Is it also demonstratably rational?Given that human reasoning is demonstrably irrational is reason a good enough basis for belief/non-belief in God?
Perhaps more to the point, is it rationally demonstratably irrational?
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Is it also demonstratably rational?Given that human reasoning is demonstrably irrational is reason a good enough basis for belief/non-belief in God?
Then have the good manners to present relevant findings, or do you claim that unreasoned positions held by some validates blanket drivel such as:"Given that human reasoning is demonstrably irrational ..."?Did it ever occur to you that the capacity to recognize such unreasoned positions in fact serves to confirm the value of human reasoning?
Stop whining ...As if you have to room to lecture someone else on manners.
Given that human reasoning is demonstrably irrational is reason a good enough basis for belief/non-belief in God?
Stop whining ...
Good point. Reason cannot be irrational.
Like you - said human reasoning can.
What do you think?
Given that human reasoning is demonstrably irrational is reason a good enough basis for belief/non-belief in God?
Shalom ...Of course it is. ...
Shalom ...
(Chassidic Judaism from California. Oy vey!)
Then have the good manners to present relevant findings, or do you claim that unreasoned positions held by some validates blanket drivel such as:"Given that human reasoning is demonstrably irrational ..."?Did it ever occur to you that the capacity to recognize such unreasoned positions in fact serves to confirm the value of human reasoning?
The pleasure is mineblanket drivel
Your view is that the studies I put forward above are unreasoned positions or that they are not relevant or both?
Of course it is. If there is a God that created us and wants us to believe in Him, and also desires that we discover Him via our reasoning faculties, then our reason is sufficient for a belief in God.
This is the infamous Cartesian Circle.
Descartes has the clear and distinct idea of God, that he exists. And whatever is perceived clearly and distinctly must be true because God is not a deceiver. Hence he exists!
Good comment. (Better formatting.)This is the infamous Cartesian Circle. Descartes has the clear and distinct idea of God, that he exists. And whatever is perceived clearly and distinctly must be true because God is not a deceiver. Hence he exists!Of course it is. If there is a God that created us and wants us to believe in Him, and also desires that we discover Him via our reasoning faculties, then our reason is sufficient for a belief in God.
Intuition, creativity and desire are not universal? I think what we call "reason" much of the time is one of these other tools. We confuse reason with logic, and we worship logical reasoning in our current society. We foolishly think it's the only pathway to "truth".I do not wish to eliminate these tools of yours. But reason is the only one wich is universal. Well, should be at least. That's why this one is easiest to use in large groups. Groups like "human kind".
This is the infamous Cartesian Circle.
Descartes has the clear and distinct idea of God, that he exists. And whatever is perceived clearly and distinctly must be true because God is not a deceiver. Hence he exists!
If by "belief" you mean "faith" then the definition most appropriate to your question is that faith is "firm belief in something for which there is no proof." Therefore, reason does not enter into it. But when reason comes into contact with faith, the results are often cataclysmic.Given that human reasoning is demonstrably irrational is reason a good enough basis for belief/non-belief in God?
Given that human reasoning is demonstrably irrational is reason a good enough basis for belief/non-belief in God?
Given that human reasoning is demonstrably irrational is reason a good enough basis for belief/non-belief in God?
If by "belief" you mean "faith" then the definition most appropriate to your question is that faith is "firm belief in something for which there is no proof." Therefore, reason does not enter into it. But when reason comes into contact with faith, the results are often cataclysmic.
Faith is not belief. Once belief is attached to one's faith that generally implies that one belongs to a religion with doctrine.