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- Jun 12, 2015
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- Married
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Some definitions:
"Proposition" A statement of fact, such as "Nature is real" "There is no divine" "Obama was not born in the USA." "Toyotas last longer than any other make of car." "Japan bombed Pearl Harbor." These are propositions, these have a burden of proof.
Belief. Something regarded, assumed, held as real, true, valid, reliable. But without necessarily having PROOF (especially not absolute, objective proof of a totally non-circular nature and in the philosophical sense. And yet such should not be nonsensical, sometimes this is associated with the admittedly very loose epistemology of "reasonable but not provable." Often it is based on some assumption (for example, that the Bible is true) and thus have a circular or assumptive nature. "I BELIEVE Obama was born in Hawaii" is a belief, not a proposition.
Faith. Reliance, trust in what is believed or a proposition known. Faith might be revealed by drinking a glass of water believed to be safe.
1. Some (Atheists and Naturalists might be examples) tend to insist on absolute, objective, non-circular PROOF for positions. I generally find that the more one insists upon this for OTHERS, the more they tend to dodge it for themselves. And I've had Atheists disallow a Theist from using anything remotely regarded as "unnatural" or "supernatural" to evidence the supernatural.... but then provide evidence for the natural by using the natural - the very thing they mocked as disallowed.
2. Others (Theists, for example) tend to admit that their position is primarily a belief. They may be able to evidence it via some rule THEY accept as normative (the Christian Bible for example) but not by something absolutely objective and non-circular and non-assumptive. We may conclude some believes appear more credible than others - but none are proven true or false in any absolute sense.
3. ALL people have beliefs and faith in them. We could not take a breath of air or drink a glass of water otherwise. Obviously, no one would drive or ride in a car or board a plane or cross the street. To mock belief or faith per se is to support that kind of radical, pan-paranoia. To deny that we have BELIEFS and FAITH is simply to admit we suffer from very radical, extreme paranoia. No. We all are people of belief..... we all walk by faith.
4. It is humbling (if frustrating) to realize that actually.... in an "uber" absolute, objective sense..... nothing can be PROVEN. "We" could be nothing but a program running on some game machine on Mars.... NONE of this, NONE of us may exist - at all. Not even Mars or that computer or that program. Humbling..... but not too helpful, lol. Just keep it in mind when there's a demand for PROOF. In debate (and in most disciplines) there is an acceptance that something should be evidenced (I didn't say proven!) TO THE LEVEL CLAIMED. "Life on Mars is possible." "Life on Mars is probable." "Life on Mars exists" are three very, very different statements (also if moved to beliefs by adding "I believe" in front of each). In Theology, we often classify teachings as "pious opinion" "tradition" "official teaching" "doctrine" "dogma" "de fide dogma" all to indicate the LEVEL of claim. In theology, the "evidence" we look for is to "match" the level of the claim - thus often the STATUS is more an issue than the actual pov.
5. In usual, informal speech, these terms often are (unfortunately) used loosely. People often do state things as propositions that they actually admit are beliefs. While this can lead to misunderstandings, it doesn't per se indicate deception. But it's often helpful to be clear how we are presenting this.
6. IMO, intellectual honesty and personal integrity typically involves two things in this context: A. The admission that absolute, objective, non-circular PROOF simply doesn't exist (for anything) and so it is impractical and nonsensical to demand such (particularly of the other while exempting only self). What we're actually talking about what is SUFFICIENT support for the REASONED conclusion of the one supporting it (and yes, that may include SOME aspect of assumption, SOME aspect of circular reasoning). B. Embrace a "level playing field." Don't demand of the other what you yourself cannot produce. For example, don't ask the Theist to PROVE the supernatural without anything supernatural or assuming anything about the supernatural when you can't PROVE the natural without anything natural or any assumptions about the natural. If one side insists it must STATE that in the words of the Bible, a "level playing field" would mandate the same can be said of me and any equal point I make. Or if I allow me to quote my denomination as evidence that a view is right, a "level playing field" mandates I allow another to quote his/her denomination as evidence that his/her view is right.
Now, here's PARTLY what motivates this thread. I got so sick of Atheist ranting on and on at CHRISTIAN websites about how there is no god, and people who belief there is are stupid, ignorant, unthinking, childish, of low IQ and obviously MUST also tech the Easter Bunny and Santa Claus. I've been mocked, ridiculed, told I had a psychological disease, and obviously had no education and a low IQ.... And I've been told I must present PROOF - objective, absolute, non-assumptive, non-circular PROOF for this "God" and Easter Bunny or admit I'm just being silly, and this PROOF can ONLY involve the natural, never anything supernatural and can ONLY involved what the Atheist regards as relible and normative, not what I do. Yet, if I say "Likewise, prove that only the natural exists - without anything natural in your evidence" well....
I'm not a relativist. I'm not a minimalist. I simply think that discussions should be intellectually honest and (as much as is possible) with a level playing field and the realization that ultimately, we are ALL people of beliefs, we ALL walk by faith. Just keeps it intellectually honest.... real. And maybe humble. Did anyone read this, lol?
- Josiah
"Proposition" A statement of fact, such as "Nature is real" "There is no divine" "Obama was not born in the USA." "Toyotas last longer than any other make of car." "Japan bombed Pearl Harbor." These are propositions, these have a burden of proof.
Belief. Something regarded, assumed, held as real, true, valid, reliable. But without necessarily having PROOF (especially not absolute, objective proof of a totally non-circular nature and in the philosophical sense. And yet such should not be nonsensical, sometimes this is associated with the admittedly very loose epistemology of "reasonable but not provable." Often it is based on some assumption (for example, that the Bible is true) and thus have a circular or assumptive nature. "I BELIEVE Obama was born in Hawaii" is a belief, not a proposition.
Faith. Reliance, trust in what is believed or a proposition known. Faith might be revealed by drinking a glass of water believed to be safe.
1. Some (Atheists and Naturalists might be examples) tend to insist on absolute, objective, non-circular PROOF for positions. I generally find that the more one insists upon this for OTHERS, the more they tend to dodge it for themselves. And I've had Atheists disallow a Theist from using anything remotely regarded as "unnatural" or "supernatural" to evidence the supernatural.... but then provide evidence for the natural by using the natural - the very thing they mocked as disallowed.
2. Others (Theists, for example) tend to admit that their position is primarily a belief. They may be able to evidence it via some rule THEY accept as normative (the Christian Bible for example) but not by something absolutely objective and non-circular and non-assumptive. We may conclude some believes appear more credible than others - but none are proven true or false in any absolute sense.
3. ALL people have beliefs and faith in them. We could not take a breath of air or drink a glass of water otherwise. Obviously, no one would drive or ride in a car or board a plane or cross the street. To mock belief or faith per se is to support that kind of radical, pan-paranoia. To deny that we have BELIEFS and FAITH is simply to admit we suffer from very radical, extreme paranoia. No. We all are people of belief..... we all walk by faith.
4. It is humbling (if frustrating) to realize that actually.... in an "uber" absolute, objective sense..... nothing can be PROVEN. "We" could be nothing but a program running on some game machine on Mars.... NONE of this, NONE of us may exist - at all. Not even Mars or that computer or that program. Humbling..... but not too helpful, lol. Just keep it in mind when there's a demand for PROOF. In debate (and in most disciplines) there is an acceptance that something should be evidenced (I didn't say proven!) TO THE LEVEL CLAIMED. "Life on Mars is possible." "Life on Mars is probable." "Life on Mars exists" are three very, very different statements (also if moved to beliefs by adding "I believe" in front of each). In Theology, we often classify teachings as "pious opinion" "tradition" "official teaching" "doctrine" "dogma" "de fide dogma" all to indicate the LEVEL of claim. In theology, the "evidence" we look for is to "match" the level of the claim - thus often the STATUS is more an issue than the actual pov.
5. In usual, informal speech, these terms often are (unfortunately) used loosely. People often do state things as propositions that they actually admit are beliefs. While this can lead to misunderstandings, it doesn't per se indicate deception. But it's often helpful to be clear how we are presenting this.
6. IMO, intellectual honesty and personal integrity typically involves two things in this context: A. The admission that absolute, objective, non-circular PROOF simply doesn't exist (for anything) and so it is impractical and nonsensical to demand such (particularly of the other while exempting only self). What we're actually talking about what is SUFFICIENT support for the REASONED conclusion of the one supporting it (and yes, that may include SOME aspect of assumption, SOME aspect of circular reasoning). B. Embrace a "level playing field." Don't demand of the other what you yourself cannot produce. For example, don't ask the Theist to PROVE the supernatural without anything supernatural or assuming anything about the supernatural when you can't PROVE the natural without anything natural or any assumptions about the natural. If one side insists it must STATE that in the words of the Bible, a "level playing field" would mandate the same can be said of me and any equal point I make. Or if I allow me to quote my denomination as evidence that a view is right, a "level playing field" mandates I allow another to quote his/her denomination as evidence that his/her view is right.
Now, here's PARTLY what motivates this thread. I got so sick of Atheist ranting on and on at CHRISTIAN websites about how there is no god, and people who belief there is are stupid, ignorant, unthinking, childish, of low IQ and obviously MUST also tech the Easter Bunny and Santa Claus. I've been mocked, ridiculed, told I had a psychological disease, and obviously had no education and a low IQ.... And I've been told I must present PROOF - objective, absolute, non-assumptive, non-circular PROOF for this "God" and Easter Bunny or admit I'm just being silly, and this PROOF can ONLY involve the natural, never anything supernatural and can ONLY involved what the Atheist regards as relible and normative, not what I do. Yet, if I say "Likewise, prove that only the natural exists - without anything natural in your evidence" well....
I'm not a relativist. I'm not a minimalist. I simply think that discussions should be intellectually honest and (as much as is possible) with a level playing field and the realization that ultimately, we are ALL people of beliefs, we ALL walk by faith. Just keeps it intellectually honest.... real. And maybe humble. Did anyone read this, lol?
- Josiah
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