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A question for those with 'faith.'

What are you most sure of?

  • My faith.

    Votes: 4 30.8%
  • 1 + 1 = 2.

    Votes: 5 38.5%
  • Not sure/don't understand what the question entails.

    Votes: 4 30.8%

  • Total voters
    13

dust1n

Zindīq
A simple question. Feel free to explain your position.


Essentially, I would like to ask:

What are you more sure of, your faith, or that 1+1=2, (EDIT: using base 10. For post 6, Thanks BSM1.)

I ask because of an interesting idea I heard in a discussion about Descartes. If you remove all of your presuppositions about knowledge and the world, faith would seem to naturally be the position in which one can must be sure of.

Let's hear it!
 
Last edited:

Reverend Richard

New Thought Minister
A simple question. Feel free to explain your position.


Essentially, I would like to ask:

What are you more sure of, your faith, or that 1+1=2?

I ask because of an interesting idea I heard in a discussion about Descartes. If you remove all of your presuppositions about knowledge and the world, faith would seem to naturally be the position in which one can must be sure of.

Let's hear it!

It's not an either/or question.

I have faith that 1+1=2, because it always has in the past. However, someone much smarter than I may come along and prove that the equation is wrong. (I may not understand why it's wrong, but there's an awful lot of math I don't understand.)
 

dust1n

Zindīq
It's not an either/or question.

I have faith that 1+1=2, because it always has in the past. However, someone much smarter than I may come along and prove that the equation is wrong. (I may not understand why it's wrong, but there's an awful lot of math I don't understand.)

Oh, I guess I should have put an 'equally the same' option, then.
 

Son of Logic

New Member
Faith is a substitution for rational foundation. When there is no evidence to support a particular belief, a void exists. To fill that void and attribute what one wishes to believe as "true", faith become the necessary filler. Faith requires nothing more than an assumption and/or assertion is true. You could even say that faith is the "hope" that something is true, falling into the category of wishful thinking in such instances.

One may have faith that they will live a long life. However, there are far too many variables for this faith to ever have grounding in anything close to certainty. In the end, no matter how much one tries to affect it to fit there faith based belief, the longevity of their life has nothing to do with hope, faith, or wishful thinking and everything to do with a multitude of variables based purely in reality. Some can be controlled, others cannot, but "faith" holds no truth in the equation.
 

Trey of Diamonds

Well-Known Member
I have faith that 1 + 1 = 2 with the understanding that it is rather subjective. One apple plus one apple equal 2 apples but alter the context but a little and the answer can be different. 1 real apple + 1 apple picture = 1 apple. Context and perception is important in math just as it is in religion. Is a chair solid? No, but it appears to be so.
 

dust1n

Zindīq
I have faith that 1 + 1 = 2 with the understanding that it is rather subjective. One apple plus one apple equal 2 apples but alter the context but a little and the answer can be different. 1 real apple + 1 apple picture = 1 apple. Context and perception is important in math just as it is in religion. Is a chair solid? No, but it appears to be so.

Assume both 1's are referring to the same unit. It's a purely mathematical concept, no need to qualify with what object we are counting here.
 

idav

Being
Premium Member
Is this a question of logic or faith? Like 1 + a = b and having faith that b=4 therfore being able to assume a=3?
 

sandandfoam

Veteran Member
Everything I know either changes or can potentially change.
When I walk outside and breathe the air, that feels real. I'm equally (un)sure of faith and math - but I work harder at faith.
 

Trey of Diamonds

Well-Known Member
Assume both 1's are referring to the same unit. It's a purely mathematical concept, no need to qualify with what object we are counting here.

But there is. You are comparing an intensely complex concept (faith) with a simplistic mathematical equation. It is only fair to point out that the equation is only simple in some perceptions. Unless you can make the faith concept simple you need to consider a more complex equation in relation to it.
 

Storm

ThrUU the Looking Glass
A simple question. Feel free to explain your position.


Essentially, I would like to ask:

What are you more sure of, your faith, or that 1+1=2, (EDIT: using base 10. For post 6, Thanks BSM1.)

I ask because of an interesting idea I heard in a discussion about Descartes. If you remove all of your presuppositions about knowledge and the world, faith would seem to naturally be the position in which one can must be sure of.

Let's hear it!
What are you getting at?
 

Son of Logic

New Member
Assume both 1's are referring to the same unit. It's a purely mathematical concept, no need to qualify with what object we are counting here.

I have never been a fan of proposing such questions as your OP offered, in regards to believers. The question itself is flawed. It's a nonsensical query. They don't need to have "faith" that 1+1=2 in any sense of "suspending logic or rationale" in which to reach their conclusion. We have a universally cohesive set of foundational mathematical rules in which we agree that 1+1=2 in a simple, predefined mathematical context. Therefore, a logical and reasoned assumption can be attributed to the equation without deferring to "faith" that the assumption is absolute in an objective sense.
 
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