3rdAngel
Well-Known Member
Very close nowWhat stage are you at?
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Very close nowWhat stage are you at?
3rd Angel said: Ok thanks for this. I missed your post here. So just to make sure I am understanding you correctly. Your trying to argue that bearing false witness in the ninth commandment is not lying is that correct? I will respond in detail after I hear back from you.
Not what I said or even implied. Your posts keep telling us that you cannot understand the responses given to you. Here is a suggestion. Try to understand what is written. Don't try to make it what you want to hear. Go back, read the post and try again. You asked for an answer. You should not ignore it when given to you.
Bearing false witness against your neighbor is making false claims about them. It is not necessarily lying about them, though a lie probably would be a false claim. What you seem to have a hard time understanding is that even if one believes what one said is true if what one said is incorrect that is bearing false witness. Let's say there was a party that we both were invited to,but I was the only one that went. For some odd reason I remember seeing you there. When asked about it I tell others that you were there. In reality you weren't. Now I did not lie about seeing you there, I really believed that you were there, but since you were not I would have been bearing false witness if I said that you were.
Theism can only be the belief god exists.Depends I guess if you believe your chart or if you believe the dictionary definitions which do not seem to be agreeing with each other. I have never heard of your definitions before although I am quite aware that there are many variations within and belief or religion.
ATHIESM DEFINITIONS
“Atheism” is typically defined in terms of “theism”. Theism, in turn, is best understood as a proposition—something that is either true or false. It is often defined as “the belief that God exists”, but here “belief” means “something believed”. It refers to the propositional content of belief, not to the attitude or psychological state of believing. This is why it makes sense to say that theism is true or false and to argue for or against theism. If, however, “atheism” is defined in terms of theism and theism is the proposition that God exists and not the psychological condition of believing that there is a God, then it follows that atheism is not the absence of the psychological condition of believing that God exists (more on this below). The “a-” in “atheism” must be understood as negation instead of absence, as “not” instead of “without”. Therefore, in philosophy at least, atheism should be construed as the proposition that God does not exist (or, more broadly, the proposition that there are no gods). (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Atheism is, in the broadest sense, an absence of belief in the existence of deities. Less broadly, atheism is a rejection of the belief that any deities exist. In an even narrower sense, atheism is specifically the position that there are no deities. The etymological root for the word atheism originated before the 5th century BCE from the ancient Greek ἄθεος (atheos), meaning "without god(s)". (Wiki).
Atheism, in general, the critique and denial of metaphysical beliefs in God or spiritual beings. As such, it is usually distinguished from theism, which affirms the reality of the divine and often seeks to demonstrate its existence. Atheism is also distinguished from agnosticism, which leaves open the question whether there is a god or not, professing to find the questions unanswered or unanswerable. (Encyclopedia Britannica)
Atheism a lack of belief or a strong disbelief in the existence of a god or any gods; a philosophical or religious position characterized by disbelief in the existence of a god or any gods (Merriam Webster dictionary)
Atheism the doctrine or belief that there is no God or disbelief in the existence of a supreme being or beings. (Dictionary.com)
Atheism The term “atheist” describes a person who does not believe that God or a divine being exists (Encyclopedia of Philisophy).
Athiesm a'-the-iz'-m (atheos, "without God" (Ephesians 2:12)): Ordinarily this word is interpreted to mean a denial of the existence of God, a disbelief in God, the opposite of theism. (International Stantard Bible Encyclopedia)
Athiesm the belief that God does not exist; not believing in any God or gods, or relating to such beliefs (Cambridge Dictionary)
Thanks for sharing your opinion though.
Athiesm the belief that there is no God, or denial that God or gods exist godlessness (Your Dictionary)
Someone who believes in Atheism...........?
Atheist, a person who does not believe in the existence of a god or any gods : one who subscribes to or advocates atheism (Merriam Webster dictionary)
You say "indeed", but every single one of your posts demonstrates the opposite.
Your repsonse...3rdAngel said: ↑ Well firstly you haven't proven their belief to be false, you have not proven there is no God or that God does not exist or have you proven that God has not revealed himself to them. Your comparing isolated cases with billions of people that claim God has revealed himself to them personally. If your talking about an isolated case you have to wonder if there is any truth in it. When your talking billions or people throughout time all world-wide all believing the same thing you have collective witnesses of truth the begs investigation. For example (hypothetically), a single person comes up to you and says I saw GODZILLA but no one else saw it, you would have to question the truth of this claim. However if you woke up the next morning reading the newspaper with a front page cover GODZILLA PASSES BY LONG ISLAND IN NEW YORK and these claims are seen by 1000's of people then you have collective witness to the event even though you never saw it and perhaps then cannot prove that it happened.
I can see that you are having trouble reasoning again. Christianity is the largest religion in the world. So even if they are right that means 2/3 of the world is wrong. No matter what belief you go with you will find that even more people are wrong than right. So what does the number of believers have to do with an idea being right or not?
And by the way, the burden of proof to even begin to claim that your beliefs are right are upon you. If you cannot support your beliefs then the rational act is to not believe. Perhaps if we try hard enough we can get you to reason rationally.
You need to define what you mean by faith. the word is very elastic. If you define it loosely enough, virtually everyone lives by faith.
You seem to believe in a god, and use faith to do so, yet seem to imply that if someone does not believe a god exists he has faith and that is bad. Is faith bad or good?
Your response...3rdAngel said: ↑ Not really. Not believing in God for example is a belief that does not believe in God. If you do not believe in God and have no evidence for your belief then you are living by faith just as much as those who believe in God
Nope it is not. You will not admit it though as it shows that you are living by faith if you do not believe in God or that God does not exist. If you have no evidence for your belief you are living by faith just like those who you claim have no evidence for their belief.and this is still just plain flat out wrong.
And if all of these people agreed on the particulars, you would have a point. But they don't. And *that* shifts the evidence to it simply being something made up and/or people conditioning themselves into belief. I don't agree that there is a 'collective witness' because there are simply too many disagreements between those in the 'collective'. if it was a real being, as opposed to self-deception, I would expect much more consistency around the world and there simply wouldn't be the diversity of religions. Once again, they cannot all be correct, but they *can* all be wrong. And the diversity suggests exactly that.
3rdAngel said: I have a similar background but not in general mathamatics. My proffession leads me more towards biometrics but that said many of these models are indeed based on assumptions. Something that cannot be quantified without them unfortunately as you would agree. I am sure not every assumption used in many mathamatic models are correct. However they do give us a general understanding of the probabilities and chances of things that are likely to take place IMO so are useful as a general guide.
Of course models have assumptions. That is how they arise, whether it be in biology or in physics. The question is whether the models are testable and give results consistent with observation. Those models that don't give any testable predictions can be discarded as meaningless and those that give incorrect predictions can be discarded as wrong (or, potentially, mere approximations). That's because I have not seen any calculation that is anywhere close to valid from either end of this. As far as I know, given the natural laws make life inevitable. We simply don't know, although the evidence we have is that life arose naturally (or, at least not by any processes that contradict the known laws of nature). So, as far as I can see, the probabilities are exactly the same in the two scenarios.
Once again, I withhold belief until there is evidence and the burden of proof is on the one making the positive existence claim. This i s how it is in every other subject.
And you can believe that if you wish. At this point, that is a hope based on a complete lack of evidence.
My basic point is that people are really, really good at deluding themselves, even to the point of hearing the voice of Cher giving advice. I see no reason to suspect God belief is anything different. And, given the evidence of how much people can delude themselves, and that the *ways* to delude oneself align well with activities like prayer and meditation, the evidence as I see it points to self-delusion and not a perception of reality.
3rdAngel said: ↑ Not really. Not believing in God for example is a belief that does not believe in God. If you do not believe in God and have no evidence for your belief then you are living by faith just as much as those who believe in God
I strongly disagree. Not believing is simply not having a belief. For example, I lack a belief in the existence of axions (a proposed subatomic particle). The evidence is not in for one way or the other and it is unreasonable to believe one way or the other without evidence. That is exactly NOT a position of faith. Instead, it is going with the available evidence and understanding that the positive existence claim is where the burden of proof lies. Not believing in God and believing there is no God are two different positions. The first is reasonable when there is no evidence either way. The second is reasonable when the lack of evidence becomes evidence of absence.
Hard atheism: I am convinced there is no God
Soft atheism: I lack a belief in God.
Soft agnosticism: I don't know either way
Hard agnosticism: It is impossible to know either way
So, an agnostic atheist is someone who lacks a belief in God but doesn't claim to *know* that no God exists.
There are also other positions:
Ignosticism: the concept of God is too ill-defined for the question of existence to be meaningful.
Apatheism: I don't care if a God exists or not.
For myself, I am convinced the Abrahamic God does not exist. I allow for other possibilities (say, pantheism, or maybe panentheism), but see them as low likelihood. I also think there are too many different conceptions of God for meaningful discussion prior to settling on a definition.
So I have a mixture of hard and soft atheism (depending of the conception of God in question), a bit of agnosticism, and a lot of ignosticism. Every once in a while I feel apatheistic: the whole question often seems pointless.
How would one know?To me, faith is a belief that does not have definitive evidence for that belief. There is also the biblical definition that christians live by as well in Hebrews 11:1 Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. Faith is good if it is based on truth and bad if it is not.
Most are in my experience.
Due to practicality. They live their lives as if God does not exist. They are not worried about judgement, some moral code from religion(s), etc. They get on with living to put it simply. Keep in mind the agnostic part can be about knowledge and if God is even "knowable". So that often become an issue regarding methodology not merely a belief in God. The systems we have are inadequate to prove or provide a high probability of existence or non-existence. Keep in mind belief and faith are similar. The difference is what is used for evidence in the for/against view. Scripture vs philosophy for example. Both categories of people will use philosophy but only one uses scripture *scripture being an umbrella term for religious texts.
One cannot have faith in something that they are lacking. Faith only concerns "belief."
If you're going to argue from an etymological stand point, then both atheism and theism does not have anything to do with the belief that a god exist or not. It's basically a moot point. But if talking about belief, then theism(theos) is the belief that a god exist. And atheism(atheos) means without
the belief of a god.
No, because agnosticism deals with the knowledge, not belief. That's why someone can be an agnostic or gnostic atheist. It's the same as someone being a Christian theist, Christianity deals with religion and theism deals with simply the belief that a god exist.
In regards to god, the existence of a god is not known. See how their belief is not about the belief that a god doesn't exist.
Some atheist see it as a big difference. One cannot have any beliefs if they are lacking in belief, so they have no belief. Someone who does not believe, does lack the belief that a god exist. The difference comes when it goes into further details.
That's two separate things. Being open to believing in a god doesn't define what atheism is about.
Again, being open has nothing to do with atheism. Just like a theist being open to the idea of no god exist. They still believe that a god exist.
Theism can be both. What's important is the usage in "context." A proposition is true or false, but not in the way that you might think. Being true or false is hinges on what the proposition is.
Propositions are not required to argue for or against them.
Nope, you're wrong. But as I said, being true or false it is dependent on the proposition. In this case, it is believe a god exist, so if you believe that a god exist, it is true. If you don't, then it is false. Theism is not god exist. You even said it yourself, it's "believe that a god exist." So the proposition would be, "you believe that a god exist." Let's dissect it, I color coded it. R is obviously the who. B is the action, the deciding factor of being true or not. G is the what, that correlates to the action. The "a-" in atheism stands for, "without" belief or "not" believe , it doesn't matter. See how the proposition plays the role? You have to know what that is and how it is being presented. And being dishonest by changing the meaning of theism didn't work because I'm using the definition, quoting exactly what you said, "is best understood as," the belief that a god exist.
Atheism, in the broadest sense, an absence of belief in the existence of a god, is the result of theism when used as a proposition.
Nope. Not believing in god cannot be an example for a belief that does not believe in god. Believing and not believing are two separate things. Use yourself as an example. You not believing that no god exist is not an example for you believing that a god exist because you not believing tells nothing about you believing.
And here's where you are wrong. I'll play along and show you the difference. I'm not living by faith, I live by evidence. I believe without a shadow of a doubt that my belief is true and can support it with sufficient and justifiable evidence. My evidence is that I believe that I lack the belief that a god exist because I am not lying to myself.
Hi Ayjay nice to see you again. How would one know what?How would one know?
Not believing in something is a FACT.Yep. Not believing in God or the existence of God is still a belief no matter how you want to spin it. Not believing in anything is simply not believing in anything. Now if you believe that there is no God and that God does not exist then that is your belief. If you cannot prove your belief and you have no evidence that God does not exist then it is simply your opinion in which you are living by faith
Nope. If you have no evidence for your belief that there is no God then all you have is an opinion that you cannot prove which means your opinion is simply based on faith as you cannot prove it. If you live by evidence then you should be able to prove that there is no God. Yet here you still are with no evidence and simply providing your own opinion you cannot prove.
Hope this helps
Indeed that is their belief and for that belief they have no evidence to prove what they believe so their belief is based on faith.Not believing in something is a FACT.
even if god existed, the FACT remains the athiest does not believe it
Nonsense. He doesnt have faith that he doesn't believe he knows full well he doesmtYour response...
Nope it is not. You will not admit it though as it shows that you are living by faith if you do not believe in God or that God does not exist. If you have no evidence for your belief you are living by faith just like those who you claim have no evidence for their belief.
Depends I guess if you believe your chart or if you believe the dictionary definitions which do not seem to be agreeing with each other. I have never heard of your definitions before although I am quite aware that there are many variations within and belief or religion.
Someone who believes in Atheism...........?
Atheist, a person who does not believe in the existence of a god or any gods