KWED
Scratching head, scratching knee
So why do you keep quoting the opinions of other people?as Baha'u'llah wrote, the faith of no man can be conditioned by anyone except himself.
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So why do you keep quoting the opinions of other people?as Baha'u'llah wrote, the faith of no man can be conditioned by anyone except himself.
But you have repeatedly been unable to show what this "verifiable evidence" is.My faith is also conditioned by independently verifiable evidence and I verified the evidence independently.
Anything else, is irrational
Let's just agree.....
Our belief doesn't make something exist or doesn't exist..... Good?
It's what the Quran says...
"On the Day of Judgment, the believers will laugh at the disbelievers while reclining on couches"
I do not need to know the Qur'an cover to cover just because I believe it is God's revelation.And here lies the problem. You claim that the Quran is god's perfect revelation, but you also admit that you do not know what it says and that you disagree with some of it.
I never did.So why do you keep quoting the opinions of other people?
It is objective evidence that has been verified.But you have repeatedly been unable to show what this "verifiable evidence" is.
No, quite the contrary. I have posted the evidence over and over and over again.Not only that, you earlier admitted that you have no evidence to support your claims.
I believe that God is beyond science and the Essence of God is beyond logical analysis. Other than that, I do not claim to know what humans will be able to understand via science in the future.That would be fine in itself but you contradict yourself when you go on to declare that some things are fundamentally beyond science or logic and so can never be understood. The core issue here (far from unique to you) is holding a specific set of beliefs and then trying to support them unconditionally using science and logic, significantly what you do when the science and logic contradicts (or at least doesn't support) your beliefs.
How so?Being capable of something but choosing not to do it is still an application of control.
God created man with free will to choose between good and evil and some people will make evil choices. The only other logical option would have been to create humans as programmable robots who cannot make any choices. God does not desire that humans make evil choices but God allows free choice so that is why there is evil in the world.ut if God didn't desire war and murder, he wouldn't have created humans in such a way that would inevitable have those consequences.
What God knows is not what causes humans to choose what they choose. God is all-knowing, so God knows everything what will happen in the future, but what God knows does not cause anything to happen. Knowing something is going to happen is not what causes it to happen. For example, mathematicians by astronomical calculations know that at a certain time an eclipse of the moon or the sun will occur but that knowledge does not cause the eclipse to take place.God can't really give humans choice, only the illusion of choice, since God already knows what choices we would make if permitted. Our choices are limited by simple practical factors so it must be possible for God to give us a limited (perceived) choice that would lead to the consequences he desired.
I believe that God is and has always been beyond the scope of science and God will always be beyond the scope of science. Anything else might be studied using science at some point in the future, at which time we would know that it was within the scope of science, although I doubt that the soul or the spiritual world are within that scope.The "scope of science" has no temporal quality. If something was beyond the scope of science it would always be beyond the scope of science. If something might be studied using science at some point in the future, it is within the scope of science by definition. Yet again, you are conflating human limitations with limitations of science.
I agree, and I believe that is everything that exists in the material world we live in.Anything that could be observed by someone or something is within the scope of science.
I fully agree. A good example of this is when Christians claim that the physical body Jesus ascended into the physical clouds in the sky and Jesus will return from heaven as He ascended and land feet first on the ground. They also believe that ‘every eye’ will see Jesus when He returns in the clouds. Then there are also the verses about how faithful Christians will meet the Lord in the air. I could go on but I think you get the point.Duped would be a harsh term. I think there are a lot of aspects of a lot of religions based on unquestionable accepting the words or certain people and texts and if anything appears to contradict them, that thing must be wrong for some reason. That leads to unsupported statements of faith like some things being "beyond science" or that there is some spiritual aspect to the world that non-believers can't understand (but the scripture, messengers and priests can somehow make clear and definitive statements about).
I can approach everything I believe logically; I would not believe it if I couldn’t. For example, I consider it logical to realize that some things are beyond science, and thus they must be believed on faith or not at all. Clearly, God is beyond science so must be believed on faith, but that faith need not be blind faith if it is supported by evidence. By evidence I mean the Messengers of God. I consider the Messengers of God a logical concept because there has to be an intermediary between an unknowable God and ordinary man and that intermediary would have to have a twofold nature, both divine and human, in order to act as an mediator between God and man.Yes, but that approach are contradictory and flawed. You are selectively applying logic to elements of your belief, those elements you feel you can rationalise logically, but any elements that can't be logically rationalised, you apply the blind faith about those elements being magically "beyond science" or "only known to God". But you still treat them as if they're truth anyway.
There is nothing illogical about holding a religious belief. We cannot know everything so we have to have faith in what we cannot know as a fact, and that applies to more than religion.If you were correctly applying logic, you wouldn't have belief. You'd have some things you know and some things you don't know. Faith in general is about filling the scary holes of all the things we don't know. We all do it to some extent, just not always in the formalised structure of a religion.
That’s true, because if I think logically, I would think logically across the board.I have no understanding of God. My challenges are based entirely on your own words. If your "logical" approach was legitimate, it wouldn't only apply to your God.
The first thing I would ask them is why their logic tells them that my God does not exist, how they reasoned that out. If I consider that illogical I will tell them why; I would not just say “that’s illogical” like some people say to me about my beliefs.For example, someone else could (and probably do) say they know your God doesn't exist because their "logic" tells them so, but they can't demonstrate that knowledge to you. Honestly now, would you accept their knowledge as truth or would you consider it false belief?
I consider that to be all-or-nothing thinking. I believe we can know the Attributes of God (such as Eternal, Holy, Unchanging, Impassable, Infinite, Omnipresent, All-Powerful, All-Knowing, All-Wise, Infallible, Self-Existent, Self-Sufficient, Sovereign, Immaterial, Good, Loving, Gracious, Merciful, Just, Righteous, Forgiving, and Patient) but we can never know the Essence of God (the intrinsic nature of God, such as what God is comprised of and how God functions and exists).Unknowable means unknowable. If there is any way of knowing something, it is not unknowable by definition. If it can be understood by reading scriptures, scientific method could be applied to that reading and scientific conclusions reached (they're unlikely to be definitive but they would be scientific).
So just to be clear, you don't claim to know god exists. You simply believe god exists and accept that he may not actually exist.Good
and that is what I have been saying too (mis understanding I think)
The issue was with their claim to know god exists.Two of you keep repeating this point. I wonder why. Is somebody stating otherwise, that if they don't believe something (or in the case of the other poster, even if unproven), that it can't or doesn't exist?
All you are saying here is the tautology that if something exists, it exists. Also, if something doesn't exist, it doesn't exist. Obviously, belief doesn't change either of those, and with nobody claiming otherwise, why have I read these comments at least a half dozen times on the last several pages of this thread?
Critical thinkers are trying to determine which statements about reality are correct and can be believed. This is done empirically. Tautology adds nothing to that.
We've been through this before. You did not "independently verify evidence". You read an article by another Baha'i who merely made claims and assertions. You agreed with it because it supports your existing position.My faith is also conditioned by independently verifiable evidence and I verified the evidence independently.
Anything else, is irrational
You have posted no "evidence". The only thing I can remember is some vague and unconvincing "prophesies" which I dealt with at the time. If you have something more, please present itIt is objective evidence that has been verified.
No, quite the contrary. I have posted the evidence over and over and over again.
How fo you know it's god's revelation if you don't know what it contains? Presumably because someone has told you it is, and you believed them without checking for yourself. Which is the initial problem.I do not need to know the Qur'an cover to cover just because I believe it is God's revelation.
"On the Day of Judgment, the believers will laugh at the disbelievers while reclining on couches"
That principle contradicts the explicit message in the Quran. So you believe it is god's perfect revelation, but you don't believe (or know) what it says.Maybe that was what God wanted people to do back when the Qur'an was written, but that does not mean it holds true for all time. Revelations from God change over time.
You are constantly quoting Bahaulla.I never did.
Atheism is not a belief, and your belief here seems to have you making claims that are violating Occam's razor.
My faith is also conditioned by independently verifiable evidence and I verified the evidence independently.
Anything else, is irrational
You can believe that but you can't support it in any way what-so-ever so it is irrelevant outside your own personal belief. It is of absolutely zero help in our discussion of what actually is (indeed, I think the concept was created by early believers to block that kind of discussion).I believe that God is beyond science and the Essence of God is beyond logical analysis.
There is nothing in the definition of "religious belief" that requires it to be something that can't be proven. You can believe something and call it part of your religion or call it part of your personal beliefs - the provability of the belief would remain exactly the same. Sticking a "Religion" label on something doesn't magically make it subject to different rules.Science does not support my religious beliefs because religious beliefs are not within the scope of science. Conflating religion and science is illogical because they fall under a different purview, as science can prove things but religion is a belief that cannot be proven.
If there is a bomb about to go off and I have a button that will disarm it, choosing not to press that button would still be an application of my control over the situation, just as choosing to press a button to trigger the bomb would be.How so?
That would have been one viable option he could have taken. He could have alternatively created a world where only the good (or at least not most evil) options were available. Or he could have simply not created humans in the first place. He apparently took the option which he knew would lead to all the evil in the world. I don't think you can absolve a hypothetical omnipotent and omniscient deity of that decision (however meaningless our objection would be).God created man with free will to choose between good and evil and some people will make evil choices. The only other logical option would have been to create humans as programmable robots who cannot make any choices.
No, but we're talking about a god defined as omniscient and the omnipotent creator of everything. The first part states that they know everything that will happen and the second states that they caused (if only indirectly) everything that will happen.What God knows is not what causes humans to choose what they choose. God is all-knowing, so God knows everything what will happen in the future, but what God knows does not cause anything to happen.
I didn't say "material world". That term has been too corrupted and misused to be of use here. I specifically said "anything that could be observed by someone or something". There is no fundamental restriction within that definition. If you wish to propose anything that outside the scope, you would need to specifically define why that thing can never be observed by anything.I agree, and I believe that is everything that exists in the material world we live in.
Not really, you just repeated another example of blind faith Christians are expected to believe because it is written in scripture and repeated by the priests. It is not meant to be questions or challenged.I could go on but I think you get the point.
That is impossible, you literally declare part of what your believe (the "Essence of God") as being being logic.I can approach everything I believe logically;
Evidence is a aspect of scientific method. If you are assessing evidence to determine the validity of a claim, you are applying science.Clearly, God is beyond science so must be believed on faith, but that faith need not be blind faith if it is supported by evidence.
What if they said they know their god is the only one, because they have the evidence of Messengers from their god, though they can't demonstrate that evidence to you and the Essence of their god is beyond logic anyway?The first thing I would ask them is why their logic tells them that my God does not exist, how they reasoned that out. If I consider that illogical I will tell them why; I would not just say “that’s illogical” like some people say to me about my beliefs.
That still doesn't mean it is incorrect. If you choose to apply all-or-nothing labels to your god, you can't complain when people treat them that way.I consider that to be all-or-nothing thinking.
Yet again, you would first need to construct logically consistent hypotheses based on all those proposed attributes. For example, if there was an all-powerful, all-knowing, infallible and good god, what would you expect to see (or not see) in the world. Note that you can't add any additional characteristics at this point (such as what this god desires) without including them in the initial definition, and therefore constructing hypotheses covering them too.The Attributes of God can be understood by reading scriptures, the same way we can understand anything by reading about it. How do you think the scientific method could be applied to the Attributes of God and scientific conclusions reached?
You are not trying to support your beliefs at all.I am not trying to support my beliefs using science.
Incorrect. Science does not support your beliefs because you can demonstrate no evidence for your beliefs.Science does not support my religious beliefs because religious beliefs are not within the scope of science.
Conflating religion and science is not illogical. Religion is, among other things, an early-human failed attempt at creating a scientific methodology.. Conflating religion and science is illogical because they fall under a different purview, as science can prove things but religion is a belief that cannot be proven.
That is a tautology. All that says is that you do not think that logic contradicts your beliefs because you do not think that logic contradicts your beliefs. Or, if you prefer, you think your beliefs are logical because you think your beliefs are logical. The phrases are semantically identical.I do not think that logic contradicts my beliefs since I think my beliefs are logical.