How do you determine those who actually know God from the rest?Some know God...
Some think they know God...
Some lie...
Some are deluded...
Some need to see a psychologist.
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How do you determine those who actually know God from the rest?Some know God...
Some think they know God...
Some lie...
Some are deluded...
Some need to see a psychologist.
If you saw certainty in my post, you read it wrong.But you, on the other hand, mount your soapbox to claim that every single person to profess knowledge of god is either delusional or dishonest. One would think that only an arrogant fool would prance around infected by such certainty.
My criticism of Religion is the claim to know anything about God, at all.
My position is man knows nothing about God. I assume this is the default position of atheists. Am I wrong?
People who say God is whatever... loving, all powerful, Just, merciful, has a plan for all of us etc.
From whence does this knowledge about God come from?
I know nothing about God and neither do you. You can have faith that God possesses whatever properties you feel God should possess, but based on what? Imagining if a God did exist, this is what God ought to be like?
You have the Bible, Quran etc... So why do you feel these folks were in any better position than you to have knowledge about God.
Not that I'm going to go about calling believers liars. I just think they feel a certainty that they don't actually possess.
I recognize I could be wrong, you could be wrong, the Pope could be wrong. So we base our knowingness on what? That any individual could be wrong in their claims about God? Guess what... That's where I am. We could all be wrong about God. Where's the knowledge? Where's the validation that anyone is right about God?
Yes and no. There's quite a bit packed into the phrase "I experienced God":I think you're wrong on several key points. One is that "knowledge" refers to direct personal experience, which you have no way of determining for someone else. If I tell you I experienced God, directly, you have no possible way of determining whether I did or I didn't. So you have nothing but your own bias upon which to formulate an opinion regarding what I "know of God".
I know it sounds confusing , but its not too bad....I promise, because for anyone that God finds all the things that goes with it is like learning to game or play cards, Chess etc. Once a few minor rules are learned everything else drops into play in no time...
How did you come by your knowledge of these rules?
Lots of folks offering to speak for God and tell us God's rules.
If I claim that God told me there were no rules, should you listen to me? Why or why not?
Why should I listen to you anymore than you should listen to me? I've had my experiences, all very convincing. Does my conviction in my personal experiences give me authority to tell you the will of God?
If we both speak for God, shouldn't we be saying the same thing?
Or is it ok? God tells me one thing is true and tells you a different thing is true.
The knowledge of God comes from within. Therefore, it can neither be confirmed nor denied.My criticism of Religion is the claim to know anything about God, at all.
My position is man knows nothing about God. I assume this is the default position of atheists. Am I wrong?
People who say God is whatever... loving, all powerful, Just, merciful, has a plan for all of us etc.
From whence does this knowledge about God come from?
I know nothing about God and neither do you. You can have faith that God possesses whatever properties you feel God should possess, but based on what? Imagining if a God did exist, this is what God ought to be like?
You have the Bible, Quran etc... So why do you feel these folks were in any better position than you to have knowledge about God.
Not that I'm going to go about calling believers liars. I just think they feel a certainty that they don't actually possess.
The knowledge of God comes from within. Therefore, it can neither be confirmed nor denied.
What do I think about people who know about their gods (yes, just know - I don't find that word "claim" in there necessary)? I think that I would like to sit down and have a conversation with them!
Experiencing the gods is one of the hearts of my own religious demographic, so I have great interest in discussing such things. Alas, very often I end up seeing things like this - the habitual second guessing and naysaying rhetoric - and these conversations don't occur. That is unfortunate. Theology - the study of the gods - is fascinating.
My position is no. I have no authority to speak for God. However those who feel they can speak for God, to the rest of us, how do they justify that claim?
Logic dictates that if someone cannot properly provide the evidence, then that something is not a part of reality.
The knowledge of God comes from within. Therefore, it can neither be confirmed nor denied.
On the contrary, see Argument from Ignorance.
Well if that argument held any value in logic instead of being a centerpiece for actual ignorance, then people would believe in invisible unicorns and use that argument to claim those who denied the existence of invisible unicorns are being illogical. Not all logical fallacies are relevant, I'm afraid, and certainly not for every situation.
We'll have to agree to disagree about whether or not you were committing the fallacy of arguing from ignorance in post 51, then.
We'll certainly have to agree to disagree that you misused a logical fallacy.