At first you don't. You do know enough about it to distinguish the god experience from say, a mental disorder.
Now, the million dollar question (which is the question I asked at the beginning) is:
How do you know?
People who have mental disorders,
don't know that they have mental disorders - that's one of the things that defines a mental disorder. So, how do you
know that what you are perceiving as God is not a mental disorder? Also, how have you gone from "you don't know anything about the experience" to "you know enough to know it's not a mental disorder"? What is it that makes you "know" that? How could you possibly know?
Of course. But I must point out again that people who say they hear God talking to them generally aren't hearing God at all.
How can you tell? And if you can tell, why not apply the same reasoning to your experience of "feeling" God? That's a double-standard.
If you can experience it, it is true. Otherwise you would not be able to experience it. You cannot imagine something unless it has some basis in reality, and because of that, all experiences are examples of fundamental truths, regardless of how false they may seem.
That's complete nonsense. People experience things that are contrary to reality all the time. I already pointed out several examples, don't make me restate them.
Or they are simply attributing a name and a set of qualities to an experience.
Then what are those qualities? I have encountered many people who claim to have felt God, yet few provide the same explanation or definition of their experience.
That points out what exactly? That people are flawed? Well, we agree on something there.
No, it points out that personal belief and experience is insufficient for determining what is true in any objective sense, and that people who believe their experiences are definitive proof of something always reject the experiences of other people that completely contradict their own.
Here's your line. Actually, its a line you've failed to draw and that is ruining your objectivity. There is a difference. God is not about some 'sky-daddy' who puts warm fuzzy feelings in you. That is not God, as much as you may want to think so. The conception is immature, and should be discarded, yet you cling to it. Why? Because you know exactly what God is? Is that not arrogant?
Where have I said anything of the like? I've not said anything even remotely resembling any of what you just accused me of saying. I feel you're just dodging my question at this point.
The distinction between belief and delusion. Faith and delusion.
So the distinction between faith and delusion is meaningless? I pretty-much agree.
So what I say doesn't make sense because I am the one not saying it right? That is quite possibly the most arrogant thing I've ever heard. Just because you can't make sense of what I'm saying doesn't make what I'm saying nonsensical.
No, because what you're saying is incoherent it means it's nonsensical. That's what nonsensical means. You appear to be saying that to be objective you must not adhere to being objective, which makes about as much sense as saying "to collect stamps, you have to not collect stamps".
When I first failed to understand your point, I made a concession and asked you to repeat your point. I was very clear with you from the beginning, and continue to remain clear. Do not claim that your lack of coherence is somehow a fault on my part.
It just means you cannot understand them, which basically means I have confounded you. This is where this whole discussion got started. Makes sense does not equal makes sense to you.
You accuse me of arrogance, and yet you're the one asserting that the only reason I don't understand your point is because I'm too arrogant to? Go and reread your point again. It literally makes no sense, either grammatically or in terms of logic.