No. If it's only a belief, then it's not knowledge. Knowledge is more like "justified true belief". Superficial knowledge might be superficially true, but still true.
Can you provide an example as it pertains to knowledge of God?
And how is this confirmation?
When you trip and fall into a mountain lake, how do you confirm that the water is cold?
Wait a minute. It seems like when we're talking about looking for evidence, God is not part of the phenomenal world. Then, when we're talking about whether God affects the phenomenal world, suddenly he is part of it... and not just that but "part and parcel of it".
Did I ever say God was
not part of the phenomenal world? The universe IS the Absolute, but it is falsely seen through the filters of Time, Space and Causation.
Which is it?
If God has physical effects, then these effects create evidence that can be observed or measured. If God creates no observable evidence, then this implies he has no physical effects.
But God has no observable physical effects other than those that are considered ordinary. You are looking for something that is not there, and not seeing what actually IS there.
You can't have it both ways.
Which is just what I described: a God that's either physically impotent or non-existent.
Is the physical world not full of vitality, even down to the subatomic level, where everything is in ecstatic vibration?
Just because something leaves no trace does not mean it is impotent nor non-existent. Consider TV signals in a room, or a mirror.
No, I'm not doing that.
Personally, I believe that there's only the physical. I think that "spiritual" is a word we use to describe physical things. However, I recognized that it sounds like you believe in some sort of "spiritual" plane, so I tried to address that possibility in my response, because I don't really want to get spun off into a tangent on materialism.
What I'm trying to say is that I'm specifically talking about the physical. If you want to believe in some other spiritual plane where you can put God, fine. I personally don't, but I'm not really interested in bringing you to my point of view on that.
Uh, huh. You 'believe there is only the physical world'. Why so arbitrary?
In proclaiming an affirmation of the physical, you are, simultaneously, affirming the non-physical. Are you aware of that? You cannot have one without the other. Physical objects require non-physical space to define them, and vice-versa.
On top of that, 'physical', as in 'solid', does not really exist, as modern science is now discovering. Atoms are mostly empty space.
But it is not I who is separating the physical from the spiritual: on the contrary; I am saying they are, in actuality, one and the same. I do not see them as dualities, but as singular. 'Physical' and 'spiritual' are but convenient mental constructs designed by the rational mind as a means of making 'sense' of a world it cannot fathom. When we remove these artificial constructs, we suddenly see the world as it actually is, and that is that it does not obey the confines of such definitions.
Why would that be?
This is just how things work: for example, if I want to find out whether there's actually a beaver in the lodge by my house, I could go sneak some sort of video camera in to have a look. If I see a beaver, then I know my answer's "yes". This may not give me full knowledge of what it feels like to be a beaver, but it would conclusively answer the question of whether the beaver (the actual beaver, not just a "beaver of concept") exists.
Yes, but your analogy fails when it comes to confirming the existence of God, because God cannot be confirmed by any of the five senses, or by any technological apparatus. His nature is beyond the five senses; beyond Time, Space, and Causation. Therefore, another kind of consciousness must be utilized, one which we have little or no knowledge of, and that consciousness must be that of God himself. You still want to confirm the existence of God as if he were an observable, verifiable object, but God can never be an object. Do you understand that there is no such thing as 'self and other'?
Is this a general statement about the nature of all knowledge, or is it just special pleading on behalf of God alone?
What pleading? All I am saying is that all attempts to define God are futile. We can only speak about the divine nature in terms of what it is not. And what it is not is 'not this', and 'not that' (
"neti, neti").
...but then there is "Tas atvam asi" ("Thou art That"): It is YOU that is the divine nature itself. It is not an object; there is no 'self and other'.
If I am mistaken, please provide a definition of God in positive terms. The closest I can come is this:
"God is a circle whose circumference is endless
and whose center is everywhere"
Still, this only describes
characteristics of the divine nature, and not the divine nature itself. Even then, can the human mind really fathom the true meaning of this statement? I think not.