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Originally posted by americandingbat
I'm really distressed that so many in this thread perceive faith as synonymous with a specific presentation of christian dogma, and that despite it having been pointed out by numerous posters in numerous ways, are unwilling to question their assumption about what faith is and can be.
Originally posted by americandingbat
I really doubt that you'll find most, or even many, psychologists who will agree with the statement "the power of faith is to distort reality, not present it."
Most psychologists recognize the extraordinary importance of faith to the human mind and emotions. Not faith in any one thing or other, but FAITH itself.
Faith is not the belief that there is a gray-bearded giant above the cloud cover who toys with humanity and punishes them for being human.
I'm really distressed that so many in this thread perceive faith as synonymous with a specific presentation of christian dogma, and that despite it having been pointed out by numerous posters in numerous ways, are unwilling to question their assumption about what faith is and can be.
Originally posted by americandingbat
Most psychologists recognize the extraordinary importance of faith to the human mind and emotions. Not faith in any one thing or other, but FAITH itself.
100% belief with no evidence.
Originally posted by Wertdagf
Ummm that definition belongs to ignorance.
Originally posted by Wertdagf
Maybe its YOU who is argueing the wrong term..... and the religious nuts are using the wrong one as well.
2 a (1): belief and trust in and loyalty to God (2): belief in the traditional doctrines of a religion b (1): firm belief in something for which there is no proof (2): complete trust
Originally posted by Wertdagf
Your putting yourself on a threadmill trying to break a word.... which is impossible.
Originally posted by TruthParadox
I've made it repeatidly clear which term I am using.
2 a (1): belief and trust in and loyalty to God (2): belief in the traditional doctrines of a religion b (1): firm belief in something for which there is no proof (2): complete trust
"firm belief in something for which there is no proof"...
Hmmm... sounds familiar...
Perhaps having a firm belief in a book which is thousands of years old, for which there is no evidence of the extraordinary events therein.
Originally posted by TruthParadox
Originally posted by americandingbat
I'm really distressed that so many in this thread perceive faith as synonymous with a specific presentation of christian dogma, and that despite it having been pointed out by numerous posters in numerous ways, are unwilling to question their assumption about what faith is and can be.
There ARE other definitions of faith which you and others keep referring to. I thought I made it quite clear what I was reffering to with this thread.
100% belief with no evidence.
I have 'faith' that I'm going to get a good job, find my 'soulmate', have 3 kids, and die an old man. *shorten quote* That example is a completely different definition of faith than what I'm talking about in this thread - but it seems people keep confusing it.
Most psychologists recognize the extraordinary importance of faith to the human mind and emotions. Not faith in any one thing or other, but FAITH itself.
So they think it's important for a person to have a 100% 'knowing' of something which has no evidence - something they couldn't know?
You see this most often in nut houses, I doubt any psychologist would consider that good.
Common ordinary everyday trust or hope? Yeah, everyone considers that good.
Originally posted by americandingbat
If I made a thread called "I saw an elephant crossing Queens Boulevard yesterday – that's no good what's the world come to?" and illustrated it with a picture of stray cat running across the street, I would expect people to point out that what I thought was an elephant was, in fact, a cat.
Originally posted by americandingbat
You made a thread called "Why Faith is NOT a Good Thing" and used no example other than fundamentalist christian dogma. I'm just here to point out that that is not faith, it is fear.
Originally posted by americandingbat
You are putting a lot of faith in the proposition that nothing that cannot be experienced through our five senses is of any importance.
Originally posted by TruthParadox
reply to post by americandingbat
Many Christians do say that they don't have any doubts - that they know 100% that God exists. The vast majority of Christians I've talked to say that.
That is what I'm arguing against.
You keep thinking I'm arguing against something else when I'm not.
Originally posted by americandingbat
If I made a thread called "I saw an elephant crossing Queens Boulevard yesterday – that's no good what's the world come to?" and illustrated it with a picture of stray cat running across the street, I would expect people to point out that what I thought was an elephant was, in fact, a cat.
Careful, your strawman is showing .
I made it clear which definition of faith I'm talking about.
Faith is a broad term, which is why I said exactly what I was arguing against.
Several times...
Originally posted by americandingbat
You made a thread called "Why Faith is NOT a Good Thing" and used no example other than fundamentalist christian dogma. I'm just here to point out that that is not faith, it is fear.
That is what they consider faith, and that is what I'm arguing against.
This is why I originally put this thread in the "Conspiracies in Religions" forum, but it was moved to the "Psychology, Philosophy and Metaphysics" forum.
Even so, I've made it very clear what it is I'm arguing against.
Originally posted by americandingbat
You are putting a lot of faith in the proposition that nothing that cannot be experienced through our five senses is of any importance.
Not at all! Not even close.
I'm saying that it's illogical to have such a firm belief in something which has as much evidence as pink unicorns.
Originally posted by americandingbat
But everything you use to back your arguments is not about whether or not God exists, but to things like evolutionary theory, specific commandments, points of contention in the Bible.
And nothing you've said takes into consideration other faiths at all.
Originally posted by americandingbat
It wasn't really a straw man, since I didn't insinuate that you were in fact calling cats elephants – I made it out there so that only the pertinent point – who defines a word – was held in common.
The analogy was meant to say "you can't just define a common English word however you want – if you do people will come let you know you're using the wrong word."
Originally posted by americandingbat
Do you think that the faith I struggle to keep, that I specifically and we generally have a purpose, is a Bad Thing?
Originally posted by americandingbat
And then you're leaping straight from "illogical" to "bad". And along the way dismissing any evidence of God's existence that doesn't come through our senses but through "feeling God's love/peace" – as though it is unimportant because it's not external to us.
Originally posted by TruthParadox
Originally posted by americandingbat
But everything you use to back your arguments is not about whether or not God exists, but to things like evolutionary theory, specific commandments, points of contention in the Bible.
And nothing you've said takes into consideration other faiths at all.
Those were examples.
I could talk about other faiths if you like, but Christianity is an example that most of us can relate to.
I could talk about how some people have faith that people are out to get them, causing them to live a paranoid and seperated life.
Originally posted by americandingbat
Do you think that the faith I struggle to keep, that I specifically and we generally have a purpose, is a Bad Thing?
Your purpose is whatever you make it.
Our main purpose is to live.
I don't really know what you have faith in though...
Do you believe that there's a 'higher purpose'? If so, why?
Is it just a hope, or is it an absolute belief?
If you 100% believe that we all have a 'higher' purpose but don't know why, then that's illogical. Not necessarily bad, just illogical.
If you simply believe that we all may have a higher purpose but you aren't sure, then that's just hope - and there's nothing wrong with that.
Originally posted by americandingbat
Your image of Christianity is not one I can relate to. I have spent my entire life in areas of the U.S. where fundamentalist Protestants are a small and not particularly powerful minority. Since I currently live in a city of over 8 million people, I am hard pressed to believe that my experience is not reasonably common in America.
Originally posted by americandingbat
It would be pretty cool if you would talk about other faiths as well. Particularly about faith in a non-dogmatic sense.
Originally posted by americandingbat
If instead of believing that people were out to get him, he believed that pink unicorns lived on Mars, there wouldn't be any particular problem. It would be an illogical belief, and he probably wouldn't find many people who share it, but unless he demanded that everyone else believe in the pink unicorns and had the power to back up that demand, it's not something we need to worry about.
Originally posted by americandingbat
I try my best to believe 100% that there is a higher purpose to human life. I'm not always successful – in fact I rarely am. I spend most of my time on the fence, afraid that there is no purpose, but never sure of that either.
Originally posted by americandingbat
But I try to always behave in accordance with there being a higher purpose, and I do what I can to increase the connections that I have felt to a higher purpose, to nurture them rather than doubting them.
Originally posted by americandingbat
There are many ways of having a strong belief in the unproveable that don't involve hate or degradation of other humans.
Originally posted by americandingbat
A 100% belief that there is meaning in life is by your definition faith. And it may be illogical, but I can't agree that it's not a good thing.
Originally posted by TruthParadox
So you think that the number of Christians who say that they 'know' that God exists is small?
Sorry, that's not at all what I've seen. Just look at people arguing on these threads... How many Christians even allow the possibility that they are wrong?
Originally posted by americandingbat
It would be pretty cool if you would talk about other faiths as well. Particularly about faith in a non-dogmatic sense.
What kinds of faith are you referring to? Having faith in a person (hope/trust)? That's not what I'm arguing against.
Originally posted by americandingbat
I try my best to believe 100% that there is a higher purpose to human life. I'm not always successful – in fact I rarely am. I spend most of my time on the fence, afraid that there is no purpose, but never sure of that either.
So fear is what drives you to have such faith. Why not be honest with yourself and admit that there's no way any of us could know either way? You're trying to force yourself to believe 100% something which we can not (as humans) know.
What does that even mean?
You nurture your faith to believe that there is a higher purpose? Why?
Because you're afraid that there might not be a higher purpose?
Sorry, I just don't understand that. I'd rather be honest with myself.
I'm a realist, you apparently aren't, and that's ultimately what it comes down to I suppose.
Originally posted by americandingbat
There are many ways of having a strong belief in the unproveable that don't involve hate or degradation of other humans.
Yes there are. Either way, it's illogical.
If I believe 100% (faith) that I will win the lottery …
Now, you would say that if someone wishes to have such faith then it's completely fine - it doesn't hurt anyone. I partially agree. It doesn't hurt anyone in this example, it simply means that the person is ok with being dishonest with themselves in order to better cope with life.
Personally, I'd like to see a world where everyone could be honest with themselves and others - perhaps you could look at that as our 'purpose', to at least accept who we are.
But back to the example I gave above, even that is not nearly as extreme as believing in something which we don't even know is possible in our universe (God). At least we know that it's possible for a person to win the lottery, but believing something which is completely baseless is even worse in my opinion...
Originally posted by americandingbat
A 100% belief that there is meaning in life is by your definition faith. And it may be illogical, but I can't agree that it's not a good thing.
Actually, that's not the definition of faith I used... There is evidence that my life has meaning because I'm the one that gives it meaning. We all define our own purpose... But if you're talking about a 'higher purpose', then that's something else entirely.
Originally posted by americandingbat
I'm looking for a knowledge that does not demand proof – in other words, a faith.
Originally posted by americandingbat
At the times when I feel most comfortable in myself and in the world, I trust that there is a reason for it all (yes, I mean a higher or at least non-human purpose).
Originally posted by americandingbat
Again with the "illogical"!
Illogical is not a synonym for "bad".
How do you feel about poetry or art?
Originally posted by TruthParadox
Faith is, quite simply, a belief which is void of evidence - sight, sound, smell, feel, or taste.
A belief which can not be verified - only believed by inferior means.
Originally posted by TruthParadox
What should be painfully obvious at this point is that the only function of faith was to ignore the initial 50%.
...Comfortable"...
Personally, I'd rather search for the truth than be content with tricking my mind into believing I already had it.
It's like the matrix - would you stay in the matrix even knowing that it's a lie?
I love art! But I don't believe said art to be the absolute truth about reality. If I did, then I'd only be brainwashing myself - which is of course the subject of this thread...
It takes an extreme amount of faith to believe in the THEORY of evolution. Creation is truth and evolution is lacking that. Evolution doesn't even have facts to beleave in, all it is is a set of guesses to hopefully count out the possibility of there being a god to answer to.
It's very unlikely that most of you have ever met a person of true Faith. If you had met such a person, you would remember it. They're not always religious fanatics. Sometimes they are conquerors. Some may be engineers or artists or even scientists. More often than not, we recognize them as eminently self-assured and dynamic individuals who plow through our existence, demolishing accepted dogma and rewriting the rules as they go.