Christianity

For all things philosophical.

Moderators: AMod, iMod

Martin Peter Clarke
Posts: 1617
Joined: Tue Apr 01, 2025 9:54 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Martin Peter Clarke »

Immanuel Can wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 8:23 pm
Martin Peter Clarke wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 7:11 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 5:47 pm
Truth is, I've never been a "foe." I'm just guy with a different understanding from yours. For me, it's never personal. It's about the issues. I don't hate the people with whom I disagree, no matter how strongly.
Same here IC. To Foe is just a way of not seeing what people say as there's no point. Different understandings are utterly, abjectly understood, accepted, bowed to. As with Muslims and Christians. Never to be discussed, unless they ask, and they never do. Not in person.
(a) Muslims and Christians are very different, Martin. Yes, it's true that many Muslims regard the asking of any questions or expressing of any doubts as taboo. And there are some Christians who also are too anxious to do that. Yet I've been here, discussing differences with Atheists and agnostics for a half dozen years, at least -- hardly an indicator of reluctance to discuss disagreements, I think you'll concede.

(b) n fact, my reason for being here, in the first place, is to find out if there are any new or interesting arguments the skeptics can raise, things I don't think have been adequately handled yet, and that I might find challenging to consider. You know -- not the old Euthyphro nonsense, or the old confusion about faith being belief in impossible things, or "how many unliftable rocks can God lift" -- that sort of shallow and easy thing -- but rather, thoughtful, fresh, insightful stuff, the sorts of things you don't find every day. It seemed to me that a philosophy site would be the best place to look for just such challenges.

(c) In the last several years I've gained a few such conversations, I would say. However, in general, I've got to say that I've found that original and interesting critiques are few and far between, even on this site. But I've certainly been forthcoming with people on dealing with the old canards, so I don't think anybody can fault me as one of those shy or reticent believers. People who want to discuss the issues, as opposed to merely trading abuse or posturing, will find me willing to discuss, for sure.
(a) Just about all orthodox = fundamentalist Christians in my experience. They're all on a spectrum of terrified to hard damnationists. I find no significant difference between Muslims and Christians.

(b) I'm not a skeptic. I have no doubt at all. Beyond the inherent, correct skepticism of science. There is knowledge. True belief. There is no doubt in that. In commons sense reason.

(c) Faith is impervious to critique, as the completely honest faithful admit, despite knowing that reason obviates it. We are believing machines down to the neuron.
User avatar
iambiguous
Posts: 11317
Joined: Mon Nov 22, 2010 10:23 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by iambiguous »

Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 11:21 pm
iambiguous wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 8:40 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 8:00 pmHave you watched any news lately?
So much more to the point [mine, let's say] has God?
Well, your accusation requires us to know something you don't know, and in fact, isn't true. That thing is that we must believe that God's is the only will that has any effect in the universe. But you don't believe that: you think you have your own will.  So you cannot blame the evils men do on God. Men do them. They have wills, just as you do. They bear the responsibility for their evils.
Well, sure, you must believe in the Christian God. Why? Because, pertaining to moral commandments, immortality and salvation, you have dumped all your spiritual eggs into the Christianity basket. And though down through the ages there have been dozens and dozens of others putting their own spiritual eggs into the baskets of different denominations, all of them [including you] simply shrug that part off and insist all the others except you are wrong. 

Then if that wasn't problematic enough how about those who consider others to be infidels...even though they believe in the very same God! 

As for my own will, I don't even have the capacity "here and now" to know for sure if it is either autonomous or autonomic. 

In fact, the main difference between my reaction to you and to so many other religionists is that you claim there is substantive and substantial historical and scientific evidence to demonstrate the existence of the Christian God.

Look, I don't blame God for the terrible, terrible things that mere mortals do to each other. Except I think it's important to note that this all powerful God doesn't even seem motivated enough to go after those like Hitler and Stalin. 

And then [as always] back to this part: 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_earthquakes'
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_l ... _eruptions
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_t ... l_cyclones
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tsunamis
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_landslides
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fires
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_e ... _pandemics
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_deadliest_floods
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tornado_records
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_diseases
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_extinction_events
That's important to note, I believe, because unlike you and I -- mere mortals -- the Christian God is said to be both omniscient and omnipotent.
 
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 11:21 pmYou need more. You would have to say He's deterministic.  That is, you would have to believe that God's is the only effective will in the universe. But if that were the case, then you would have no basis of accusation against Him; for your objections would merely be what you were predetermined by God to think, and not your own thoughts at all. They wouldn't be rational. They'd be inevitable, instead.
Again and again: it's not what we believe about the Christian God that interests me nearly as much as our capacity to demonstrate to others why they should believe the same. And why is that? Well, according to you it goes beyond more or less blind leaps of faith, wagers and scripture. There is instead actual evidence able to establish the existence of God in Heaven as others might establish the existence of the Pope in the vatican.

As for this...
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 11:21 pmAnd they wouldn't signify anything, because "moral" would not be a real thing either: predetermined creatures are not moral or immoral.  They're just whatever they've been made to be.  So they have no frame of reference from which to launch a protest against anything.  THEY have no genuine thoughts of their own.
Shades of Calvinism. And, yeah, that's what any number of No God folks will suggest regarding an omniscient God. If He does exist and He is omniscient an explanation is needed regarding how mere mortals can behave autonomously if he already knows everything they think, feel, say and do. For example, from the cradle to the grave.
Now, if He is omniscient, how can anything we do be of our own volition?
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 11:21 pmAn omnipotent God, if indeed you believe in such, could surely make free-will-possessing creatures.  And you look at yourself, and you recognize yourself as one.
So, while He may be omniscient, His omnipotence trumps that? He has the power to "somehow" accomplish this? Part of His mysterious ways? A catch-all frame of mind which allows the faithful to rationalize anything and everything that unfolds. 
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 11:21 pmIf Determinism were true -- either "Divine Determinism" by God, or "Materialistic Determinism" of some Physicalist or Naturalistic type, done by inexorable material forces -- then no such creatures could exist, and your objection would be a mere "epiphenomenon" of accidental Nature or of the iron will of a Determinist god.
You post things like this all the time. As though posting it in and of itself makes it true. But what on Earth and for all practical purposes does it convey regarding your own interactions with others? And, as always, any number of others on any number of additional One True Paths are out there intent on saving your soul!
And if He is omnipotent, all of the terrible things He does to us in regard to "acts of God", He has the power to put an end to, but does not. And even given the terrible things we do to each other -- especially to the truly innocent children -- He has the capacity to put an end to, but does not.
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 11:21 pmYes. But it's very easy to see why.  Just think about its consequences.

How much evil should a genuinely just God "put an end" to?  You know the answer.  And what would happen if He did?  :shock:
Note to others:

What exactly is he suggesting here? That the consequences of the Christian God putting an end to all "acts of God" down here and interjecting to stop those mere mortal monsters who make life a hellhole for millions, would result in dire consequences? More dire than the brutal consequences we already endure, with Him doing nothing at all? 
Belinda
Posts: 10548
Joined: Fri Aug 26, 2016 10:13 am

Re: Christianity

Post by Belinda »

Immanuel Can wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 9:48 pm
Belinda wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 9:20 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 8:23 pm
Muslims and Christians are very different, Martin. Yes, it's true that many Muslims regard the asking of any questions or expressing of any doubts as taboo. And there are some Christians who also are too anxious to do that. Yet I've been here, discussing differences with Atheists and agnostics for a half dozen years, at least -- hardly an indicator of reluctance to discuss disagreements, I think you'll concede.

In fact, my reason for being here, in the first place, is to find out if there are any new or interesting arguments the skeptics can raise, things I don't think have been adequately handled yet, and that I might find challenging to consider. You know -- not the old Euthyphro nonsense, or the old confusion about faith being belief in impossible things, or "how many unliftable rocks can God lift" -- that sort of shallow and easy thing -- but rather, thoughtful, fresh, insightful stuff, the sorts of things you don't find every day. It seemed to me that a philosophy site would be the best place to look for just such challenges.

In the last several years I've gained a few such conversations, I would say. However, in general, I've got to say that I've found that original and interesting critiques are few and far between, even on this site. But I've certainly been forthcoming with people on dealing with the old canards, so I don't think anybody can fault me as one of those shy or reticent believers. People who want to discuss the issues, as opposed to merely trading abuse or posturing, will find me willing to discuss, for sure.
Scepticism is part of how we get to know what we know.
Skepticism is good, if it's persuadable and based on rational arguments. In that, it contrasts to cyncism, which is the decision to be negative regardless of what information is available or what arguments are offered -- and that's a waste of time. Some people imagine themselves to be skeptical, when all they're really being is cynical. So we have to know the difference.
I agree, of course with what you say. Also It's a shame you needed to point this out but I suspect it was indeed needful.
Martin Peter Clarke
Posts: 1617
Joined: Tue Apr 01, 2025 9:54 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Martin Peter Clarke »

Belinda wrote: Thu Jul 03, 2025 8:07 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 9:48 pm
Belinda wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 9:20 pm
Scepticism is part of how we get to know what we know.
Skepticism is good, if it's persuadable and based on rational arguments. In that, it contrasts to cyncism, which is the decision to be negative regardless of what information is available or what arguments are offered -- and that's a waste of time. Some people imagine themselves to be skeptical, when all they're really being is cynical. So we have to know the difference.
I agree, of course with what you say. Also It's a shame you needed to point this out but I suspect it was indeed needful.
Neither skepticism nor cynicism apply at all. Just common sense. But as free will is meaningless, that can't shift untrue belief in one go. It can erode it over decades.
Belinda
Posts: 10548
Joined: Fri Aug 26, 2016 10:13 am

Re: Christianity

Post by Belinda »

iambiguous wrote: Thu Jul 03, 2025 12:17 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 11:21 pm
iambiguous wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 8:40 pm

So much more to the point [mine, let's say] has God?
Well, your accusation requires us to know something you don't know, and in fact, isn't true. That thing is that we must believe that God's is the only will that has any effect in the universe. But you don't believe that: you think you have your own will.  So you cannot blame the evils men do on God. Men do them. They have wills, just as you do. They bear the responsibility for their evils.
Well, sure, you must believe in the Christian God. Why? Because, pertaining to moral commandments, immortality and salvation, you have dumped all your spiritual eggs into the Christianity basket. And though down through the ages there have been dozens and dozens of others putting their own spiritual eggs into the baskets of different denominations, all of them [including you] simply shrug that part off and insist all the others except you are wrong. 

Then if that wasn't problematic enough how about those who consider others to be infidels...even though they believe in the very same God! 

As for my own will, I don't even have the capacity "here and now" to know for sure if it is either autonomous or autonomic. 

In fact, the main difference between my reaction to you and to so many other religionists is that you claim there is substantive and substantial historical and scientific evidence to demonstrate the existence of the Christian God.

Look, I don't blame God for the terrible, terrible things that mere mortals do to each other. Except I think it's important to note that this all powerful God doesn't even seem motivated enough to go after those like Hitler and Stalin. 

And then [as always] back to this part: 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_earthquakes'
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_l ... _eruptions
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_t ... l_cyclones
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tsunamis
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_landslides
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fires
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_e ... _pandemics
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_deadliest_floods
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tornado_records
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_diseases
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_extinction_events
That's important to note, I believe, because unlike you and I -- mere mortals -- the Christian God is said to be both omniscient and omnipotent.
 
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 11:21 pmYou need more. You would have to say He's deterministic.  That is, you would have to believe that God's is the only effective will in the universe. But if that were the case, then you would have no basis of accusation against Him; for your objections would merely be what you were predetermined by God to think, and not your own thoughts at all. They wouldn't be rational. They'd be inevitable, instead.
Again and again: it's not what we believe about the Christian God that interests me nearly as much as our capacity to demonstrate to others why they should believe the same. And why is that? Well, according to you it goes beyond more or less blind leaps of faith, wagers and scripture. There is instead actual evidence able to establish the existence of God in Heaven as others might establish the existence of the Pope in the vatican.

As for this...
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 11:21 pmAnd they wouldn't signify anything, because "moral" would not be a real thing either: predetermined creatures are not moral or immoral.  They're just whatever they've been made to be.  So they have no frame of reference from which to launch a protest against anything.  THEY have no genuine thoughts of their own.
Shades of Calvinism. And, yeah, that's what any number of No God folks will suggest regarding an omniscient God. If He does exist and He is omniscient an explanation is needed regarding how mere mortals can behave autonomously if he already knows everything they think, feel, say and do. For example, from the cradle to the grave.
Now, if He is omniscient, how can anything we do be of our own volition?
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 11:21 pmAn omnipotent God, if indeed you believe in such, could surely make free-will-possessing creatures.  And you look at yourself, and you recognize yourself as one.
So, while He may be omniscient, His omnipotence trumps that? He has the power to "somehow" accomplish this? Part of His mysterious ways? A catch-all frame of mind which allows the faithful to rationalize anything and everything that unfolds. 
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 11:21 pmIf Determinism were true -- either "Divine Determinism" by God, or "Materialistic Determinism" of some Physicalist or Naturalistic type, done by inexorable material forces -- then no such creatures could exist, and your objection would be a mere "epiphenomenon" of accidental Nature or of the iron will of a Determinist god.
You post things like this all the time. As though posting it in and of itself makes it true. But what on Earth and for all practical purposes does it convey regarding your own interactions with others? And, as always, any number of others on any number of additional One True Paths are out there intent on saving your soul!
And if He is omnipotent, all of the terrible things He does to us in regard to "acts of God", He has the power to put an end to, but does not. And even given the terrible things we do to each other -- especially to the truly innocent children -- He has the capacity to put an end to, but does not.
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 11:21 pmYes. But it's very easy to see why.  Just think about its consequences.

How much evil should a genuinely just God "put an end" to?  You know the answer.  And what would happen if He did?  :shock:
Note to others:

What exactly is he suggesting here? That the consequences of the Christian God putting an end to all "acts of God" down here and interjecting to stop those mere mortal monsters who make life a hellhole for millions, would result in dire consequences? More dire than the brutal consequences we already endure, with Him doing nothing at all? 
If all is known then Hitler and Stalin are known by how they necessarily lived their lives the way they lived as they did. It follows that the more we judge correctly the closer we are to Good.

However social order must include rules and regulations. Moses, Jesus ,and Muhammad, showed us how to formulate rules and regulations and laid down codified morality and how to be as good as we can be. Jesus was more progressive than Moses, as Jesus followed on from the OT prophets whose new message was and is that intentions (i.e. faith ) are morally paramount over actual achievements.

SIambiguous wrote:
Shades of Calvinism. And, yeah, that's what any number of No God folks will suggest regarding an omniscient God. If He does exist and He is omniscient an explanation is needed regarding how mere mortals can behave autonomously if he already knows everything they think, feel, say and do. For example, from the cradle to the grave.
God's future is as free and open as our own futures. Predestination i.e. 'Calvinism' is not the same as determinism.

Predestination holds that God's future is closed to change. Existentialists' idea of God is that God is not the same as His essential moral code carved on stone as it were , but is a human idea in process of change.

The Aristotelian /Thomist idea of human nature is that humans may progress each towards his perfect nature. Therefore predestination does not fit with Thomist Christianity.

Libertarian Free Will
The idea of libertarian free will evolved:

From early intuitions about voluntary action in Aristotle,

through theological necessity in Augustine & Aquinas (to account for sin and salvation),

into explicit metaphysical freedom in Scotus and Descartes,

then challenged by determinists (Spinoza, Hume),

and refined in modern debates as a clear contrast to determinism.






ChatGPT
User avatar
Immanuel Can
Posts: 27608
Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Martin Peter Clarke wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 10:46 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 8:23 pm
Martin Peter Clarke wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 7:11 pm
Same here IC. To Foe is just a way of not seeing what people say as there's no point. Different understandings are utterly, abjectly understood, accepted, bowed to. As with Muslims and Christians. Never to be discussed, unless they ask, and they never do. Not in person.
(a) Muslims and Christians are very different, Martin. Yes, it's true that many Muslims regard the asking of any questions or expressing of any doubts as taboo. And there are some Christians who also are too anxious to do that. Yet I've been here, discussing differences with Atheists and agnostics for a half dozen years, at least -- hardly an indicator of reluctance to discuss disagreements, I think you'll concede.

(b) n fact, my reason for being here, in the first place, is to find out if there are any new or interesting arguments the skeptics can raise, things I don't think have been adequately handled yet, and that I might find challenging to consider. You know -- not the old Euthyphro nonsense, or the old confusion about faith being belief in impossible things, or "how many unliftable rocks can God lift" -- that sort of shallow and easy thing -- but rather, thoughtful, fresh, insightful stuff, the sorts of things you don't find every day. It seemed to me that a philosophy site would be the best place to look for just such challenges.

(c) In the last several years I've gained a few such conversations, I would say. However, in general, I've got to say that I've found that original and interesting critiques are few and far between, even on this site. But I've certainly been forthcoming with people on dealing with the old canards, so I don't think anybody can fault me as one of those shy or reticent believers. People who want to discuss the issues, as opposed to merely trading abuse or posturing, will find me willing to discuss, for sure.
(a) Just about all orthodox = fundamentalist Christians in my experience. They're all on a spectrum of terrified to hard damnationists. I find no significant difference between Muslims and Christians.
You'll maybe need to look closer, then. As I think you'll then discover, that's one of the serious weaknesses of the skeptics: having decided before they even began to investigate to dismiss all of what they call "religion" as bunk, they have no incentive to look closer. So they end up offering critiques that, say, might apply to something like Islam as if they should be telling against Quakers or Hassidim: because all three are "fundamentalists," but the key question is "Fundamentally WHAT?" And it really does make a big difference.

When Islamists shoot up a theatre, it definitely doesn not imply that Hassidim or Quakers would do the same. You're not going to find any Mennonite child bombers, nor any Baptist or Hutterite or Brethren terrorists. Yet all get called "fundamentalist." So I think it behoves a thoughtful skeptic to be discerning about those differences...unless, again, all he plans to do is insult and dismiss them all without knowing anything in particular about them. But if he does that, can he be surprised when the Baptists, or Mennonites, or Quakers, or Hassidim don't take his critique seriously? They can see that nothing he says applies to their case, so he's not doing very well at critiquing them, is he?
(b) I'm not a skeptic. I have no doubt at all. Beyond the inherent, correct skepticism of science. There is knowledge. True belief. There is no doubt in that. In commons sense reason.
I think doubt is something that any healthy mind experiences. Human epistemology only inductive and probabilistic. Even in experimental sciences, a set of experiments, however successful, never eradicate the worry that the very next trial would expose different results. Since nobody has performed the set of all possible trials, we can only speak of science as being highly probable, not certain. In fact, theses once regarded as solidly "scientific" are often disproved by further experimentation, which produces an even higher probability thesis, but still never is able to eliminate doubt.

I don't fear doubt. I am familiar with it, as the reasonable counterpart to knowledge. And I know that high-probability convictions are much better than low-probability ones, on average -- so I don't find it fearful at all.

In fact, that's why I came here: to find out if there are higher-challenge doubts to be considered. And as I said, I've found a few, but not many. And I've found it quite affirming to tackle some of them and find that they have answers. Still, I'm always in the market for new challenges of that kind.
(c) Faith is impervious to critique, as the completely honest faithful admit, despite knowing that reason obviates it. We are believing machines down to the neuron.
I consider myself honest, and I would wish to be found faithful, but I do not avoid critique, nor do I think that faith and reason are in conflict. I think that if one defines-away "faith" as being "belief contrary to reason," or "belief contrary to knowledge," or something like that, what we have is not actual faith at all, but rather indoctrination of a toxic sort.

And I think the same is quite true of Atheism: those Atheists who believe their position is unassailable by reason and needless of proof are guilty of just the sort of toxic "bad faith" indicted by Sartre. Only those skeptics who remain open to reason and evidence, and don't imagine they have certainty instead, are better than indoctrinated themselves.

Look at it this way: if religious people can believe things in bad, toxic ways, why cannot an Atheist disbelieve in exactly the same sort of bad, toxic ways? How is a religionist who has never thought about critiques any worse than an Atheist who refuses even to entertain the possibility of critiques? It seems to me that, in regard to "faith" they turn out to be identical twins. Neither one has any actual faith or knowledge: they just pretend to.

No reference to present company intended, of course. I'm merely reflecting generally on the state of skepticism and belief, not accusing you or anybody here present of having "bad faith." But I think it's worth reflection, just as a general observation on the issue.
User avatar
Immanuel Can
Posts: 27608
Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

iambiguous wrote: Thu Jul 03, 2025 12:17 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 11:21 pm
iambiguous wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 8:40 pm

So much more to the point [mine, let's say] has God?
Well, your accusation requires us to know something you don't know, and in fact, isn't true. That thing is that we must believe that God's is the only will that has any effect in the universe. But you don't believe that: you think you have your own will.  So you cannot blame the evils men do on God. Men do them. They have wills, just as you do. They bear the responsibility for their evils.
Well, sure, you must believe in the Christian God.
Of course. But if you think God is a Determinist, then you've got some other god. You need a revision of your conception, if that's the case. Or you need to find an UltraCalvinist, perhaps, and argue with him: because those are Theistic Determinists. Or you could pick a Muslim, because their "god" is close to Deterministic, if not absolutely so. But the Biblical God isn't going to fit your expectation there.
User avatar
Immanuel Can
Posts: 27608
Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Belinda wrote: Thu Jul 03, 2025 8:07 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 9:48 pm
Belinda wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 9:20 pm
Scepticism is part of how we get to know what we know.
Skepticism is good, if it's persuadable and based on rational arguments. In that, it contrasts to cyncism, which is the decision to be negative regardless of what information is available or what arguments are offered -- and that's a waste of time. Some people imagine themselves to be skeptical, when all they're really being is cynical. So we have to know the difference.
I agree, of course with what you say. Also It's a shame you needed to point this out but I suspect it was indeed needful.
It's just a general thought that applies to all of us, I think. It's all too easy to save ourselves the hard work of being knowledgebly skeptical, or critical in an informed way, by lapsing into some form of mere cynicism. The difference will be detectable in the quality of the evidence and logic summoned for the position we take. Cynicism is terribly easy: rational critique is demanding and complex.
Martin Peter Clarke
Posts: 1617
Joined: Tue Apr 01, 2025 9:54 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Martin Peter Clarke »

Immanuel Can wrote: Thu Jul 03, 2025 2:29 pm
Martin Peter Clarke wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 10:46 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 8:23 pm
(a) Muslims and Christians are very different, Martin. Yes, it's true that many Muslims regard the asking of any questions or expressing of any doubts as taboo. And there are some Christians who also are too anxious to do that. Yet I've been here, discussing differences with Atheists and agnostics for a half dozen years, at least -- hardly an indicator of reluctance to discuss disagreements, I think you'll concede.

(b) In fact, my reason for being here, in the first place, is to find out if there are any new or interesting arguments the skeptics can raise, things I don't think have been adequately handled yet, and that I might find challenging to consider. You know -- not the old Euthyphro nonsense, or the old confusion about faith being belief in impossible things, or "how many unliftable rocks can God lift" -- that sort of shallow and easy thing -- but rather, thoughtful, fresh, insightful stuff, the sorts of things you don't find every day. It seemed to me that a philosophy site would be the best place to look for just such challenges.

(c) In the last several years I've gained a few such conversations, I would say. However, in general, I've got to say that I've found that original and interesting critiques are few and far between, even on this site. But I've certainly been forthcoming with people on dealing with the old canards, so I don't think anybody can fault me as one of those shy or reticent believers. People who want to discuss the issues, as opposed to merely trading abuse or posturing, will find me willing to discuss, for sure.
(a) Just about all orthodox = fundamentalist Christians in my experience. They're all on a spectrum of terrified to hard damnationists. I find no significant difference between Muslims and Christians.
(aa) You'll maybe need to look closer, then. As I think you'll then discover, that's one of the serious weaknesses of the skeptics: having decided before they even began to investigate to dismiss all of what they call "religion" as bunk, they have no incentive to look closer. So they end up offering critiques that, say, might apply to something like Islam as if they should be telling against Quakers or Hassidim: because all three are "fundamentalists," but the key question is "Fundamentally WHAT?" And it really does make a big difference.

When Islamists shoot up a theatre, it definitely doesn not imply that Hassidim or Quakers would do the same. You're not going to find any Mennonite child bombers, nor any Baptist or Hutterite or Brethren terrorists. Yet all get called "fundamentalist." So I think it behoves a thoughtful skeptic to be discerning about those differences...unless, again, all he plans to do is insult and dismiss them all without knowing anything in particular about them. But if he does that, can he be surprised when the Baptists, or Mennonites, or Quakers, or Hassidim don't take his critique seriously? They can see that nothing he says applies to their case, so he's not doing very well at critiquing them, is he?
(b) I'm not a skeptic. I have no doubt at all. Beyond the inherent, correct skepticism of science. There is knowledge. True belief. There is no doubt in that. In commons sense reason.
(bb) I think doubt is something that any healthy mind experiences. Human epistemology only inductive and probabilistic. Even in experimental sciences, a set of experiments, however successful, never eradicate the worry that the very next trial would expose different results. Since nobody has performed the set of all possible trials, we can only speak of science as being highly probable, not certain. In fact, theses once regarded as solidly "scientific" are often disproved by further experimentation, which produces an even higher probability thesis, but still never is able to eliminate doubt.

I don't fear doubt. I am familiar with it, as the reasonable counterpart to knowledge. And I know that high-probability convictions are much better than low-probability ones, on average -- so I don't find it fearful at all.

In fact, that's why I came here: to find out if there are higher-challenge doubts to be considered. And as I said, I've found a few, but not many. And I've found it quite affirming to tackle some of them and find that they have answers. Still, I'm always in the market for new challenges of that kind.
(c) Faith is impervious to critique, as the completely honest faithful admit, despite knowing that reason obviates it. We are believing machines down to the neuron.
(cc) I consider myself honest, and I would wish to be found faithful, but I do not avoid critique, nor do I think that faith and reason are in conflict. I think that if one defines-away "faith" as being "belief contrary to reason," or "belief contrary to knowledge," or something like that, what we have is not actual faith at all, but rather indoctrination of a toxic sort.

And I think the same is quite true of Atheism: those Atheists who believe their position is unassailable by reason and needless of proof are guilty of just the sort of toxic "bad faith" indicted by Sartre. Only those skeptics who remain open to reason and evidence, and don't imagine they have certainty instead, are better than indoctrinated themselves.

Look at it this way: if religious people can believe things in bad, toxic ways, why cannot an Atheist disbelieve in exactly the same sort of bad, toxic ways? How is a religionist who has never thought about critiques any worse than an Atheist who refuses even to entertain the possibility of critiques? It seems to me that, in regard to "faith" they turn out to be identical twins. Neither one has any actual faith or knowledge: they just pretend to.

No reference to present company intended, of course. I'm merely reflecting generally on the state of skepticism and belief, not accusing you or anybody here present of having "bad faith." But I think it's worth reflection, just as a general observation on the issue.
(aa) Why bless your ignorant, presumptuous young heart! You are all fundamentalists in that you all are slaves to sacred texts. Absolutely nothing about which is unnatural. And you're all therefore helplessly evil damnationsists. None of these fossils contains any anachronism. No Precambrian rabbit. As for skeptics' weaknesses, I have none. I am no skeptic, I have no doubt whatsoever of nature's fully explanatory power, and our risible incapacity to understand it.

Christians and Jews are bombing apartment blocks, schools, playgrounds, hospitals, the odd theatre every week.

(bb) I doubt myself constantly. Unhealthily, fearfully as well as healthily, fearlessly. But doubting nature would be truly utterly bizarre, unsound, irrational. Unhealthy. Fearful. I have no warrant, no justification, no need, no fear to do so.

(cc) All untrue belief is contrary to reason, knowledge, by definition. Toxic. I have no faith, bad or otherwise. Apart from good faith, good will, of course. I believe in kindness, social justice; I know the latter can never be attained except in the grave. There's nothing toxic in that. Nothing bad or toxic in my fully reasoned, proven knowledge of nature's complete sufficiency. I have no need to reflect in that hall of mirrors.

Why do you keep mentioning doubt? You're not addressing common sense absolute certainty. Why not? Starting with infinite, eternal nature, of which we are the mediocre infinitesimal very best it can do.
Last edited by Martin Peter Clarke on Thu Jul 03, 2025 4:43 pm, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
Immanuel Can
Posts: 27608
Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Martin Peter Clarke wrote: Thu Jul 03, 2025 3:45 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Thu Jul 03, 2025 2:29 pm
Martin Peter Clarke wrote: Wed Jul 02, 2025 10:46 pm
(a) Just about all orthodox = fundamentalist Christians in my experience. They're all on a spectrum of terrified to hard damnationists. I find no significant difference between Muslims and Christians.
(aa) You'll maybe need to look closer, then. As I think you'll then discover, that's one of the serious weaknesses of the skeptics: having decided before they even began to investigate to dismiss all of what they call "religion" as bunk, they have no incentive to look closer. So they end up offering critiques that, say, might apply to something like Islam as if they should be telling against Quakers or Hassidim: because all three are "fundamentalists," but the key question is "Fundamentally WHAT?" And it really does make a big difference.

When Islamists shoot up a theatre, it definitely doesn not imply that Hassidim or Quakers would do the same. You're not going to find any Mennonite child bombers, nor any Baptist or Hutterite or Brethren terrorists. Yet all get called "fundamentalist." So I think it behoves a thoughtful skeptic to be discerning about those differences...unless, again, all he plans to do is insult and dismiss them all without knowing anything in particular about them. But if he does that, can he be surprised when the Baptists, or Mennonites, or Quakers, or Hassidim don't take his critique seriously? They can see that nothing he says applies to their case, so he's not doing very well at critiquing them, is he?
(b) I'm not a skeptic. I have no doubt at all. Beyond the inherent, correct skepticism of science. There is knowledge. True belief. There is no doubt in that. In commons sense reason.
(bb) I think doubt is something that any healthy mind experiences. Human epistemology only inductive and probabilistic. Even in experimental sciences, a set of experiments, however successful, never eradicate the worry that the very next trial would expose different results. Since nobody has performed the set of all possible trials, we can only speak of science as being highly probable, not certain. In fact, theses once regarded as solidly "scientific" are often disproved by further experimentation, which produces an even higher probability thesis, but still never is able to eliminate doubt.

I don't fear doubt. I am familiar with it, as the reasonable counterpart to knowledge. And I know that high-probability convictions are much better than low-probability ones, on average -- so I don't find it fearful at all.

In fact, that's why I came here: to find out if there are higher-challenge doubts to be considered. And as I said, I've found a few, but not many. And I've found it quite affirming to tackle some of them and find that they have answers. Still, I'm always in the market for new challenges of that kind.
(c) Faith is impervious to critique, as the completely honest faithful admit, despite knowing that reason obviates it. We are believing machines down to the neuron.
(cc) I consider myself honest, and I would wish to be found faithful, but I do not avoid critique, nor do I think that faith and reason are in conflict. I think that if one defines-away "faith" as being "belief contrary to reason," or "belief contrary to knowledge," or something like that, what we have is not actual faith at all, but rather indoctrination of a toxic sort.

And I think the same is quite true of Atheism: those Atheists who believe their position is unassailable by reason and needless of proof are guilty of just the sort of toxic "bad faith" indicted by Sartre. Only those skeptics who remain open to reason and evidence, and don't imagine they have certainty instead, are better than indoctrinated themselves.

Look at it this way: if religious people can believe things in bad, toxic ways, why cannot an Atheist disbelieve in exactly the same sort of bad, toxic ways? How is a religionist who has never thought about critiques any worse than an Atheist who refuses even to entertain the possibility of critiques? It seems to me that, in regard to "faith" they turn out to be identical twins. Neither one has any actual faith or knowledge: they just pretend to.

No reference to present company intended, of course. I'm merely reflecting generally on the state of skepticism and belief, not accusing you or anybody here present of having "bad faith." But I think it's worth reflection, just as a general observation on the issue.
(aa) Why bless your ignorant, presumptuous young heart!
Now, that's interesting...so far, I've stayed miles away from anything ad hominem...But go on. Let's see what you follow it up with.
You are all fundamentalists in that you all are slaves to sacred texts.
Which "text"? If the text is good, then it's not at all bad to be governed by what the text says. Do you not govern yourself by the "text" of civil laws or at least by moral precepts? If you do, does that make you a "slave"?

Everything depends on the text that's being questioned...is it a good "text" or a bad "text"?
As for skeptics' weaknesses, I have none. I am no skeptic, I have no doubt whatsoever of nature's fully explanatory power, and our risible incapacity to understand it.
Wait a minute.

You say, "I have no doubt whatever..." and then also say we have a "risible incapacity to understand [nature's full explanatory power]." Those are your exact terms, are they not? How can you "have no doubt" of what we have, by your admission, no capacity to understand? :shock:
Christians and Jews are bombing apartment blocks, schools, playgrounds, hospitals, the odd theatre every week.

Really? Well, I suppose that you're thinking of Gaza right now, which is a war instituted and sustained by Hamas. But the problem is that it doesn't involve "fundamentalist" Jews like the Hassidim, because Hassidim are not Zionists. Did you not know that? Perhaps that's a good illustration of the critic not knowing enough about the object of his ire to make his critique work.

As for Christians " bombing apartment blocks, schools, playgrounds, hospitals, the odd theatre every week," you'll have to give me some evidence for that. The press is remarkably quiet about it, if it's happening. But I'm prepared to view your evidence for that claim.
(bb) I doubt myself constantly. Unhealthily, fearfully as well as healthily, fearlessly. But doubting nature would be truly utterly bizarre, unsound, irrational. Unhealthy. Fearful. I have no warrant, no justification, no need, no fear to do so.
"I doubt myself," you say, but not "nature"? That's got two problems: one is that if you doubt the instrument on which the information is registering (yourself), then how can you not doubt the reliability of the data that instrument is delivering to you? It would be like looking through a coloured telescope and declaring, "I have no doubt the moon is red." The other is that there is no such thing as absolute human empirical knowledge. No matter how long you look at nature, you should -- as a scientist does -- always recognize the margin or error that exists in all theorizing and all empirical data. To fail to do so wouldn't be a strength, but rather a weakness -- it would actually end science itself, since one never has to look further into what one is sure one absolutely knows.
(cc) All untrue belief is contrary to reason, knowledge, by definition.
Actually, it's not. Knowledge can be falsified, of course. And reason depends on the quality of the premises offered, which must be valid and true, or it produces only invalid or unsound conclusions.

What untrue belief is contrary to is actually reality.
I have no faith, bad or otherwise.
No faith in science? No faith in the universal explanatory power of "nature" explanations? But you just said you did. In fact, you said you were so certain you don't even doubt anymore. But since you also admit that "nature" has not currently supplied us with every possible explanation, and indeed, you insist that our "incapacity to understand it" is at the level of "risible," it's impossible to see how your premise warrants the conclusion you assert here.
Apart from good faith, good will, of course. I believe in kindness, social justice; I know the latter can never be attained except in the grave.
There's no "good" in a world of "nature." Nothing there is either "good" or "bad." So there's no "good will" to which a "nature" adherent can refer...at least, no objectively real "good." I suppose one could imagine something...but no more than that. Likewise, there's no "justice"; for justice is a moral quality, and a "nature" kind of world has no moral content of any kind. Nature is whatever nature is, and that's the end of it.

You say you have no faith. But now you say you have faith in "good will." And now you say you "believe in kindness, social justice." But what need is there to "believe" or "have faith," if you will, in a thing you currently have? But if you recognize this world as having a lack of "social justice," and even insist that it "can never be attained," then what kind of faith or belief is it that you have? And how will the grave provide some "justice" you don't see in this life?
You're not addressing common sense absolute certainty.
I am. See above. There's no such thing. There is, however, the self-deception of believing one can have it. That, at least, is a real thing.

Even science does not purport to provide certainty. And, as Oxford mathematician John Lennox has astutely pointed out, even mathematics requires the mathematician to accept as axiomatic certain principles he cannot prove from mathematics itself. So even in maths, the most seeming-certain of all disciplines, faith returns: one has to have faith in, for example, the stability of reference of numerical terms, or one cannot get good results even from maths.

So there is no such thing as absolute certainty. There is only the bravado that claims to have it, when it simply cannot be had. There is, however, such a thing as a rational, firm, relative conviction of the truth of a proposition, provided the evidence for it is sufficiently probabilistically strong.
Martin Peter Clarke
Posts: 1617
Joined: Tue Apr 01, 2025 9:54 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Martin Peter Clarke »

I edited. You've got less than nothing in empty rhetoric which I'll deal with later. And you'll come back with even more less. And I'll Foe you : )
User avatar
Immanuel Can
Posts: 27608
Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Martin Peter Clarke wrote: Thu Jul 03, 2025 4:45 pm I edited. You've got less than nothing in empty rhetoric which I'll deal with later. And you'll come back with even more less. And I'll Foe you : )
You're not responding here. You're just lapsing into ad hominems. I don't see any defense here of your earlier claims.

I suppose you'll do as you see fit. If you want to make your conversation partners or your critics your "foes," you will. That will be your choice, not theirs. But nobody can stop you doing it.

So...do what you see fit.
Martin Peter Clarke
Posts: 1617
Joined: Tue Apr 01, 2025 9:54 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Martin Peter Clarke »

Immanuel Can wrote: Thu Jul 03, 2025 5:40 pm
Martin Peter Clarke wrote: Thu Jul 03, 2025 4:45 pm I edited. You've got less than nothing in empty rhetoric which I'll deal with later. And you'll come back with even more less. And I'll Foe you : )
You're not responding here. You're just lapsing into ad hominems. I don't see any defense here of your earlier claims.

I suppose you'll do as you see fit. If you want to make your conversation partners or your critics your "foes," you will. That will be your choice, not theirs. But nobody can stop you doing it.

So...do what you see fit.
Nothing ad hominem there. I make no claims whatsoever. Only untruth believers do that. If I Foe you, which I'll have to, as you cannot actually converse, deal with anything substantive.
User avatar
Immanuel Can
Posts: 27608
Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Martin Peter Clarke wrote: Thu Jul 03, 2025 5:44 pm I make no claims whatsoever.
:D Did you notice? That's a claim. "I make no claims" IS a claim!
If I Foe you, which I'll have to, as you cannot actually converse, deal with anything substantive.
The problem with that is that IF, and let us say only IF, you have any faults in your current beliefs, all you're doing is cutting them off from further examination, further challenge, further improvement. In other words, all you're doing is preventing yourself from learning anything or refining your position any more.

But again, do as you see fit. It's really not a loss to me, if, as it seems, that's the limit of your ability to respond. You decide.
Martin Peter Clarke
Posts: 1617
Joined: Tue Apr 01, 2025 9:54 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by Martin Peter Clarke »

Immanuel Can wrote: Thu Jul 03, 2025 4:29 pm
Martin Peter Clarke wrote: Thu Jul 03, 2025 3:45 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Thu Jul 03, 2025 2:29 pm

(aa) You'll maybe need to look closer, then. As I think you'll then discover, that's one of the serious weaknesses of the skeptics: having decided before they even began to investigate to dismiss all of what they call "religion" as bunk, they have no incentive to look closer. So they end up offering critiques that, say, might apply to something like Islam as if they should be telling against Quakers or Hassidim: because all three are "fundamentalists," but the key question is "Fundamentally WHAT?" And it really does make a big difference.

When Islamists shoot up a theatre, it definitely doesn not imply that Hassidim or Quakers would do the same. You're not going to find any Mennonite child bombers, nor any Baptist or Hutterite or Brethren terrorists. Yet all get called "fundamentalist." So I think it behoves a thoughtful skeptic to be discerning about those differences...unless, again, all he plans to do is insult and dismiss them all without knowing anything in particular about them. But if he does that, can he be surprised when the Baptists, or Mennonites, or Quakers, or Hassidim don't take his critique seriously? They can see that nothing he says applies to their case, so he's not doing very well at critiquing them, is he?

(bb) I think doubt is something that any healthy mind experiences. Human epistemology only inductive and probabilistic. Even in experimental sciences, a set of experiments, however successful, never eradicate the worry that the very next trial would expose different results. Since nobody has performed the set of all possible trials, we can only speak of science as being highly probable, not certain. In fact, theses once regarded as solidly "scientific" are often disproved by further experimentation, which produces an even higher probability thesis, but still never is able to eliminate doubt.

I don't fear doubt. I am familiar with it, as the reasonable counterpart to knowledge. And I know that high-probability convictions are much better than low-probability ones, on average -- so I don't find it fearful at all.

In fact, that's why I came here: to find out if there are higher-challenge doubts to be considered. And as I said, I've found a few, but not many. And I've found it quite affirming to tackle some of them and find that they have answers. Still, I'm always in the market for new challenges of that kind.

(cc) I consider myself honest, and I would wish to be found faithful, but I do not avoid critique, nor do I think that faith and reason are in conflict. I think that if one defines-away "faith" as being "belief contrary to reason," or "belief contrary to knowledge," or something like that, what we have is not actual faith at all, but rather indoctrination of a toxic sort.

And I think the same is quite true of Atheism: those Atheists who believe their position is unassailable by reason and needless of proof are guilty of just the sort of toxic "bad faith" indicted by Sartre. Only those skeptics who remain open to reason and evidence, and don't imagine they have certainty instead, are better than indoctrinated themselves.

Look at it this way: if religious people can believe things in bad, toxic ways, why cannot an Atheist disbelieve in exactly the same sort of bad, toxic ways? How is a religionist who has never thought about critiques any worse than an Atheist who refuses even to entertain the possibility of critiques? It seems to me that, in regard to "faith" they turn out to be identical twins. Neither one has any actual faith or knowledge: they just pretend to.

No reference to present company intended, of course. I'm merely reflecting generally on the state of skepticism and belief, not accusing you or anybody here present of having "bad faith." But I think it's worth reflection, just as a general observation on the issue.
(aa) Why bless your ignorant, presumptuous young heart!
Now, that's interesting...so far, I've stayed miles away from anything ad hominem...But go on. Let's see what you follow it up with.
You are all fundamentalists in that you all are slaves to sacred texts.
Which "text"? If the text is good, then it's not at all bad to be governed by what the text says. Do you not govern yourself by the "text" of civil laws or at least by moral precepts? If you do, does that make you a "slave"?

Everything depends on the text that's being questioned...is it a good "text" or a bad "text"?
As for skeptics' weaknesses, I have none. I am no skeptic, I have no doubt whatsoever of nature's fully explanatory power, and our risible incapacity to understand it.
Wait a minute.

You say, "I have no doubt whatever..." and then also say we have a "risible incapacity to understand [nature's full explanatory power]." Those are your exact terms, are they not? How can you "have no doubt" of what we have, by your admission, no capacity to understand? :shock:
Christians and Jews are bombing apartment blocks, schools, playgrounds, hospitals, the odd theatre every week.


Really? Well, I suppose that you're thinking of Gaza right now, which is a war instituted and sustained by Hamas. But the problem is that it doesn't involve "fundamentalist" Jews like the Hassidim, because Hassidim are not Zionists. Did you not know that? Perhaps that's a good illustration of the critic not knowing enough about the object of his ire to make his critique work.

As for Christians " bombing apartment blocks, schools, playgrounds, hospitals, the odd theatre every week," you'll have to give me some evidence for that. The press is remarkably quiet about it, if it's happening. But I'm prepared to view your evidence for that claim.
(bb) I doubt myself constantly. Unhealthily, fearfully as well as healthily, fearlessly. But doubting nature would be truly utterly bizarre, unsound, irrational. Unhealthy. Fearful. I have no warrant, no justification, no need, no fear to do so.


"I doubt myself," you say, but not "nature"? That's got two problems: one is that if you doubt the instrument on which the information is registering (yourself), then how can you not doubt the reliability of the data that instrument is delivering to you? It would be like looking through a coloured telescope and declaring, "I have no doubt the moon is red." The other is that there is no such thing as absolute human empirical knowledge. No matter how long you look at nature, you should -- as a scientist does -- always recognize the margin or error that exists in all theorizing and all empirical data. To fail to do so wouldn't be a strength, but rather a weakness -- it would actually end science itself, since one never has to look further into what one is sure one absolutely knows.
(cc) All untrue belief is contrary to reason, knowledge, by definition.
Actually, it's not. Knowledge can be falsified, of course. And reason depends on the quality of the premises offered, which must be valid and true, or it produces only invalid or unsound conclusions.

What untrue belief is contrary to is actually reality.

I have no faith, bad or otherwise.


No faith in science? No faith in the universal explanatory power of "nature" explanations? But you just said you did. In fact, you said you were so certain you don't even doubt anymore. But since you also admit that "nature" has not currently supplied us with every possible explanation, and indeed, you insist that our "incapacity to understand it" is at the level of "risible," it's impossible to see how your premise warrants the conclusion you assert here.
Apart from good faith, good will, of course. I believe in kindness, social justice; I know the latter can never be attained except in the grave.


There's no "good" in a world of "nature." Nothing there is either "good" or "bad." So there's no "good will" to which a "nature" adherent can refer...at least, no objectively real "good." I suppose one could imagine something...but no more than that. Likewise, there's no "justice"; for justice is a moral quality, and a "nature" kind of world has no moral content of any kind. Nature is whatever nature is, and that's the end of it.

You say you have no faith. But now you say you have faith in "good will." And now you say you "believe in kindness, social justice." But what need is there to "believe" or "have faith," if you will, in a thing you currently have? But if you recognize this world as having a lack of "social justice," and even insist that it "can never be attained," then what kind of faith or belief is it that you have? And how will the grave provide some "justice" you don't see in this life?
You're not addressing common sense absolute certainty.


I am. See above. There's no such thing. There is, however, the self-deception of believing one can have it. That, at least, is a real thing.

Even science does not purport to provide certainty. And, as Oxford mathematician John Lennox has astutely pointed out, even mathematics requires the mathematician to accept as axiomatic certain principles he cannot prove from mathematics itself. So even in maths, the most seeming-certain of all disciplines, faith returns: one has to have faith in, for example, the stability of reference of numerical terms, or one cannot get good results even from maths.

So there is no such thing as absolute certainty. There is only the bravado that claims to have it, when it simply cannot be had. There is, however, such a thing as a rational, firm, relative conviction of the truth of a proposition, provided the evidence for it is sufficiently probabilistically strong.
Anadromously: I have no bravado whatsoever. Only absolute certainty. You can't have it. Oh, and er, are you absolutely certain that I don't?

Science doesn't deal with absolute certainty, because nothing can be observed with it. But it deals with practically absolute certainty, by as many sigmata as to be meaningless, all the time.

The 'faith' in mathematical axioms you mention is warranted, justified. Just like my 'faith' in science. Religious faith is not. Lennox is a savant believer. First. Naturally.

No you're not and I have no self deception in knowing, with absolute certainty, what I know: That nature is infinite and eternal. I know this, warrantedly and justifiably. You can not. And you are in no position whatsoever to identify my self deception.

Quote me where I said I have faith in good will.

I'm natural. Entirely. Just like you. Belief and kindness and good will and good faith are natural. As natural as quantum mechanics which never fails. As natural as unbelief and cruelty and ill will and bad faith. We naturally know what they mean. Most of us, for much of the time. I need kindness, don't you? Naturally. Of these things I am absolutely certain. Naturally. What has any of this got to do with unwarranted, unwarrantable, unjustified, unjustifiable, untrue beliefs? Religious beliefs? Being cognitively biased down to the neuron is entirely natural. I know this for a fact. Being religious is entirely natural. I am absolutely certain of this. Our mesoscopic inability to ever understand quantum and relatavistic nature is entirely natural.

Nature is reality.

All of it. Infinitely, eternally, all of it. Of that I am absolutely certain.

Oh, and, er, I get all of my news from the BBC. It's been full of Christians doing exactly what Muslims do and worse, with less justification, including to Muslims. Where do you get yours, Foe?
Last edited by Martin Peter Clarke on Thu Jul 03, 2025 10:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Post Reply