Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Fri Jul 21, 2023 1:48 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 2:42 pm
Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 11:32 amRight. So the "regular faith, the kind needed in ordinary relationships" is not enough to sustain your belief in God; the difference, it seems to me, being the extra dollop of hope included in every 'probabilistic calculation' you perform. You hope the Bible is the inspired word of God, unlike the thousands of beliefs and religions you insist are human creations. I won't labour the point, but you hope the various arguments presented in favour of God are sound, and you hope your feeling of a relationship with God is based on some interaction between you and him.
Well, again, there's a debased version of "hope," just as there is a debased interpretation of "faith." In both cases, the debased version assumes that there's no evidence or warrant for either -- that one has "hope" in things that are improbable, and "faith" in things that are unrealistic. But neither word, in a full-blooded way implies either.
No, I am not assuming there is no evidence for faith or hope in your God, nor any other for that matter. If your hypothesis is that a supreme being created the world, then the fact that there is a world is evidence that supports your hypothesis.
Like all evidence, the evidence can be recognized as evidence, or dismissed as irrelevant. That's as true, whether we're talking about a hair or fibre at a crime scene, or an entire universe.
So recognizing evidence is always an act of faith and hope. But not groundless, evidenceless, faith or hope. That's all I was saying.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 2:42 pmJust as "faith" is a probability calculation premised on estimating the evidence for the truth of something to be strong, hope is simply belief that what God has said He will do. It's a vote of confidence in the character of the One whom one has come to know.
So in your language faith is calculation and hope a belief. Perhaps that is what they mean "in a full-blooded way", but I doubt I'm the only one here so debased to understand both as some variation of wishful thinking.
I'm sorry...l didn't mean "debased" to be an adjective modifying the concept "people," far less "Will B." I used it as an adjective modifying the term"conception." A single person can simultaneously have a "full-blooded" conception of one thing and a "debased" view of another, especially if he has been misled or mistaken about the second in some way. That's not a personal insult. It's a note on the kind of conceptions people can hold.
But as you point out, you are far from being the only person who believes that faith and hope are about wishful thinking. Popular discourse, coming as it always does from the secular world, assumes that very thing. And it's convenient for them, because it means they need think no harder about either concept -- they can simply bundle them together and dismiss them as religious frippery.
However, the point I have been making is that faith and hope are actually intrinsic to human existence, at all times; and that science itself is a matter of both faith and hope. That secular talk fails to realize this is unfortunate; but it's not a situation that needs to be perpetuated by more thoughtful types like ourselves...
hopefully.
Nonetheless, this:
Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 11:32 amThe empirical evidence is available to theists and atheists alike and different interpretations are available. The difference is that you hope it is true.
which you describe as
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Jul 18, 2023 2:25 pm...not a "difference." It's a similarity.
might be clearer to you if I put it like this: The empirical evidence for God is available to theists and atheists alike and different interpretations are available. The difference is that you wish it is true.[/quote]
Secular thought uses "hope" and "wish" as synonyms, it's true. But Christian hope isn't just a wish. It's a convinced investment of self. It's a rational decision to prefer the testimony of God over the verbal gestures of the cynics, based on one's evidence and experience of God.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 2:42 pmThe scientist ventures his hypotheses on faith.
Or in less than full blooded English: calculation.
Now you're closer to what faith actually is. It's a calculation. It's an estimate that one thing is far more likely to be the case than another.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 2:42 pmEven when he's run a hundred tests, he knows he has never run the complete set of possible tests. If he's run 5, he knows he didn't run the 6th: and what if the anomaly appeared in the 6th? He's not absolutely sure it wouldn't. But it looks to him as if that's improbable, if he's run 5 really good tests, so he invests his hope and faith in the integrity of his hypothesis...and often, more evidence follows.
But here's the thing: if he had run 100 or a 1,000 tests, he still would know he hadn't run 101 or 1,001.
The difference is you can't perform even one test on God,
One cannot
demand tests. But God has provided many evidences.
The key thing is where the initiative is coming from. God does not dance to cynic's tunes; but in his graciousness, he provides many evidences of His existence, His purposes, His intentions and His will...IF the observer will accept them as evidence.
But as I said earlier, nothing is evidence to somebody if he/she decides to refuse it as evidence. So we have to choose whether or not we will include the data He has so abundantly supplied as any part of our consideration, or set our minds to the effect that no such evidence can count, and refuse to see it.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 24, 2022 12:50 amDoing the complete set of tests for anything is simply impossible, because it's infinite.
Yes, that's the problem of induction that you can't tell from underdetermination.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 24, 2022 12:50 amSo whenever we assert a scientific conclusion -- and even when we decide to dignify that phenomenon with the term "scientific
law," we're still speaking only probabilistically. We don't know with absolute certainty that such a "law" can never be contravened; we only know that, so far as we know, it never has...and so we say, "It probably never will, and I can safely call it a 'law.'"
We safely call laws that even if they are contravened - Newton's law of universal gravitation, for example.
Yes, but if that happens we also immediately revise them and look for new "laws" to incorporate the phenomena that show our old "law" inadequate.
The 'laws' of science we use are man made,
Not "man-made," but rather "discovered by man." What we call "scientific laws" is nothing but the organizing in our human minds of regularities that we find in nature. When such regularities are regular enough, we dub them "laws." But we didn't actually
make them; we
found them. The regularities pre-existed our discovery.
As I understand you, the reason we can invent any number of laws that describe some behaviour we are interested in, is that behind it all is a supreme being who created a set of laws that govern the behaviour we are describing. That is certainly one possibility, but it is not one that you can test - it is therefore unfalsifiable; hence very different to any piece of science we call a law.
It's interesting you take recourse to "unfalsifiablity." A belief would only be "unfalsifiable" if there were no evidence or tests. In the case of God, the very presence of such evidence and tests refutes the allegation of "unfalsifiability." And were there no such evidences, in fact, Theism would be falsified at least to this extent -- that if it were even possible God existed, it would no longer matter. For having no impact on the world at all, His existence would be functionally irrelevant to us, and it would make no difference whether or not we believed in the existence of God.
This is something problematic in Deism. Deism holds that God has created the Earth, but then gone absent. There is no intervention, no divine speaking, no further engagement of the deity with the material world, it holds. And other than the evidence of the existence of Creation itself, the Deist would have no evidence to his hypothesis at all. But it is not so with Christianity. For Christianity holds that God is not only evidenced abundantly in Creation, but also in divine self-revelation, in divine interventions, in answers to prayer, in the nature and consciousness of human beings, in the functioning of reason,m in the existence of morality, existentially in our experience, and pre-eminently, in the Incarnation of Jesus Christ.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 2:42 pmThat's not unreasonable. It's good science. And a faith or hope premised on good evidence is likewise eminently rational...and unavoidable, since we live in an empirical world, among empirical phenomena, and are ourselves finite, limited creatures. Upon what then can we operate but faith and hope? There is nothing else, for us.
You mean calculation and belief, in my debased language. I shan't quibble with that.
Choose your synonyms; and I shall not quibble either.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 2:42 pm
Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 11:32 amIt gets nasty when you accuse people who don't share your conclusions of being cynical, which itself is cynical.
You'll have to show me where you think I did that. To my memory, I have only ever called something "cynical" when it was manifestly a case of being cynical rather than thoughtful.
But I'm sure you wouldn't allege that if you didn't think it was true, so feel free to supply the case and context.
I mean this kind of thing:
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jul 14, 2023 5:09 pmPeople choose themselves over God. And their various "gods" offer them something they're afraid the real God will take away...like cultural solidarity, pride, the opportunity to indulge, the freedom to do as they please, their resources...it can be a lot of things. It's easier to stay with the "gods" they have self-chosen, or which they are rewarded by their culture for hanging onto: especially when their chosen "god" is themselves. So they just refuse to investigate further. They're happy with what they've got.
Perhaps you don't call that cynical. I do; misanthropic too. Either way - not nice.
I would characterize it as rightly descriptive of the facts, actually. Not all facts are pretty. For something to be genuinely "cynical," it ought to be unduly negative, and perhaps so negative as to be unfair or untrue -- but what I have described is observable. Cases are not few and far-between.
Let's take Marxism. It's goal is collective solidarity of the workers, or nowadays, the "oppressed," which has been substituted for them. Marx said that the critique of religion was "the first critique" he needed to mount (his words). And why? Because his program could never go forward until people were stripped of hope in God. Marx's rationale, then was not that he had some clever disproof of the existence of God, but that he WANTED not to believe in God, and NEEDED others to disbelieve in God, because without that,
his chosen program could not go forward.
His hatred of God was pragmatic and programmatic, not rational and evidentiary. And as Marx's biographers report, there was no god -- or person, for that matter -- that Marx loved so much as he loved himself. He drained his own family of its resources, and then disowned his own son. Even Engels, who fueled his mania so diligently, was just a cow for Marx to milk. (These historical facts are found in pratically every scholarly biography of Marx: I'm not making this stuff up.)
So Marx's god was...Marx.
Was Marx further interested in the God question, once he had settled on his program? We have no evidence he spent any more thought on the question except to pour vituperation upon "religion" as "the opium of the masses." Did he ever take it seriously again? We have no evidence he did.
Other examples are not hard to produce. So, "cynical"? No. But sad? Yes.