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So subjectively, I completely understand you believing things simply because they make you feel good. But here's the thing about believing things without good evidence: although those beliefs often make us feel good, they also come frequently with unintended consequences. It may make me feel good to believe I can take heroin and it will be harmless, but the reality is that heroin is dangerous and taking it is likely to have undesirable consequences down the road. One of those consequences is that you may actually do harm to other people, not to mention yourself.
Could there be harmless, or maybe even helpful, baseless beliefs? I suppose so. But beliefs tend not to be isolated; they interconnect to form a worldview. And if you arrived at one belief irrationally, the likelihood is that you'll use that same irrational thought process again. And thus you increase your chances of unintended negative consequences again.
So if you care about the well-being of yourself and others, the preference should be to believe things when there's good evidence for them. If you don't care about the well-being of yourself or others, then you're right, I can't prove to you that you should.
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You're assuming an awful lot about me. I substantially agree with you. Maybe your subjectivity needs a reality check?
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Only if you equivocate about what faith means. Many other threads on RF have addressed this.
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Actually it's both of our problem to solve mutually, because we live in a shared world and our beliefs and actions have an effect on each other. That is the whole origin of morality: humans had to figure out how to interact cooperatively with each other for our survival. And to do that, humans had to agree, to some degree, on a shared understanding of the reality we all can verify. So if you espouse a belief that contradicts our shared reality, and you even say that belief helps you - that's fine, as long as that belief keeps truly helping you and doesn't interfere with others' ability to navigate our shared reality. But many who have come before you have also had unsubstantiated belief in things that supposedly helped them, and those beliefs ended up being incredibly harmful to them and/or the world. So if you care about the well-being of yourself and others, I'm going to keep warning you of the risk of believing things that have no basis outside your head. If you don't care, so be it.
Okay, I have been rewriting this again and again. And every time it got to long.
So as short as I can do it. Yes, I projected unto you and I get that now.
The limit of reason, logic, knowledge, evidence and science. In short no positive metaphysics and ontology is possible with evidence for whether whether the world is natural or not.
So beliefs without evidence is not limited to religion. All versions of philosophical naturalism, materialism and physicalism are belief systems without evidence, proof, knowledge and what not.
If you like, we can go through it.
So for humans, here are the relevant variants.
There are humans functionally incapable of doing these kinds of discussions.
For those capable, there are those who don't care and don't waste time on this.
For those capable and who care, there are those who believe they know and those who know, that they don't know, but believe anyway.
Now where you fall as beliefs about what the world is, I don't know. But in practice the warning you gave, is not just relevant for religious beliefs, woo, CT and what not. They are relevant also for some non-religious humans.