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Decessus

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#1 Decessus
Member since 2003 • 5132 Posts

As the educator George H. Smith said in his book Atheism: The Case Against God, "confusion is the enemy of purposeful thought."

Most arguments between the theist and the atheist end up becoming repetitious and dull because there is a fundamental disagreement between the atheist and the theist that rarely gets brought up and so is rarely discussed. I am in agreement with Mr. Smith that the conflict between the theist and the atheist is fundamentally a conflict between reason and faith. It is a conflict about how human beings can distinguish between what is true and what is false.

Reason and faith are two mutually exclusive terms, and as such there can be no reconciliation between the two nor common ground met. Faith is belief without, or in spite of, reason. So the question must be asked, can faith be used as a valid cognitive procedure for acquiring knowledge or is acquiring knowledge solely within the realm of reason?

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FragStains

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#2 FragStains
Member since 2003 • 20668 Posts
This sounds like a question that a teacher would give out for homework or essay.
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Silver_Dragon17

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#3 Silver_Dragon17
Member since 2007 • 6205 Posts
"I think there's a common assumption that you cannot both be a rigorous, show-me-the-data scientist and a person who believes in a personal God. I would like to say that from my perspective that assumption is incorrect; that, in fact, these two areas are entirely compatible and not only can exist within the same person, but can exist in a very synthetic way, and not in a compartmentalized way. I have no reason to see a discordance between what I know as a scientist who spends all day studying the genome of humans and what I believe as somebody who pays a lot of attention to what the Bible has taught me about God and about Jesus Christ. Those are entirely compatible views.

"Science is the way -- a powerful way, indeed -- to study the natural world. Science is not particularly effective -- in fact, it's rather ineffective -- in making commentary about the supernatural world. Both worlds, for me, are quite real and quite important. They are investigated in different ways. They coexist. They illuminate each other. And it is a great joy to be in a position of being able to bring both of those points of view to bear in any given day of the week. The notion that you have to sort of choose one or the other is a terrible myth that has been put forward, and which many people have bought into without really having a chance to examine the evidence. I came to my faith not, actually, in a circumstance where it was drummed into me as a child, which people tend to assume of any scientist who still has a personal faith in God; but actually by a series of compelling, logical arguments, many of them put forward by C. S. Lewis, that got me to the precipice of saying, 'Faith is actually plausible.' You still have to make that step. You will still have to decide for yourself whether to believe. But you can get very close to that by intellect alone."--Francis Collins, head of the Human Genome Project.
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Decessus

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#4 Decessus
Member since 2003 • 5132 Posts

This sounds like a question that a teacher would give out for homework or essay.FragStains

What would you write if it were? Do you have any opinion on the subject?

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FragStains

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#5 FragStains
Member since 2003 • 20668 Posts

[QUOTE="FragStains"]This sounds like a question that a teacher would give out for homework or essay.Decessus

What would you write if it were? Do you have any opinion on the subject?

One acquire knowledge in whatever form a person wants. Since it's relative to each person, you cannot say that you can only acquire knowledge a certain way. And what is your definition of knowledge?
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Decessus

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#6 Decessus
Member since 2003 • 5132 Posts

"I think there's a common assumption that you cannot both be a rigorous, show-me-the-data scientist and a person who believes in a personal God. I would like to say that from my perspective that assumption is incorrect; that, in fact, these two areas are entirely compatible and not only can exist within the same person, but can exist in a very synthetic way, and not in a compartmentalized way. I have no reason to see a discordance between what I know as a scientist who spends all day studying the genome of humans and what I believe as somebody who pays a lot of attention to what the Bible has taught me about God and about Jesus Christ. Those are entirely compatible views.

"Science is the way -- a powerful way, indeed -- to study the natural world. Science is not particularly effective -- in fact, it's rather ineffective -- in making commentary about the supernatural world. Both worlds, for me, are quite real and quite important. They are investigated in different ways. They coexist. They illuminate each other. And it is a great joy to be in a position of being able to bring both of those points of view to bear in any given day of the week. The notion that you have to sort of choose one or the other is a terrible myth that has been put forward, and which many people have bought into without really having a chance to examine the evidence. I came to my faith not, actually, in a circumstance where it was drummed into me as a child, which people tend to assume of any scientist who still has a personal faith in God; but actually by a series of compelling, logical arguments, many of them put forward by C. S. Lewis, that got me to the precipice of saying, 'Faith is actually plausible.' You still have to make that step. You will still have to decide for yourself whether to believe. But you can get very close to that by intellect alone."--Francis Collins, head of the Human Genome Project.Silver_Dragon17

I have issues with a scientist who claims that the supernatual world exists, yet gives no evidence or reasons to support his or her claim. Dr. Collins is absolutely a brilliant man, of that I have no doubt. However, having a Ph.D does not exclude someone from the burden of supporting his or her position.

Also, unless Dr. Collins is going to start posting on Gamespot, I would appreciate it if you contributed your own thoughts on the subject instead of relying on the thoughts of others.

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hojobojo

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#7 hojobojo
Member since 2005 • 1268 Posts

"I think there's a common assumption that you cannot both be a rigorous, show-me-the-data scientist and a person who believes in a personal God. I would like to say that from my perspective that assumption is incorrect; that, in fact, these two areas are entirely compatible and not only can exist within the same person, but can exist in a very synthetic way, and not in a compartmentalized way. I have no reason to see a discordance between what I know as a scientist who spends all day studying the genome of humans and what I believe as somebody who pays a lot of attention to what the Bible has taught me about God and about Jesus Christ. Those are entirely compatible views.

"Science is the way -- a powerful way, indeed -- to study the natural world. Science is not particularly effective -- in fact, it's rather ineffective -- in making commentary about the supernatural world. Both worlds, for me, are quite real and quite important. They are investigated in different ways. They coexist. They illuminate each other. And it is a great joy to be in a position of being able to bring both of those points of view to bear in any given day of the week. The notion that you have to sort of choose one or the other is a terrible myth that has been put forward, and which many people have bought into without really having a chance to examine the evidence. I came to my faith not, actually, in a circumstance where it was drummed into me as a child, which people tend to assume of any scientist who still has a personal faith in God; but actually by a series of compelling, logical arguments, many of them put forward by C. S. Lewis, that got me to the precipice of saying, 'Faith is actually plausible.' You still have to make that step. You will still have to decide for yourself whether to believe. But you can get very close to that by intellect alone."--Francis Collins, head of the Human Genome Project.Silver_Dragon17

That is what you call faith

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Decessus

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#8 Decessus
Member since 2003 • 5132 Posts

One acquire knowledge in whatever form a person wants. Since it's relative to each person, you cannot say that you can only acquire knowledge a certain way. And what is your definition of knowledge?
FragStains

I think that's a very good question. There certainly isn't agreement among philosophers as to what constitutes knowledge, but I'm personally of the opinion that knowledge is belief that most closely resembles reality.

For example, if I have knowledge that the tea kettle on my stove is boiling, it isn't to say that with 100% certainty such a thing is really happening. Instead, such a belief is as close to the truth as can possibly be. Does that make much sense?

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espoac

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#9 espoac
Member since 2005 • 4346 Posts
You're right the argument between Theism and Atheism is dull and repitious. In the end giving up Theism is more about severing one's emotional to Theism than appealing to one's reason and rationality. That's why we still see intelligent people choosing Theism in my opinion. Current statistics however indicate that nonbelief is winning out, slowly but surely. By 2040 supposedly the majority of Westerners will be atheists or agnostics if current standards hold true.
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whodeysay85

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#10 whodeysay85
Member since 2006 • 3237 Posts
Read the Case for Faith by Lee Strobel. He basically summarizes all atheist arguments and counters them with reason through faith. Its a very good read. Good for the skeptics.
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FragStains

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#11 FragStains
Member since 2003 • 20668 Posts

[QUOTE="FragStains"]One acquire knowledge in whatever form a person wants. Since it's relative to each person, you cannot say that you can only acquire knowledge a certain way. And what is your definition of knowledge?
Decessus

I think that's a very good question. There certainly isn't agreement among philosophers as to what constitutes knowledge, but I'm personally of the opinion that knowledge is belief that most closely resembles reality.

For example, if I have knowledge that the tea kettle on my stove is boiling, it isn't to say that with 100% certainty such a thing is really happening. Instead, such a belief is as close to the truth as can possibly be. Does that make much sense?

There is data, and then there is information. Accessing either could constitute having knowledge. Using that knowledge equates to wisdom. Of course, everyone's definition of all these terms will be different, which makes the base point of the original post difficult to discuss. Is knowledge relative? Does just believing in something constitute knowledge? For example, I believe beyond our earth's atmosphere that space exists. I have no concrete proof myself, but does the fact that I believe that there is space, mean that I have knowledge of space.

These are all very ambiguous terms. Of course, you could get dictionary definitions for them, but they could debated.

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espoac

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#13 espoac
Member since 2005 • 4346 Posts
Read the Case for Faith by Lee Strobel. He basically summarizes all atheist arguments and counters them with reason through faith. Its a very good read. Good for the skeptics.whodeysay85
Strobel's book is more about justifying Chrstianity to those who consider Christianity immoral. He does nothing to address the central argument of Atheism-that blind faith is unjustified. Strobel's arguments do nothing to suggest that faith in the Christian God is more than a matter of blind faith.
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#14 muthsera666
Member since 2005 • 13271 Posts
There are many scientists who have religion in their lives. Personally, I have trouble believing in Christianity, but that is a personal bias that has been brought about by my rebelling against my indoctrination and those around me who profess to be Christian, but in actuallity are hypocrits. I am working on eliminating this bias so that I can logically analyze Christianity, but overall, I have seen little evidence that is sufficient to sway me towards any particular religion.
And for the record, C. S. Lewis is an intelligent man, but I disagree with him on many points.
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#15 Decessus
Member since 2003 • 5132 Posts

There is data, and then there is information. Accessing either could constitute having knowledge. Using that knowledge equates to wisdom. Of course, everyone's definition of all these terms will be different, which makes the base point of the original post difficult to discuss. Is knowledge relative? Does just believing in something constitute knowledge? For example, I believe beyond our earth's atmosphere that space exists. I have no concrete proof myself, but does the fact that I believe that there is space, mean that I have knowledge of space.

These are all very ambiguous terms. Of course, you could get dictionary definitions for them, but they could debated.

FragStains

I think most people would disagree that just believing in something constitues as knowledge. For instance, suppose I go to the store today and buy a lottery ticket where I choose the six numbers. This Saturday when the drawing is held, those numbers are called. Do you think it would be okay to say I had knowledge of what those numbers would be? Personally, I don't think so.

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#16 muthsera666
Member since 2005 • 13271 Posts
[QUOTE="Decessus"]

[QUOTE="FragStains"]One acquire knowledge in whatever form a person wants. Since it's relative to each person, you cannot say that you can only acquire knowledge a certain way. And what is your definition of knowledge?
FragStains

I think that's a very good question. There certainly isn't agreement among philosophers as to what constitutes knowledge, but I'm personally of the opinion that knowledge is belief that most closely resembles reality.

For example, if I have knowledge that the tea kettle on my stove is boiling, it isn't to say that with 100% certainty such a thing is really happening. Instead, such a belief is as close to the truth as can possibly be. Does that make much sense?

There is data, and then there is information. Accessing either could constitute having knowledge. Using that knowledge equates to wisdom. Of course, everyone's definition of all these terms will be different, which makes the base point of the original post difficult to discuss. Is knowledge relative? Does just believing in something constitute knowledge? For example, I believe beyond our earth's atmosphere that space exists. I have no concrete proof myself, but does the fact that I believe that there is space, mean that I have knowledge of space.

These are all very ambiguous terms. Of course, you could get dictionary definitions for them, but they could debated.

For Socrates, knowledge goes beyond factual data or information of things based on the material world. Instead, he bases it more on the understanding and the comprehension of the way things truly are in their purest sense. The concept of a circle, for example, and not physical depictions found in this world. 
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#17 Nude_Dude
Member since 2007 • 5530 Posts

As the educator George H. Smith said in his book Atheism: The Case Against God, "confusion is the enemy of purposeful thought."

Most arguments between the theist and the atheist end up becoming repetitious and dull because there is a fundamental disagreement between the atheist and the theist that rarely gets brought up and so is rarely discussed. I am in agreement with Mr. Smith that the conflict between the theist and the atheist is fundamentally a conflict between reason and faith. It is a conflict about how human beings can distinguish between what is true and what is false.

Reason and faith are two mutually exclusive terms, and as such there can be no reconciliation between the two nor common ground met. Faith is belief without, or in spite of, reason. So the question must be asked, can faith be used as a valid cognitive procedure for acquiring knowledge or is acquiring knowledge solely within the realm of reason?

Decessus
Theists and atheists should mind their own business instead of brawling for things they don't know what they are for.
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#18 Omnicaster
Member since 2007 • 44 Posts
Faith is not a valid form of information. It is simply belief in something. If we were to live solely on faith our civilization would fall apart in no time. Trying going a month not doing for food except having faith that it will be provided for you. Let me know how it works out for you.
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#19 comp_atkins
Member since 2005 • 38947 Posts

"I think there's a common assumption that you cannot both be a rigorous, show-me-the-data scientist and a person who believes in a personal God. I would like to say that from my perspective that assumption is incorrect; that, in fact, these two areas are entirely compatible and not only can exist within the same person, but can exist in a very synthetic way, and not in a compartmentalized way. I have no reason to see a discordance between what I know as a scientist who spends all day studying the genome of humans and what I believe as somebody who pays a lot of attention to what the Bible has taught me about God and about Jesus Christ. Those are entirely compatible views.

"Science is the way -- a powerful way, indeed -- to study the natural world. Science is not particularly effective -- in fact, it's rather ineffective -- in making commentary about the supernatural world. Both worlds, for me, are quite real and quite important. They are investigated in different ways. They coexist. They illuminate each other. And it is a great joy to be in a position of being able to bring both of those points of view to bear in any given day of the week. The notion that you have to sort of choose one or the other is a terrible myth that has been put forward, and which many people have bought into without really having a chance to examine the evidence. I came to my faith not, actually, in a circumstance where it was drummed into me as a child, which people tend to assume of any scientist who still has a personal faith in God; but actually by a series of compelling, logical arguments, many of them put forward by C. S. Lewis, that got me to the precipice of saying, 'Faith is actually plausible.' You still have to make that step. You will still have to decide for yourself whether to believe. But you can get very close to that by intellect alone."--Francis Collins, head of the Human Genome Project.Silver_Dragon17

who says it exists???

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#20 Palax
Member since 2003 • 2399 Posts

As the educator George H. Smith said in his book Atheism: The Case Against God, "confusion is the enemy of purposeful thought."

Most arguments between the theist and the atheist end up becoming repetitious and dull because there is a fundamental disagreement between the atheist and the theist that rarely gets brought up and so is rarely discussed. I am in agreement with Mr. Smith that the conflict between the theist and the atheist is fundamentally a conflict between reason and faith. It is a conflict about how human beings can distinguish between what is true and what is false.

Reason and faith are two mutually exclusive terms, and as such there can be no reconciliation between the two nor common ground met. Faith is belief without, or in spite of, reason. So the question must be asked, can faith be used as a valid cognitive procedure for acquiring knowledge or is acquiring knowledge solely within the realm of reason?

Decessus

Faith is based on nothing but Faith so therefore it cannot and should not be used.

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#21 foxhound_fox
Member since 2005 • 98532 Posts
They are not mutually exclusive... in any way. You can have reasonable beliefs. The debates between atheism and theism are quite childish and get nobody nowhere. It is a complete waste of time.
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0roddman

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#22 0roddman
Member since 2007 • 242 Posts

zeitgeist.com

learn about xianity ediots

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#23 HupHupOranje
Member since 2006 • 1450 Posts
I adopted the position of agnostic. True knowledge is knowing that you can truly know nothing. I accept the fact that I cannot prove or disprove the existence of a God(s) and I'm fine with that.
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194197844077667059316682358889

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#24 194197844077667059316682358889
Member since 2003 • 49173 Posts
Faith and reason seem like a false dichotomy, much like religion and science. They deal with radically different areas of experience. It's like saying which is better, music or dessert. Science and reason deal with the tangible, measurable empirical aspects of our experience. Faith and religion deal with ineffable mystery and questions of purpose and meaning that science doesn't even ask, since answering them cannot be done by empirical means. The different spheres of competence for the two means it usually turns out useless at best and destructive at best when someone tries to mix them, such as when someone tries to "sicentifically disprove God" or people push for "intelligent design/creation science" to be included in public school curricula.
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Donkey_Puncher

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#25 Donkey_Puncher
Member since 2005 • 5083 Posts

Of course Reason will always trump faith. What has faith given us? The Bible, and belief in God?

Reason has given us everything scientific and technological in our life today.

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YeahYes

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#26 YeahYes
Member since 2002 • 7128 Posts
I think everyone has some faith. Doing things risky you have to have faith, faith in yourself at least.
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194197844077667059316682358889

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#27 194197844077667059316682358889
Member since 2003 • 49173 Posts

Of course Reason will always trump faith. What has faith given us? The Bible, and belief in God?

Reason has given us everything scientific and technological in our life today.

Donkey_Puncher
Faith gives people meaning, and the Kansas State School Board clearly thinks that faith can trump reason. I think you vastly underestimate the appeal of faith.
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#28 Donkey_Puncher
Member since 2005 • 5083 Posts
[QUOTE="Donkey_Puncher"]

Of course Reason will always trump faith. What has faith given us? The Bible, and belief in God?

Reason has given us everything scientific and technological in our life today.

xaos

Faith gives people meaning, and the Kansas State School Board clearly thinks that faith can trump reason. I think you vastly underestimate the appeal of faith.

You can have meaning with out faith. I have meaning because of my job, my family, and my friends. You don't need to bring any supernatural faith into the equation to have meaning.

Secondly, Kansas' decision to rule against evolution only proves that their entire school board is filled with morons.

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194197844077667059316682358889

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#29 194197844077667059316682358889
Member since 2003 • 49173 Posts
[QUOTE="xaos"][QUOTE="Donkey_Puncher"]

Of course Reason will always trump faith. What has faith given us? The Bible, and belief in God?

Reason has given us everything scientific and technological in our life today.

Donkey_Puncher

Faith gives people meaning, and the Kansas State School Board clearly thinks that faith can trump reason. I think you vastly underestimate the appeal of faith.

You can have meaning with out faith. I have meaning because of my job, my family, and my friends. You don't need to bring any supernatural faith into the equation to have meaning.

Secondly, Kansas' decision to rule against evolution only proves that their entire school board is filled with morons.

I didn't say faith gives every individual person meaning; people of faith receive comfort and meaning from their faith, and their faith trumps the lack of rational evidence in support of it and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future. My issue is that you seem to have a pretty fundamentalist view of a purely empirical/rationalist view of the universe.
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Donkey_Puncher

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#30 Donkey_Puncher
Member since 2005 • 5083 Posts

I didn't say faith gives every individual person meaning; people of faith receive comfort and meaning from their faith, and their faith trumps the lack of rational evidence in support of it and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future. My issue is that you seem to have a pretty fundamentalist view of a purely empirical/rationalist view of the universe.

xaos

Is there something wrong with seeing the Universe as a completely naturalistic place devoid of supernatural mumbo jumbo?

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194197844077667059316682358889

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#31 194197844077667059316682358889
Member since 2003 • 49173 Posts

[QUOTE="xaos"]

I didn't say faith gives every individual person meaning; people of faith receive comfort and meaning from their faith, and their faith trumps the lack of rational evidence in support of it and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future. My issue is that you seem to have a pretty fundamentalist view of a purely empirical/rationalist view of the universe.

Donkey_Puncher

Is there something wrong with seeing the Universe as a completely naturalistic place devoid of supernatural mumbo jumbo?

Not a bit; there is, IMO, something wrong with insisting that other people do, or that those who don't are "morons." I certainly agree that the Kansas School Board thing was absurd at best, but the tone I seem to be reading from you is that you find faith to be stupid. My apologies if I'm misreading your intent or putting words into your mouth. I'll refrain from further comment until I know what you mean here. However, in your original post, you suggest that faith hasn't given anything of significant value and I think at least a couple billion folks would disagree with you on that point.
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#32 Donkey_Puncher
Member since 2005 • 5083 Posts

Not a bit; there is, IMO, something wrong with insisting that other people do, or that those who don't are "morons." I certainly agree that the Kansas School Board thing was absurd at best, but the tone I seem to be reading from you is that you find faith to be stupid. My apologies if I'm misreading your intent or putting words into your mouth. I'll refrain from further comment until I know what you mean here. However, in your original post, you suggest that faith hasn't given anything of significant value and I think at least a couple billion folks would disagree with you on that point.

xaos

I didn't call people of faith morons, I called the Kansas school board morons, because they are. They actively used their "Faith" to interfere with science and reason; something I absolutely am not alright with.

If people have faith in God good for them, keep it to yourself. Once you cross that border and try and pass it off as fact is where theycross the line, just like in Kansas.

What would you consider more benficial to man: Faith in God giving people meaning in life OR Modern medicine, computers, automobiles, plastics, polymers, telecommunications, and mathmatics?

Personally I'm going with Science on this one. ;)

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194197844077667059316682358889

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#33 194197844077667059316682358889
Member since 2003 • 49173 Posts

[QUOTE="xaos"]

Not a bit; there is, IMO, something wrong with insisting that other people do, or that those who don't are "morons." I certainly agree that the Kansas School Board thing was absurd at best, but the tone I seem to be reading from you is that you find faith to be stupid. My apologies if I'm misreading your intent or putting words into your mouth. I'll refrain from further comment until I know what you mean here. However, in your original post, you suggest that faith hasn't given anything of significant value and I think at least a couple billion folks would disagree with you on that point.

Donkey_Puncher

I didn't call people of faith morons, I called the Kansas school board morons, because they are. They actively used their "Faith" to interfere with science and reason; something I absolutely am not alright with.

If people have faith in God good for them, keep it to yourself. Once you cross that border and try and pass it off as fact is where theycross the line, just like in Kansas.

What would you consider more benficial to man: Faith in God giving people meaning in life OR Modern medicine, computers, automobiles, plastics, polymers, telecommunications, and mathmatics?

Personally I'm going with Science on this one. ;)

And I'm an empiricist/rationalist myself and call myself an agnostic with strong atheist leanings. However, I've also known some very smart people of faith, as well as people who exercise their faith by living an ememplary life, rather than by proselytizing, and just don't think that their faith should be mocked/dismissed just because it is utterly outside the realm of science. Otherwise, things like literature and music can be just as easily dismissed as worthless. I think that your comparison of the spiritual benefits of faith and the material benefits of technology is kind of spurious. Bear in mind that the rational western tradition has its roots in natural philosophy, as first articulated by Robert Boyle, himself a very strong theist who regarded scientific inquiry as a devotional attempt to understand the divinely created universe.
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CptJSparrow

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#34 CptJSparrow
Member since 2007 • 10898 Posts
Science is excellent in helping us understand the natural world. Religion and philosophy are our means to try to understand purpose, the supernatural, and anything that science cannot--at one time or another. The imagination is a totally different part of the mind than reason, and the two are at odds with each other in most individuals, with the imagination usually winning. The two faculties have their benefits and their shortcomings in different components of our existence. There are times when the imagination is better than reason and times where an individual's reason is more beneficial. While the two are at odds with each other in most individuals, they balance out in the group. Reason increases our chances of survival, improves our standards of living, and helps us understand our existence better. Faith and the imagination, which I group into the same category, help to keep the human race stable. During the 20th century, we underwent a crisis of faith and entered into today's apathetic and self-destructive Western society. While it was a definite good thing for humanity to begin to question authority and tradition, we took things much too far, entering into a "if it feels good, do it" sacrifice of the intellect--as a group, and threaten to destroy ourselves, which we will do if we do not have faith--if not faith in a rationalized absolute, then faith in ourselves--which, sadly, most humans lack these days. While we do not necessarily need theism, we should appreciate the philosophical questions of our existence that fundamentalist or ignorant atheists ignore--for example: What is real? Reality is only what appears to be real to us, and that unleashes a new river of possibilities, beliefs, and scientific explorations for the individual, as well as doubts on so-called "facts." When we ask ourselves "Do we know anything?" we begin to understand why some people choose the path of the faith and realize how much of an unnecessary hassle it is to continually debate things that are beyond our looking glass of inherently possible understanding. Debate for knowledge is fine and trying to solve problems is even better; each field has its own patch of blunders who are found to cause dyspepsia amongst those who they should, as common members of the human race, work with naturally. I believe that it is past time for us to wake up to the problem of apathy and intolerance, share the load of work to be done, cooperate, stop asserting ourselves always right, go beyond good and evil, and have a better future.
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CptJSparrow

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#35 CptJSparrow
Member since 2007 • 10898 Posts
[QUOTE="whodeysay85"]Read the Case for Faith by Lee Strobel. He basically summarizes all atheist arguments and counters them with reason through faith. Its a very good read. Good for the skeptics.espoac
Strobel's book is more about justifying Chrstianity to those who consider Christianity immoral. He does nothing to address the central argument of Atheism-that blind faith is unjustified. Strobel's arguments do nothing to suggest that faith in the Christian God is more than a matter of blind faith.

Agreed...I read A Case for a Creator, and he also does not understand the implications of Darwinism, or go to discuss anything with the "opposition."
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quiglythegreat

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#36 quiglythegreat
Member since 2006 • 16886 Posts
Well, reason and faith aren't mutually exclusive. What you're talking about is bias and rejection before acceptance.
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nuclear_cookout

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#37 nuclear_cookout
Member since 2005 • 8617 Posts

I believe that both faith and reason go hand in hand. Reasonable people have faith that what they believe in is reasonable. Vis a vis, people of faith believe that what they believe in is reasonable. However, atheists go by what scientists claim to be fact. Scientists aren't always right, but atheists have faith in them regardless. Theists generally believe in ancient texts, but those texts (such as the Bible) have a good amount of wisdom to guide a person through their life, and have documented real events. In fact, scientists have recently found evidence of the Red Sea crossing. Religion also gives a person a sense of purpose; a belief that there really is something beyond our time here in earth.

From what I've seen in both science and my personal life, I find God/Christianity to be more logical, ergo, I don't have enough faith to be an atheist.

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kalossimitar

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#38 kalossimitar
Member since 2005 • 613 Posts

As the educator George H. Smith said in his book Atheism: The Case Against God, "confusion is the enemy of purposeful thought."

Most arguments between the theist and the atheist end up becoming repetitious and dull because there is a fundamental disagreement between the atheist and the theist that rarely gets brought up and so is rarely discussed. I am in agreement with Mr. Smith that the conflict between the theist and the atheist is fundamentally a conflict between reason and faith. It is a conflict about how human beings can distinguish between what is true and what is false.

Reason and faith are two mutually exclusive terms, and as such there can be no reconciliation between the two nor common ground met. Faith is belief without, or in spite of, reason. So the question must be asked, can faith be used as a valid cognitive procedure for acquiring knowledge or is acquiring knowledge solely within the realm of reason?

Decessus

do you live in a **** box or what? More than half the atheists usually use that argument. For my part, when in conflict with stupid believers, I always use it.

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Decessus

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#39 Decessus
Member since 2003 • 5132 Posts

They are not mutually exclusive... in any way. You can have reasonable beliefs. The debates between atheism and theism are quite childish and get nobody nowhere. It is a complete waste of time.foxhound_fox

Several hundred years worth of philosophy go against your idea that the debates are childish and a waste of time. Countless decisions are made everyday based on religious beliefs. If those beliefs are unfounded, then don't you think as rational human beings we have a responsibility to not act on those beliefs?

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LJS9502_basic

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#40 LJS9502_basic  Online
Member since 2003 • 180279 Posts
Nope....you can arrive at faith through reason. Therefore Smith was it?...is simply stating bias.
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Decessus

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#41 Decessus
Member since 2003 • 5132 Posts

Faith and reason seem like a false dichotomy, much like religion and science. They deal with radically different areas of experience. It's like saying which is better, music or dessert. Science and reason deal with the tangible, measurable empirical aspects of our experience. Faith and religion deal with ineffable mystery and questions of purpose and meaning that science doesn't even ask, since answering them cannot be done by empirical means. The different spheres of competence for the two means it usually turns out useless at best and destructive at best when someone tries to mix them, such as when someone tries to "sicentifically disprove God" or people push for "intelligent design/creation science" to be included in public school curricula.xaos

I think it is incorrect to say that they deal with radically different areas of experience. Both propoents of faith, and proponents of reason believe that knowledge is aquired though their respective means.

If your position is that faith reveals knowledge about purpose and meaning, how does it do it?

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slinky6

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#42 slinky6
Member since 2004 • 8521 Posts
Faith and reason are complete opposites. "Reasonable faith" is an oxymoron. Reason implies that there some evidence backing a belief. Faith is belief in the absence of evidence. Of course, whether or not faith is good is another issue. Faith can be used to justify both good things and bad things. But if you ask me, I see more bad than good.
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LoG-Sacrament

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#43 LoG-Sacrament
Member since 2006 • 20397 Posts

there are christian philosophers that back theirbeliefs with reason. though i havent read one that made a particularly convincing case.

edit: freudian slip, i really did mean beliefs

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hellfire9988

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#44 hellfire9988
Member since 2006 • 1136 Posts

[QUOTE="FragStains"]This sounds like a question that a teacher would give out for homework or essay.Decessus

What would you write if it were? Do you have any opinion on the subject?

I would if I wanted to decphire what you said. I sureley would give an educated, and genius response if this was my homework, but sadly, I am on Gamespot where I really could care less about vocabulary and my beliefs. I believe in God, and I love him. What you believe may not be right for me, and visa versa.

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#45 Cube_of_MooN
Member since 2005 • 9286 Posts

As the educator George H. Smith said in his book Atheism: The Case Against God, "confusion is the enemy of purposeful thought."

Most arguments between the theist and the atheist end up becoming repetitious and dull because there is a fundamental disagreement between the atheist and the theist that rarely gets brought up and so is rarely discussed. I am in agreement with Mr. Smith that the conflict between the theist and the atheist is fundamentally a conflict between reason and faith. It is a conflict about how human beings can distinguish between what is true and what is false.

Reason and faith are two mutually exclusive terms, and as such there can be no reconciliation between the two nor common ground met. Faith is belief without, or in spite of, reason. So the question must be asked, can faith be used as a valid cognitive procedure for acquiring knowledge or is acquiring knowledge solely within the realm of reason?

Decessus

Acquiring knowledge in a strictly mundane sense is based on reason almost exclusively. I say almost though, as faith can inspire one to search for deeper meaning, as faith in God might push a man to search for a scientific proof of God. Faith is used in the search of acquiring knowledge in that case. So no, while reason is used almost exclusively in the acquisition of mundane knowledge, faith can be used to assist the acquisition of knowledge, or to increase one's knowledge of the supernatural. They can work together, the problem there is the word "exclusive."

Well that's my interpretation anyway. If I'm way off, you can tell me in a polite way :)

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Zero5000X

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#46 Zero5000X
Member since 2004 • 8314 Posts

Nope....you can arrive at faith through reason. Therefore Smith was it?...is simply stating bias.LJS9502_basic

hmmmm... that may just be the dumbest thing i've ever read...