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Question about "faith"
RE: Question about "faith"
(September 25, 2020 at 9:07 pm)LadyForCamus Wrote: I miss you guys. ❤️

* Smooch *  Heart
"The world is my country; all of humanity are my brethren; and to do good deeds is my religion." (Thomas Paine)
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RE: Question about "faith"
(September 26, 2020 at 6:09 am)possibletarian Wrote: Do you for instance think that our existence is ordinary?

You're using a subjective description that offers nothing beyond bias. That bias is not inconsequential, given that the purpose of the spiderman-like quote is to ask for extraordinary evidence. Claims, no matter how extraordinary you feel they are, simply require evidence. There is no higher threshold for evidence, and if there was, your inability to measure when evidence reaches that threshold makes it useless.

I understand biases are difficult to uproot; but the term adds no value and takes away objectivity.
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RE: Question about "faith"
(September 26, 2020 at 9:15 am)John 6IX Breezy Wrote:
(September 26, 2020 at 6:09 am)possibletarian Wrote: Do you for instance think that our existence is ordinary?

You're using a subjective description that offers nothing beyond bias. That bias is not inconsequential, given that the purpose of the spiderman-like quote is to ask for extraordinary evidence. Claims, no matter how extraordinary you feel they are, simply require evidence. There is no higher threshold for evidence, and if there was, your inability to measure when evidence reaches that threshold makes it useless.

I understand biases are difficult to uproot; but the term adds no value and takes away objectivity.

I understand how brainwashing can be hard to uproot, but how did you reach the conclusion that existence was special enough to require magical beings.. a subjective opinion ?
'Those who ask a lot of questions may seem stupid, but those who don't ask questions stay stupid'
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RE: Question about "faith"
John, tell me this, given as you seem to feel that any evidence is enough for any claim, would you say that a drunken man claiming that aliens abducted him one night and told him they were in fact the gods of the scripture, would you take this as an equal competing view to your god or would you ask for more evidence, or simply dismiss it ?
'Those who ask a lot of questions may seem stupid, but those who don't ask questions stay stupid'
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RE: Question about "faith"
My views on evidence are that it is underdeterministic and theory-dependent. By underdeterministic I mean that any individual bit of data is insufficient to draw any specific conclusion. This goes hand-in-hand with the idea that science doesn't prove it disproves.

And by theory-dependent I mean that all data requires interpretation; data only becomes evidence through the theory by which it is interpreted. Data is objective; evidence is subjective.

As an example, a bloody knife and a dead body, underdetermine any conclusion about whether a murder or a suicide occurred. They become evidence for either depending on which theory you interpret with.

As far as the alien question, the drunken man is free to take any piece of data he has, and interpret it through the abduction lens. And if I have any disagreement with him, my job is to falsify his claim, not to ask him for more evidence.
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RE: Question about "faith"
John,

Your mind is an exquisite example to behold. It truly is. To have lived as long as you have while at some point having to cross traffic is amazing.
Insanity - Doing the same thing over and over again, expecting a different result
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RE: Question about "faith"
(September 26, 2020 at 12:48 pm)John 6IX Breezy Wrote: My views on evidence are that it is underdeterministic and theory-dependent. By underdeterministic I mean that any individual bit of data is insufficient to draw any specific conclusion. This goes hand-in-hand with the idea that science doesn't prove it disproves.

And by theory-dependent I mean that all data requires interpretation; data only becomes evidence through the theory by which it is interpreted. Data is objective; evidence is subjective.

As an example, a bloody knife and a dead body, underdetermine any conclusion about whether a murder or a suicide occurred. They become evidence for either depending on which theory you interpret with.

As far as the alien question, the drunken man is free to take any piece of data he has, and interpret it through the abduction lens. And if I have any disagreement with him, my job is to falsify his claim, not to ask him for more evidence.

But John the aliens have since departed, there is nothing to disprove or test.. do you believe him ? do you for instance give it as much credence as a theistic belief given that science cannot help you here ?

Perhaps let's try it a different way, how confident are you that your god exists ?

1-10, 10 being 99%+ sure

And how confident are you that other gods do not exist ?
'Those who ask a lot of questions may seem stupid, but those who don't ask questions stay stupid'
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RE: Question about "faith"
(September 25, 2020 at 11:36 pm)John 6IX Breezy Wrote:
(September 25, 2020 at 11:11 pm)possibletarian Wrote: Magical, invisible, unprovable universe creating beings extraordinary enough for you  ?

No; provide a way to measure extraordinariness. If you cannot measure it, then it is not science.


Provide a method to falsify your god.

You'd believe if you just opened your heart" is a terrible argument for religion. It's basically saying, "If you bias yourself enough, you can convince yourself that this is true." If religion were true, people wouldn't need faith to believe it -- it would be supported by good evidence.
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RE: Question about "faith"
(September 26, 2020 at 5:08 pm)Simon Moon Wrote: Provide a method to falsify your god.

My denomination claims that God created man as mortal, having no soul or spirit independent from the body. At death the person merely decomposes.

If you falsify this proposition, by showing man does indeed have a soul, it would refute the existence of my particular God. I would have to join Hinduism or Islam, or any other religion with a soul-predicting God. Or at the very least reinterpret my churches beliefs to account for the information.
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RE: Question about "faith"
Religious faith does to the theistic mind what hallucinetic drugs do to any mind.
"Never trust a fox. Looks like a dog, behaves like a cat."
~ Erin Hunter
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