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Those who believe there is no God live by faith

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TagliatelliMonster

Veteran Member
Not really.
Yes really.

Not playing football, is not a sport.
Not collection stamps, is not a hobby.
Barefoot, is not a type of shoe.
Bald, is not a hair due.
Naked, is not a type of clothing.
Not believing, is not a belief.


Not believing in God for example is a belief that does not believe in God.

That makes no sense.
It's like saying "not playing footbal, is the sport of not playing football".


If you do not believe in God and have no evidence for your belief then you are living by faith just as much as those who believe in God :)

False. I don't know in how many more ways I can explain this to you.
I'm thinking it's not going to sink in, no matter how many more times I try.
 

Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
Ok thanks for this. I missed your post here. So just to make sure I am understanding you correctly. Your trying to argue that bearing false witness in the ninth commandment is not lying is that correct? I will respond in detail after I hear back from you. :)
Not what I said or even implied. Your posts keep telling us that you cannot understand the responses given to you. Here is a suggestion. Try to understand what is written. Don't try to make it what you want to hear. Go back, read the post and try again. You asked for an answer. You should not ignore it when given to you.
 
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Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
Well firstly you haven't proven their belief to be false, you have not proven there is no God or that God does not exist or have you proven that God has not revealed himself to them. Your comparing isolated cases with billions of people that claim God has revealed himself to them personally. If your talking about an isolated case you have to wonder if there is any truth in it. When your talking billions or people throughout time all world-wide all believing the same thing you have collective witnesses of truth the begs investigation. For example (hypothetically), a single person comes up to you and says I saw GODZILLA but no one else saw it, you would have to question the truth of this claim. However if you woke up the next morning reading the newspaper with a front page cover GODZILLA PASSES BY LONG ISLAND IN NEW YORK and these claims are seen by 1000's of people then you have collective witness to the event even though you never saw it and perhaps then cannot prove that it happened.
I can see that you are having trouble reasoning again. Christianity is the largest religion in the world. So even if they are right that means 2/3 of the world is wrong. No matter what belief you go with you will find that even more people are wrong than right.

So what does the number of believers have to do with an idea being right or not?

And by the way, the burden of proof to even begin to claim that your beliefs are right are upon you. If you cannot support your beliefs then the rational act is to not believe.

Perhaps if we try hard enough we can get you to reason rationally.
 

Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
It's a common misconception that agnosticism and atheism are two distinct positions.

In reality, they aren't mutually exclusive. They are different answers to different questions.
(A)gnosticism pertains to knowledge while (a)theism pertains to beliefs.

Here's a helpfull diagram:

View attachment 36708

I've never met a gnostic atheist.
There are a couple that claim to be here. I have met many gnostic theists, those that claim to know that there is a god. Sadly all they can show is that they have a belief. I have yet to meet a gnostic theist that understands the difference between knowledge and belief.
 

lukethethird

unknown member
No... I did EXACTLY what you said. Your statement is basically, "what is good for the goose, is NOT good for that gander" and "Do as I say and not as I do".. to your own peril ;)
The difference is that one is a positive claim and the other is a negative claim. That x exists out there is a positive claim. A negative claim such as x does not exist cannot be proved, however it is justifiably supported when no evidence has been provided for the positive claim, that x does exist. Any negative claim such as x does not exist can be very easily disproved by simply providing evidence for x. Therefor, what is claimed without evidence can justifiably be dismissed without evidence, so not a problem at all for those that think for themselves.
 
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TagliatelliMonster

Veteran Member
There are a couple that claim to be here. I have met many gnostic theists, those that claim to know that there is a god. Sadly all they can show is that they have a belief. I have yet to meet a gnostic theist that understands the difference between knowledge and belief.
Ow yes, just about every theistic fundamentalist matches the term "gnostic theist" according to how it is defined in that diagram.

I've always found it quite bizarre to take a "gnostic" stance on unfalsifiable claims.
 

Milton Platt

Well-Known Member
Hi all some questions for consideration for this OP....

1. If one does not believe that there is a God and they have no evidence that there is no God does that mean that God does not exist?

2. If one believes there is no God and cannot prove there is no God then is this belief simply another religion that is based on faith and not evidence?

3. Now for those who do not believe in God and you have no evidence for this belief (faith), does it not worry you that you could be wrong if the scriptures are true?

4. Finally if there is a God obviously not all religions can be correct as many are contradictory to each other. How would one go about finding what is the correct faith? Seems we all live by faith IMO wheather we believe or do not believe in God.

I believe God's judgments are coming to this world to all those who do not believe and follow God's Word according to the scriptures. Can you prove they are not

Thanks for your thoughts...

You need to define what you mean by faith. the word is very elastic. If you define it loosely enough, virtually everyone lives by faith.
You seem to believe in a god, and use faith to do so, yet seem to imply that if someone does not believe a god exists he has faith and that is bad. Is faith bad or good?
 

Evangelicalhumanist

"Truth" isn't a thing...
Premium Member
Yes. I think the point here is that the body of astrophysics that predicts black holes is based on observational evidence. So we have reason to believe the astrophysics is a good model and that what it predicts has a good chance of being observed, eventually. None of that applies to any God hypothesis.

As for your question about evidence of continued maintenance of the universe, there is the age-old question of why there is such an exquisite degree of order in nature. Any scientist with imagination must sometimes be struck by the amazing way order arises from randomness, and so on. This is by no means evidence for God in any scientific sense. However Spinoza and Einstein seemed to come to view that ordering principle itself as God. That is the sort of thing I had in mind in my earlier remarks about God seeming, to some, to be likely, or possible, for aesthetic reasons.
Your latter point has always failed to convince me, because it seems to me that it's more likely to be just a failure of imagination (and I like to say that the philosopher's error is to suppose failure of imagination to yield a philosophical truth). Let's try an example -- break a dinner plate in half, then take a look at both pieces. Ignoring that they may be tiny shards that fill to the floor unnoticed, you'll see that the break line on one piece is a mirror image (reversed) of the break line on the other piece. So at the Big Bang and shortly thereafter, as the particles/forces began taking on their properties (as we know them), there was inevitably some of this "mirroring" going on. That in itself is a kind of order, in my view.

And I think it is also very wrong to suppose that this universe that we know, with it's physical (and therefore chemical) laws, is the only sort of universe that could support "life" (or "intelligence"). We don't know that at all. When you have an infinity of possibilities in what may be a "multiverse," it is not only likely but extremely likely (or even certain) that other interesting arrangements are possible. Sure, there will lots of universes in the multiverse that produce nothing, or very little -- yet there could well be others that produce "entities" that we can't even begin to imagine, simply because the physics and chemistry in those universes may be totally different -- that their Big Bangs resulted in different particles and forces because they simply broke apart with a different symmetry.
 

Milton Platt

Well-Known Member
Your latter point has always failed to convince me, because it seems to me that it's more likely to be just a failure of imagination (and I like to say that the philosopher's error is to suppose failure of imagination to yield a philosophical truth). Let's try an example -- break a dinner plate in half, then take a look at both pieces. Ignoring that they may be tiny shards that fill to the floor unnoticed, you'll see that the break line on one piece is a mirror image (reversed) of the break line on the other piece. So at the Big Bang and shortly thereafter, as the particles/forces began taking on their properties (as we know them), there was inevitably some of this "mirroring" going on. That in itself is a kind of order, in my view.

And I think it is also very wrong to suppose that this universe that we know, with it's physical (and therefore chemical) laws, is the only sort of universe that could support "life" (or "intelligence"). We don't know that at all. When you have an infinity of possibilities in what may be a "multiverse," it is not only likely but extremely likely (or even certain) that other interesting arrangements are possible. Sure, there will lots of universes in the multiverse that produce nothing, or very little -- yet there could well be others that produce "entities" that we can't even begin to imagine, simply because the physics and chemistry in those universes may be totally different -- that their Big Bangs resulted in different particles and forces because they simply broke apart with a different symmetry.

It might also be noted that our inability to see order does not mean there is no order. Something extremely large and highly complex could give the appearance of randomness when it is simply the limitations of our understanding that makes it seem so.
From another viewpoint......everything is as it is because of very dependable physical laws continually acting on the universe....so is it random or is it that it could have been no other way given all past events in the cosmos?
 

Evangelicalhumanist

"Truth" isn't a thing...
Premium Member
So glad you asked. Simple answer? I don’t know. There are any number of things that human beings cannot know. That lack of capacity says nothing about the existence of those things. It does say something about the limited human capacity for cognizance. We simply are not capable of knowing everything.

For me, “God” is an avatar — a metaphor — for the Divine. Same as Allah is a metaphor, and Vishnu, and Ra, and Apollo, and any other deity. We use these avatars because we simply don’t have the language to talk about the Divine in any other way. These metaphors aren’t perfect, but they serve our purposes. “God” is bigger than the Bible, bigger than the Koran, bigger than any religious system or theological construct can manage. For me, the Divine is — for lack of a better way of putting it — existence itself, life itself, purpose, presence, love, causation. Divinity is the “Perfect, Great Unknowable.”
One of the phrases I use in ceremony is to address God as “You who are known by a thousand names and yet are the unnameable One.”
If you don't know what God is, you have no possible way of knowing whether it exists or not.

As I said earlier, the divine is simply an idea in human thought. And you make that point yourself in your post, by saying that "'God' is an avatar -- a metaphor -- for the Divine." But both avatars and metaphors are only ideas -- they exist in our minds, but not in any sort of reality. And this speaks to my underlying thought -- which is this:

You think that "God" (or Divinity, or reality) exists in the way in which you imagine it, because it serves your purpose. But I propose that this is only descriptive -- that you get your purpose from your reality, and then try to impose that on something that gives it justification outside of yourself.

For the non-theist/deist, this is simply unnecessary and a distraction.
 

Trailblazer

Veteran Member
I can see that you are having trouble reasoning again. Christianity is the largest religion in the world. So even if they are right that means 2/3 of the world is wrong. No matter what belief you go with you will find that even more people are wrong than right.

So what does the number of believers have to do with an idea being right or not?
The number of believers means nothing except that is how many people are convinced that religion is true.

In argumentation theory, an argumentum ad populum (Latin for "appeal to the people") is a fallacious argument that concludes that a proposition is true because many or most people believe it: "If many believe so, it is so." Argumentum ad populum - Wikipedia

The converse of this is that if many or most people do not believe it, it cannot be so, and that is fallacious.

For various reasons Christianity is the largest religion in the world but that does not mean it is the religion God wants everyone to find and follow in this new age.

Matthew 7:13-14 Enter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it.

Maybe Christianity was once the narrow gate when it was first revealed and it there were a small number of believers, but Christianity can no longer be the narrow gate that leads to eternal life, since many people have entered through it.

I believe that the religion at the narrow gate is the religion God wants us to find and follow, and it is the gate that leads to eternal life. But it is not that easy for most people to find this gate because most people are steeped in religious tradition or attached to what they already believe. If they do not have a religion, most people are suspicious of the new religion and the new Messenger. If they are atheists they do not like the idea of Messengers of God or they think they are all phonies.

It is difficult to get through the narrow gate because one has to be willing to give up all their preconceived ideas, have an open mind, and think for themselves. Most people do not normally embark upon such a journey. They go through the wide gate, the easy one to get through – their own religious tradition or their own preconceived ideas about God or no god. They follow the broad road that is easiest for them to travel.
 

Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
The number of believers means nothing except that is how many people are convinced that religion is true.

In argumentation theory, an argumentum ad populum (Latin for "appeal to the people") is a fallacious argument that concludes that a proposition is true because many or most people believe it: "If many believe so, it is so." Argumentum ad populum - Wikipedia

The converse of this is that if many or most people do not believe it, it cannot be so, and that is fallacious.

For various reasons Christianity is the largest religion in the world but that does not mean it is the religion God wants everyone to find and follow in this new age.

Matthew 7:13-14 Enter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it.

Maybe Christianity was once the narrow gate when it was first revealed and it there were a small number of believers, but Christianity can no longer be the narrow gate that leads to eternal life, since many people have entered through it.

I believe that the religion at the narrow gate is the religion God wants us to find and follow, and it is the gate that leads to eternal life. But it is not that easy for most people to find this gate because most people are steeped in religious tradition or attached to what they already believe. If they do not have a religion, most people are suspicious of the new religion and the new Messenger. If they are atheists they do not like the idea of Messengers of God or they think they are all phonies.

It is difficult to get through the narrow gate because one has to be willing to give up all their preconceived ideas, have an open mind, and think for themselves. Most people do not normally embark upon such a journey. They go through the wide gate, the easy one to get through – their own religious tradition or their own preconceived ideas about God or no god. They follow the broad road that is easiest for them to travel.

Yes, I was trying to respond to a poster that seemed to think that there was strength in numbers. And in many ways Christianity is self contradicting, but from what I have heard that tends to apply to all religions. I can't say for sure about others since I have not personally investigated them thoroughly. I prefer to go with "They can't all be right,but they can all be wrong".
 

McBell

Unbound
Not really. Not believing in God for example is a belief that does not believe in God. If you do not believe in God and have no evidence for your belief then you are living by faith just as much as those who believe in God :)
and this is still just plain flat out wrong.
 

Kenny

Face to face with my Father
Premium Member
The difference is that one is a positive claim and the other is a negative claim. That x exists out there is a positive claim. A negative claim such as x does not exist cannot be proved, however it is justifiably supported when no evidence has been provided for the positive claim, that x does exist. Any negative claim such as x does not exist can be very easily disproved by simply providing evidence for x. Therefor, what is claimed without evidence can justifiably be dismissed without evidence, so not a problem at all for those that think for themselves.
It isn't a lack of evidence... it is just the interpretation of evidence. Like scientists who look at the universe and have three different viewpoints on how it began. Same evidence... just different interpretations.
 

Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
Very true and I agree, billions of people can be wrong however if you have no evidence to show that these people are wrong you have a collective witness that bears to the truth and this in and of itself is evidence. I of course disagree to the claims of people making these things up. This is simply your opinion thay you cannot prove.

And if all of these people agreed on the particulars, you would have a point. But they don't. And *that* shifts the evidence to it simply being something made up and/or people conditioning themselves into belief. I don't agree that there is a 'collective witness' because there are simply too many disagreements between those in the 'collective'.

if it was a real being, as opposed to self-deception, I would expect much more consistency around the world and there simply wouldn't be the diversity of religions. Once again, they cannot all be correct, but they *can* all be wrong. And the diversity suggests exactly that.

Well that is not true. People do indeed agree on the basic properties of God this is called religion. Of course not all religions agree together. Yet this does not prove that there is no a religion that has got it right now does it? Keep in mind I have never said all religions are right either. Many contradict each other. However a contradiction does not prove or disprove that God is real or not real and that God does not exist.

No, but it does suggest that the strength of their beliefs isn't a marker of the truth of their beliefs and it does bring into serious question whether *any* are correct.

Once again, if everyone were seeing the same thing, we would expect a consistency that isn't there.

I have a similar background but not in general mathamatics. My proffession leads me more towards biometrics but that said many of these models are indeed based on assumptions. Something that cannot be quatified with out them unfortunately as you would agree. I am sure not every assumption used in many mathamatic models are correct. However they do give us a general understanding of the probabilities and chances of things that are likely to take place IMO so are useful as a general guide.

Of course models have assumptions. That is how they arise, whether it be in biology or in physics. The question is whether the models are testable and give results consistent with observation. Those models that don't give any testable predictions can be discarded as meaningless and those that give incorrect predictions can be discarded as wrong (or, potentially, mere approximations).

I would argue that it is you who have failed as you have not really addressed any of the content of my posts to you. You simply hand waived the chances of life occuring through intelligent design and the probability of life occuring without it.
That's because I have not seen any calculation that is anywhere close to valid from either end of this. As far as I know, given the natural laws make life inevitable. We simply don't know, although the evidence we have is that life arose naturally (or, at least not by any processes that contradict the known laws of nature).

So, as far as I can see, the probabilities are exactly the same in the two scenarios.

Or have you proven that there is no God and that God does not exist. If we pretend we know all things when we do not we are only fooling ourselves.

Once again, I withhold belief until there is evidence and the burden of proof is on the one making the positive existence claim. This i s how it is in every other subject.

I would argue that the lack of evidence is simply a lack of evidence before evidence is discovered and revealed. I believe God will reveal himself to all one day but at that time it will be too late for the many.

And you can believe that if you wish. At this point, that is a hope based on a complete lack of evidence. And, if such does happen, there *would* be evidence for belief and people will change their minds (same as what happened with black holes).

Thanks Poly I am enjoying our discussion thanks for sharing your thoughts.:)

I'm enjoying it also.

My basic point is that people are really, really good at deluding themselves, even to the point of hearing the voice of Cher giving advice. I see no reason to suspect God belief is anything different. And, given the evidence of how much people can delude themselves, and that the *ways* to delude oneself align well with activities like prayer and meditation, the evidence as I see it points to self-delusion and not a perception of reality.
 

Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
Not really. Not believing in God for example is a belief that does not believe in God. If you do not believe in God and have no evidence for your belief then you are living by faith just as much as those who believe in God :)

I strongly disagree. Not believing is simply not having a belief. For example, I lack a belief in the existence of axions (a proposed subatomic particle). The evidence is not in for one way or the other and it is unreasonable to believe one way or the other without evidence.

That is exactly NOT a position of faith. Instead, it is going with the available evidence and understanding that the positive existence claim is where the burden of proof lies.

Not believing in God and believing there is no God are two different positions. The first is reasonable when there is no evidence either way. The second is reasonable when the lack of evidence becomes evidence of absence.
 
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