day-to-day lives, we demand evidence and validation before accepting something as truth. — Thund3r
Perhaps I’ve not fully understood some of the strongest theist arguments. — Thund3r
Well, that's good enough to demonstrate that disbelief in theistic g/G is more reasonable than theistic g/G-beliefs. From a recent post ...No one has either proved/disproved the existence of god. All that has been accomplished is refutations of mainly theistic arguments, that they're unsound. — Agent Smith
Also (same thread):↪Agent Smith These semantic muddles are why I prefer the more probative question of Is theism true or not true? rather than merely "Does g/G exist?" If theism is not true (i.e. antitheism), then atheism (i.e. every theistic g/G is a fiction) follows; however, whether or not "g/G exists" does not entail either belief or disbelief in g/G ... — 180 Proof
We do for some things, but not for many many others. For example, we have large sets of heuristics about how to achieve certain things: money, friends, romance, creative works: how to avoid certain things: being looked down on, being safe, figuring out the right things to doIn our day-to-day lives, we demand evidence and validation before accepting something as truth. — Thund3r
No "lack of belief" here, just active disbelief. — 180 Proof
We always have a choice whether or not to hold rational (dis)beliefs — 180 Proof
...says roughly that beliefs are either based on empirical evidence or faith, setting up a false dilemma. — Banno
And "empirical evidence" suggests that the universe did indeed have a beginning. The example of quantum fluctuation is a case in point, not in contrast. — Banno
A better argument against there being a good god who intervenes in the world is to look around at how bad a job he is doing. — Banno
Some theists will point to personal experiences as evidence, — Thunder
Ah, the all-famous lack of belief. In me humble opinion, atheists shouldn't co-opt lack of belief - that position is distinct enough to deserve a separate category (would save us a lot of trouble). — Agent Smith
If beliefs are not based on faith or empirical evidence, what is the main root? — javi2541997
I can't know there is no god. I can only decide there are no reasons good enough to believe in one. I am, like many contemporary freethinkers, an agnostic atheist. Agnostic in relation to knowledge of god; atheist in terms of belief in god. — Tom Storm
I think most people believe in god because they are brought up with the idea - evidence and faith are post hoc. — Tom Storm
Children are taught there is a god and the notion becomes absorbed as part of their socialisation and enculturation. — Tom Storm
You're much more likely to have an experience of a particular God as an adult if you are properly primed from birth. — Tom Storm
... or delusion? ... or whichever is cognitively-socially easier? ... or???do they believe in God because of blind faith? ... or do they need an empirical evidence? — javi2541997
I can't believe in something I don't know to be true, even if I don't know if it is not true. Are we having fun yet? :razz: — Tom Storm
Such as ...I'm under the impression that we may have "reasons" other than a good argument to believe. — Agent Smith
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