There actually are laws of logic. The Law of Identity, The Law of Non-Contradiction, and the Law of Excluded Middle.
Alright. That one is yours.
I do not see why this was needed haha. I never said there was no difference.
Because The example I gave was about understanding, then you turned around and used my example as if it was about knowing. You criticized it when you were the one who confused the concepts.
No, there is one idea here, not several. Have you ever heard the idea of the sixth sense, a type of innate, possibly spiritual / divine knowing sense? It is what people are talking about when they are saying they felt something mystical through an experience. The experience holds no validity to anyone but the one who feels it. If one does not think it has happen to them, I can tell you it has not. Trust me, you know haha.
I was going off the logical fallacy of skepticism I brought up. If all knowledge is only from the 5 sense, all that we know would be subjective. What is objective about a true mystical experience is that there is no thought put into it, it is something that you understand without explanation.
I haven't heard it explained as a sixth sense, but I am familiar with the concept. However, the main problem I have is how do you know such a sense actually exists, and is not simply an effect cast on you by your mind? As evidence by the placebo effect, if we think our bodies will feel a certain way, they will.
I understand that there is the possibility of something beyond our senses, and the fact is, you are completely oblivious to the fact that we
can still observe them through devices we have made throughout the centuries. Like Gamma radiation. We cannot perceive it with any of our five senses, but certain devices can. What happens, however, is that it is converted into an image of or sound which we can observe with our senses.
Furthermore, I completely disagree with your supposed "fallacy" of skepticism. Skepticism is in fact the most logical of paths to take. To take something on as fact with no reason, I believe we can agree, is absurd. Skepticism means not believing without evidence.
Even more is the fact just because there is no thought does not make it objective. In fact, I would go even further as to say it is even
more subjective because it relies, as you have agreed, on a personal basis. Objective truths must be free from bias, which, quite literally, cannot come from just one person.
I also wish to comment on the absurdity of "understanding without explanation." That statement is not admitting the possibility of something such as placebo; your mind changes in order for it to make sense, and, coupled with confirmation bias, uses it to reinforce something you may have already believed, even at a very small level.
Children are born believers in God, academic claims - Telegraph
Psychological programming has made us more susceptible to believing in a higher power than not. When given a strange phenomena, it isn't far-fetched to say you only believe it as a spiritual experience because of the faults and biases of the mind.
For me, if there is no purpose we are just wasting time. I do not like wasting time, and if there is nothing greater beyond our suffering I would simple end it. I have experienced ridiculous amounts of pain in my short life, and I would not stick around simply to live a false, self created fantasy out.
Dude, nice on you. I haven't a single problem with that at all. You believe what keeps you going, and thats good.
Well, I do not see why natural drugs should exclude natural (innate / divine / mystical) experiences. I am not talking someone on LSD or Ecstacy, but shamans and mystics have used drugs for centuries and centuries to induce experiences and better understand them. Things like DMT, Salvia, Peyote, Marijuana, etc.
But then my point is that those experiences weren't anything beyond our world; they were just experiences induced by a confusion of the senses and mind. A person who is high seeing sasquatch does not actually see sasquatch; their senses are just disturbed to the point where they envision a totally new reality, but a fake reality nonetheless.
But, again, it is empirical (in a 6th sense, spiritual sort of way). I simply mean you must experience such a thing to even think about it.
And, no. If you do not understand how images created but chemicals that litteraly confuse your senses into a different reality, no matter what this new reality you experience is, is not in any way shape or form evidence without confirming the information outside of the vision itself, then we cannot continue.
Just because a person has more "experience" with the effects of a drug and is a spiritual leader does not make anything they experience any more valid. It just doesn't. It
must have someway if validating whether it is true or not.
And that is where many religious beliefs fail. It is unreasonable
in every sense of the word to believe something that cannot be invalidated. That is why the concept of the flying spaghetti monster was made. The point of it was to say, "Just because you cannot prove it
doesn't exist, does not mean it does.
If anything, please just explain to me how any of your beliefs have a method of invalidation.
However, since you will not be here, the same question is open to everyone else.