No, it's irrelevant to ponder whther a God does anything because we can't known one way of the other, and if any gods exist as you define it. How you dfine God is also a guess since you can't detect anything to describe.
I do not need to detect God in order to know some things about God.
How I describe (not define) God is according to scriptures. It is not a guess, it is my belief.
No, you cannot know one way or another, without scriptures.
No, it is an assumption. Belief isn't knowledge.
I make no assumptions, I only have beliefs. They are not based upon what you consider knowledge, they are based upon what I consider knowledge, which comes from God through Messengers.
There is no such science.
The evidence that God exists is not found in science.
No gods are known to exist, so irelevant.
No gods are known to exist
by you.
Bringing it up gods at all is a dead end, even with your own definition. You say we can't detect God, so how can you present any definition? It must be a total guess.
Remember, I told you that we can detect God through His Messengers. That is how we can know the 'very little' we are able to know about God.
You might refer to your Baha'i dogma, but that can't be confirmed either, so is yet another claim that has no basis in fact, so we throw it out.
I have confirmed it to be true by the process of independent investigation. You can throw it out if you want to.
So now we are back to knowing God exists all of a sudden? What changed as I slept? You offer no evidence of how you know Messengers are genuine.
"I" can know God exists because of the Messengers.
I have offered evidence of how "I" know Messengers are genuine. Obviously, not everyone is going to see the evidence as I see it.
Belief in the many gods is comforting for those who believe. There is no factual basis for belief. You offer no other explanation.
You do not know if it is comforting for those who believe unless you ask people if they feel comforted, but even if they do, I highly doubt many people would say that is why they believe. If they were Christians they would say they believe because of the Bible and if they were Baha'is they would say they believe because of Baha'u'llah.
The explanation is that I don't need a factual basis for belief. I only need a revelation from God.
OK, you assume the Baha'i teachings are factual, and that is not fact-based.
No, I do not assume the Baha'i teachings are factual, I believe they are true. True means in accordance with fact
or reality.
The teachings can be in accordance with reality even if they have not been proven as a fact.
Who cares what they claim when they offer no facts?
I do.
We don't care what you believe, we care about facts. You are moving towards a heavy reliance on this dogma in your responses to me. Baha'i dogma is not evidence.
After all this time posting to me and reading my posts you should know I only have beliefs, not facts. I cannot give you something I do not have. Baha'i dogma is not evidence, Baha'u'llah is the evidence.
But you don't know any of it is true, you just assume it is. That means nothing to me or others.
I do not assume it is, I believe it is.. I do not expect it to mean anything to you or others.
It doesn't convince critical thinkers. Your mileage may vary. You are motivated to believe it, thus biased.
I am not trying to convince anyone. You do not know that I am motivated to believe, thus biased.
That cuts both ways. I could just as easily say that you are not motivated to believe, thus biased towards non-belief.
Thus far none of it convinces thinkers, only a few folks who are willing to assume these claims are true without adequate evidence.
I am not trying to convince anyone.
I am willing to believe these claims are true with adequate evidence.
Every religious group thinks it's dogma is true. None offer evidence to show theirs is true over others, or true independently. It's all tribalism. You found your tribe, you are happy with your tribe's dogma, you will not examine the ideas like critical thinkers.
You do not speak for me, I can speak for myself.
Most people were raised in a particular religion so that is what they belong to. I was not raised in any religion, I came to belief by myself was by reading what Baha'u'llah, Abdu'l-Baha, and Shoghi Effendi wrote, and by reading other information about the Baha'i Faith. The Baha'i teachings made logical sense to me so that is why I believed it. No emotions were ever involved.
I am happy but not because I belong to a tribe that has a dogma. I am happy because I know I have truth to live by, and nothing is more important that that.
Religious belief is notoriously reliant on assumptions, not evidence. This is why believers, like you, are willing to suspend reason to adopt a religious framework that lacks evidence.
I have plenty of evidence. You just don't recognize it as evidence. We all look at the evidence through our own mind which differs from other minds.
Believers don't believe due to evidence, so the only other option is non-rational motives.
You are projecting 'what you believe' about believers onto believers. Since you don't believe there is any evidence, you cannot believe that believers believe on evidence, so you think there must be another reason why they believe.
It might help if you could at least try to look at this through the eyes of believers, because then you would understand why they believe. A long time ago I started looking at what atheists believe through their own eyes since I believed them when they told l me why they don't believe in God.
The key is to be able to separate and realize that believers have their own thought process just as atheists do, and to believe them when thye tell you why they believe. So for example if a Christian says he believes in God because of the Bible you can accept that he is telling the truth even though
you could never believe in God because of the Bible.
Atheists are able to examine religious concepts more objectively because for whatever reason they don't feel pressured or motivated to to adopt religious ideas.
You are making assumptions, facts not in evidence. You are assuming that believers 'feel pressured or motivated to to adopt religious ideas.'
A person can always look at something more objectively when they are looking from outside; so for example, I can look at the Bible more objectively since it is not my Holy Book. Similarly, I can look at atheist position more objectively since it is not my position.
I think this is what you tell yourself, as do other theists, to help jusify belief in ideas that not only l;ack evidence, but are also inconsistent with what we observe and understand about reality. Religions tend to require some level of illusion by the believer. They certainly can't rationally explain their thinking and experience in ways that suggest they aren't imagining their version of truth. These "truths" certainly are not fact-based.
What Baha'is believe is not inconsistent with what we observe and understand about reality, it is just outside the purview of the physical reality.
If atheism could stand on its own merit, you wouldn't need to say religions require some level of illusion by the believer. What you refer to an illusory is simply something you do not believe is real.
I cannot speak for other religious believers, but Bahais can rationally explain their thinking and experience in ways that suggest they aren't imagining their version of truth. These "truths" are not fact-based, they are scripture-based.