ppp
Well-Known Member
Okay. Kinda vague. But sure.1. As you shouldn’t. However, you should be cautious not to superimpose what one thing says onto something else that says differently.
While there are metaphysical elements to this claim, it is not merely metaphysical. When you assert that your god exists and can interact with reality, you are making an ontological claim. You are also implicitly making an epistemological claim about your ability to know that the claim is true. It is that final leg that would have to be demonstrated first. Are you capable of knowing that a god exists? How? I don't know what evidence would demonstrate such. I spent some considerable energy on the question and have never discovered a satisfactory methodology.2. Therein lies the question. That word. Evidence. I ask again in reply: what sort of evidence are you looking for in assessing the validity of a metaphysical or philosophical claim such as ‘God exists’ or conversely ‘God does not exist’. As to the use of sound reasoning, I agree with you here. The use of reason is, really, the only means whereby we can answer this question. Anything else is either self-insisting or will render inconclusive results.
The Kitab-i-Aqdas (yes, I looked up the spelling) and the Seven Proofs - summer and fall of '87.3. Ah. That’s telling. Can you say that you’ve read Bahá’í texts? Additionally, as I’ve aforementioned, Bahá’ís have a very layered conception of who God is, so approaching it is not as simple as merely saying the general Abrahamic stuff.
Or even if any god exists at all, let alone for certain. BTW, I don't worry about absolute certainty. Merely rational justification.1. Various religions have vastly different conceptions of God. As such, we human beings cannot ascertain who or what God is for certain.
To address your first point directly, though, we’re talking about a conceptual or metaphysical reality, not an empirical one..
As I said earlier, at its base this is a question of epistemology. When some one makes a claim of any type, the first step is to establish that the claimant is capable of knowing anything about the subject of their claim. Up to and including, if the subject is real. If they cannot, then they are necessarily talking about an imaginary character. Even if it just so happens that such a being actually exists.
We use term logic in a loosey goosey way in our daily lives. And loosey goosey is usually "good enough" for making everyday mundane decisions. Being wrong is usually not too disastrous. Usually.Additionally, simply because one person cannot make sense of something does not mean in the slightest that it’s not logically valid in an absolute way. It’ll make sense to someone else. It’s all in how a person chooses to view it.
But, like math, logic is actually a set of formal and structured processes. In order to say that logic is actually being employed, one would need to be capable of laying out one's process of syllogistic and inductive reasoning. Logical structures are not subjective. The premises might be, but not the structure.
As an aside: What are commonly referred to as the 'logical absolutes' are considered to be transcendent; applying to everything, even the metaphysical. -- A thing is what it is. It is not what it's not. And it either is or is not.
Y'al kinda do, As for instance, I have heard many Baha'i in real life, and on this forum say that Jesus is not God, but a Messenger. Which is explicitly and directly calling the core of most forms of Christianity an invalid conception. And while y'all are softening your stance on homosexuality (which is good), at its core Baha'i still hold that gay relationships and marriages are immoral. Which, aside from being an immoral position to hold, tells other people, religious and non-religious, that their conception to the contrary is invalid.2. Bahá’ís do not claim that our conception(s) of God is the truth of the matter. Connected to this, we neither claim to possess the only valid conception compared to other religions. Every religion (indeed, every individual person) has their own understanding of the Divine, yet the case is that none of them fully reflect the truth.
[nod] As I have said before, with the exception of a few outliers, I suspect that most people on the forum and pretty much alike, and would get along fine IRL. Maybe even [gasp] be friends.Indeed. This is absolutely true.
I get where you’re coming from here, dude. It reminds me of my own childhood days. I would love to ask questions and debate with other kids or my siblings on different things. Whenever I discovered I was wrong, I would feel very embarrassed, especially as I tended to argue from what I didn’t know about or didn’t understand fully (if at all).
As for my own investigation into different religions, there are lots of things I still don’t know about plenty of them, and about which I do my best to keep an open mind on and try to adjust my understandings accordingly.