Actually this I can understand, and it was what I was trying to get at. In reality, I agree with it. I very specifically say one should not hold to an idea of God as God and then believe in it. I am saying the same thing, from a slightly different approach. You recall I said I "believe" in God provisionally? It's really at its heart a symbolic tool, an archetype, not a "believe in" sort of thing. That's what seems very vague to people, and I can understand that. But it's not a confusion, it's really just a matter of engaging in the value of the symbol. And in that sense it's "true" because of what it opens within you. What you experience is true, not the object of belief. The object of belief is provisional, like the raft used to cross the river you leave at the shore as you walk inland. And that's a hard concept for people to understand. It's thinking from a very different perspective. Others that do this will clearly understand what this is however.I thought I should deal with this separately:
There is the school of thought - ignosticism - that the concept (or set of concepts) referred to by the term "god" is not coherent enough to be evaluated for truth or falsehood.
So I agree with what ignosticsm is saying about you can't or shouldn't put your beliefs in something so vague. What I do, and others like me, is basically open our sails to the wind and let it propel our rafts over the river on the journey into ourselves. Wind is vague too, but it can in fact be harnessed!
Well, I've always had a problem with atheism as a term in that it is saying "I don't believe". That's fine though, I know some use it more as a "weak atheist", which is really more like agnosticism, or by extension Ignosticism. But my point has been that when atheist speaks of God, it is in fact offering a definition that is mythic-literal. That is not what Ignosism does, as far as I am aware.I consider ignosticism to be a form of atheism, since a concept can't be rationally accepted as true until it can be evaluated.
Be careful. What some people call incoherent is often times something they simply lack context in order to understand. Cries of "You're incomprehensible!" is taken by those who understand the context is just that person expressing frustration that they can't understand something and need to blame someone else. Sometimes stuff is just garbled gook, but not everything is. If NO ONE understands someone, that's another matter. Plenty of people do get what I am saying clearly and is quite coherent to them. So I think a better assumption would be to ask others if the person speaking doesn't make sense to them. Other may have another way of explaining it better to that person in a way that might help bridge the understanding better for them.In these cases, rejection isn't so much "you're wrong" as it is "you're so incoherent you can't possibly be right".
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