that guy who now lives in Mexico, and if his predictions were correct had peking duck last night with another couple.
LOL. Yes, as it was foretold, we did have Peking duck Saturday night. Such is the power of prophecy. So let it be written, so let it be done. And I claim godhood for it. Who but a god sees the future?
I have learned quite a bit from them in recent weeks, and that is because they have taken time to educate themselves in ways I haven't. I know this because they show their work.
Thanks, and vice versa. Your posting is always clear, sound, and relevant.
But there are billions of humans on this planet that don't have the benefits you have in terms controlling your own life. They lack the knowledge, the information, the opportunities, the reasoning skills, the luck, the social support, and the faith in themselves that you have been given by the whim of fate. So when they assess the probabilities in their lives the results don't look nearly so rosy for them as they do for you. And yet they have to keep moving forward, and keep hoping, anyway. And they find that faith in God is the only effective way for them to do that.
Yes, and that's fine, but it changes nothing about what faith is and means. It's as a coping mechanism for those who feel relatively powerless and vulnerable. But it also affects many people adversely. It functions as a crutch when intellectual and moral development should be occurring, rendering its victims in a juvenile stage in both areas, still with the magical thinking, and still with the conscience of a child following received rules from a judgmental father figure in order to earn rewards and escape punishment.
This is how we all think until a certain age. Those who mature outside of that Abrahamic perspective of a magic man punishing sin where faith is considered a virtue can develop critical thinking skills and a mature conscience in their place. They learn to determine what is true, right, and good for themselves.
I still say that faith is like eyeglasses - great for those who see better with them, but a hindrance for those who see clearly without them. If faith can make one's life more comfortable, then it is understandable why one would lean on it, but because it is a path to false belief which can have grave consequences, the willingness to believe by faith comes with a risk, especially if it informs action.
you're going to look down on them like they're silly superstitious children?
No, that's your atheophobia coming through. You've toned down that rhetoric over the years, for which you should be commended, but your contempt for atheists is palpable. They are childlike in their thinking, but I haven't seen any expression of contempt or ill will for such people from the empiricists.
It's YOU who looks down on the empiricists. YOU'RE the one using the language of superiority when you dismissively and scoffingly refer to others as materialists and into scientism, and use the words 'fool' and 'stupid 'to refer to those who disagree with you. Your contempt is palpable. Sorry you don't approve, but your emotional reaction is all you.
you will never be able to prove God doesn't exist.
This again? Why do you think anybody needs to do that? Seriously, why do you keep posting this? Atheists don't need disproof of gods, and theists don't need proof.
But if by 'God' you mean the god of the Old Testament, the god of Abraham, that one can be disproven, but only to a prepared mind ready to hear the disproof, meaning one capable of evaluating an argument for soundness and willing to change his mind following a compelling argument. Without that, and in the presence of a faith-based confirmation bias, there is no burden of proof. Teaching is a cooperative process, and experience tells us that it is nearly impossible to convince a person of that which he has stake in not believing.
If you are saying that unverifiable claims are not true, that is a logical fallacy.
Unverifiable claims should not be called true, but it would be a logical fallacy to call them false without falsification.
Faith cannot be avoided if a person wants an understanding of God, since there is no proof that God exists.
I don't want any idea in my belief set that can only be believed by faith. You seem to think that if the faith-based belief follows looking at evidence that it is sound. It is not. The trope 'I have evidence but not proof, and I belief by that evidence and faith' means that you believe by faith. One drop of faith in an argument and the entire argument becomes unsound. Maybe your addition is impeccable except for just one mistake. If so, your sum is wrong. That's how faith contaminates reason. A little bit of faith and it's all faith.
I have no contempt for skilled thinking, I employ it.
No, you don't. And that's demonstrably true as we'll see next:
God is real because God exists.
That's an unsound argument. It contains a well-characterized fallacy. Can you name it despite committing it? And you like to talk about interpreting evidence, this is evidence that your reasoning skills are not as good as you think, but I don't expect you to draw sound conclusions from it. You don't know how, and you aren't interested in them anyway. They're just opinions, right?
Now it is your turn to contradict me and say I don't think critically just because you don't agree with me. In so doing, you are the one who shows contempt for those you are debating.
That you experience dialectic emotionally is unfortunate, but does not establish your claim. To my knowledge, nobody here disagreeing with you has contempt for you. But this is another area where you can't be reached, so it is your lot to feel badly in discussions like these. Nobody can help you.
Faith with evidence is not.
Faith in evidence is still faith.
I was not complaining about personal attack.
You were objecting. You became defensive. You didn't like it. You claimed that my criticism of your ideas was to puff myself up.
It is not a contest between critical thought and faith since we need both.
No, we don't need faith. In fact, belief by faith is undesirable.
God does not expect us to believe on faith alone. God provides evidence, and we need critical thought to evaluate the evidence, but we need faith to believe in what cannot be proven.
If you need faith to believe anything, then you shouldn't believe it. Tossing the word evidence in there doesn't make belief by faith any more sound.
You claimed that faith is unjustified belief. The dictionary does not define faith as unjustified belief, so it is only your personal opinion that faith is unjustified.
That's not a rebuttal. Nor is it correct. Millions agree with me that belief by faith is unjustified belief whether they use those words or not.
The reason that that is not a rebuttal is that we could both be correct, because our claims aren't mutually exclusive as is required to call an answer a rebuttal. It has to falsify what it responds to. Even if no dictionary uses the phrase unjustified belief (perhaps none do, although many describe faith in terms of belief without sufficient evidence to justify that belief), and even if it is my opinion (and it is), my claim need not be wrong.
It is in fact correct. There is a word faith that means unjustified belief, just as there is another word of the same spelling and pronunciation (homonyms that are both homographs and homophones) that means justified belief, and another that means a religion. Capitalized, it's also a girl's name. In the phrases good and bad faith, it refers to intention and trustworthiness.