RE: Faith vs Belief
June 13, 2015 at 7:54 am
(This post was last modified: June 13, 2015 at 7:56 am by comet.)
FAITH/
noun
1.
complete trust or confidence in someone or something.
"this restores one's faith in politicians"
synonyms:
trust, belief, confidence, conviction; More
belief
noun
1.
an acceptance that a statement is true or that something exists.
"his belief in the value of hard work"
2.
trust, faith, or confidence in someone or something.
"a belief in democratic politics"
synonyms:
faith, trust, reliance, confidence, credence
"belief in the value of hard work"
we can, at best, use a type of understanding like we have with "Annoyed and Angry." So discussing the deference between "belief" and "faith" is for people that are not interested in how the universe works but rather they are trying pin point their own belief with less "facts" and more "words" as the axioms. The problem is it is not anchored in understand or even definitions. It is anchored in vernaculars, or what Christ called sand. I call it bullshit. When we get to this level the hiezenburger uncertainty in understanding applies. We can't know the exact definition and The exact meaning at the same in philosophy. fubar-ed.
noun
1.
complete trust or confidence in someone or something.
"this restores one's faith in politicians"
synonyms:
trust, belief, confidence, conviction; More
belief
noun
1.
an acceptance that a statement is true or that something exists.
"his belief in the value of hard work"
2.
trust, faith, or confidence in someone or something.
"a belief in democratic politics"
synonyms:
faith, trust, reliance, confidence, credence
"belief in the value of hard work"
we can, at best, use a type of understanding like we have with "Annoyed and Angry." So discussing the deference between "belief" and "faith" is for people that are not interested in how the universe works but rather they are trying pin point their own belief with less "facts" and more "words" as the axioms. The problem is it is not anchored in understand or even definitions. It is anchored in vernaculars, or what Christ called sand. I call it bullshit. When we get to this level the hiezenburger uncertainty in understanding applies. We can't know the exact definition and The exact meaning at the same in philosophy. fubar-ed.
anti-logical Fallacies of Ambiguity