
Carry on then. It was simply constructive criticism.
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Alphanumeric!I dunno if anyone else has said this because I haven't looked at the rest of the thread, but the style reminds me of ReBoot.
(In other words, I like it.)
They are your beliefs, express them. Don't worry what other people think.
I mean, I genuinely, no bull, honestly don't know how to get my points across without either honking off sensitive religious types OR compromising the message while trying to not ruffle any feathers; the two seem quite at odds with each other, perhaps even mutually exclusive.
Well put doog. You never posted anything offensive whatsoever
we know she'll be back, like a good bitch should.
Oh, but they're not my beliefs. My philosophy, maybe, my toolkit for getting along in the world...but they're not beliefs.They are your beliefs, express them.
I usually don't. The thing is...well...if you're trying to get a message across, you DO have to consider your audience a little.Don't worry what other people think.
I would disagree; the idea that logic, science and rational thought can offer truths is, in itself, a belief, and if one tries to justify it logically one first has to accept the premise that logic is a way of defining truth, and similarly if one tries to justify it empirically one first has to accept that the universe functions according to empirical evidence and patterns.Oh, but they're not my beliefs. My philosophy, maybe, my toolkit for getting along in the world...but they're not beliefs.
Well put doog. You never posted anything offensive whatsoever
we know she'll be back, like a good bitch should.
Well put doog. You never posted anything offensive whatsoever
we know she'll be back, like a good bitch should.
Yes, that IS a belief...but it's also not what is being said here. At all.I would disagree; the idea that logic, science and rational thought can offer truths is, in itself, a belief
No, I can't agree. If the evidence supports it, then belief isn't required. That's the whole point of an empirical worldview.Of course, these are very simple conclusions to make, and the evidence supports them, but it is nonetheless clearly a belief.
Personally, I don't see a huge difference between faith and belief in the religious sense.What it certainly is not (and I would happily defend this) is faith.
Oh, not at all, not at all.yeah, I always read atheists talking about how they do believe, that they do have faith, in the idea that there is no god or gods.
Technically speaking, I suppose I'm a bit of an agnostic...but only if you take the position that even hinting at, "I don't know for certain," makes you an agnostic.I guess that may partially be because I follow the school of thought that "agnostics are full of shit fence-sitters that need to actually admit which side they believe, or just say that they're not comfortable discussing it rather than act like they don't have opinions"
There seems to be a difference between what you and I understand by 'belief'. You appear to understand belief as an acceptance of something without sufficient reason or evidence or against reason or evidence; this is what I would call 'faith'. However, I understand it differently - a belief is something which you hold to be true, regardless of how you come to that conclusion. You seem to hint at that definition with "if you believe something for irrational reasons".It's a repudiation of THAT which is being offered here; if you believe something for irrational reasons, frankly, you're doing it wrong, that's the message.
Well put doog. You never posted anything offensive whatsoever
we know she'll be back, like a good bitch should.
"Belief" is entirely too fuzzy a term; I actually REALLY dislike it quite a bit in discussions like these for exactly that reason.There seems to be a difference between what you and I understand by 'belief'. You appear to understand belief as an acceptance of something without sufficient reason or evidence or against reason or evidence; this is what I would call 'faith'. However, I understand it differently - a belief is something which you hold to be true, regardless of how you come to that conclusion. You seem to hint at that definition with "if you believe something for irrational reasons".
But there's a serious disparity between those two things.What I'm getting at is that you require beliefs about things to function in the world. If you're religious, it's simple; you believe in a deity or supernatural force. If you're an empiricist, you believe that science and experience are the only ways of learning about the world.
Well, you're using belief in a way which I would not. With objective, testable, falsifiable evidence on hand, belief becomes redundant, replaced by knowledge.While your position may be perfectly rational it is not excluded from the notion of belief.
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