See, I don't know what is meant by "how prayer functions". I think that is a pretty personal question actually, and different people can give different answers.
Then prayer has no actual function. If it is all just a "personal" feeling and has no objective definition of how it works, then it can't be said to work at all, since no one can agree what that means.
I'd say build a relationship, but sure.
LOL. Yeah, but it is tough to build a relationship with someone with whom you have no communication. Communication is the foundation of a relationship. So if you can't demonstrate the existence of the foundation, it's pretty hard to demonstrate the existence of the relationship.
I disagree, I think there can be rational reasons for holding irrational beliefs. Here are a few.
1) The individual disagrees with the imprimatur of irrational in regards to the belief.
2) The individual feels that rationality may be independent of objective reality, and for that reason feels no need to necessarily respect labels which are independent of objective reality.
(my addition: Then this individual does not know what "rational" means.)
3) The individual believes in super-human factors that are not confined by human standards of rationality.
4) A benefit is recognized in holding the belief that appears to correspond to holding the belief, and while that correspondence is intact, the belief is held.
I can come up with more. My point? There can be rational reasons for holding a judged irrational belief, and that would be a rational thing to do, therefore holding an irrational belief does not necessarily make one irrational.
Yes, and I can list the rational reasons for believing in Santa Claus too.
1) You see him in stores
2) They have songs about him.
3) (and most importantly) He brings you gifts
etc. etc.
Here's the thing. Once you
know a belief is irrational, can you still rationally believe in it? I submit that you cannot. The only excuse for believing something irrational is ignorance. That is why most people will
not agree that their beliefs are irrational, but will try instead to contend that they
are rational. So really, we come back to the definition of what is meant by "rational". On this, I suspect we will not soon agree.
Why would there need to be, necessarily?
To determine if your behavior is rational. Talking to imaginary friends is irrational. If you agree with this, then the only way you can make your communication with God rational is to believe that He is not imaginary. If it is not important to you that your communication with God is no different from the communication with an imaginary friend, then there is no need to determine if this communication is actually occurring.
I disagree, because of the question I just raised.
And I disagree because your
need has nothing to do with rationality. If it is so important to you that you have an imaginary friend that you will brook no inquiries, by yourself or others, about how you know this friend, then you can continue to maintain that this belief in the imaginary friend is rational. I could not do this.
Not if being "shown to work" is secondary to other motivations. Meaning, if you are praying with the intention that the result of your prayer will be such that you will have demonstrated to every skeptic that your prayer has "worked", then yeah, I'd call that irrational.
Not just for skeptics. For yourself. Maybe you don't need to know if it is rational. Maybe you don't care. And that is one of the biggest difference between skeptics and believers. Skeptics care if
their own beliefs are irrational. At least, this one does.
Prayer and power are *two* different things. That's why I started this thread to begin with.
Prayer is prayer. The result is something different.
Then it seems you are saying that "results" have no connection to prayers. Zero zip zilch. they are *two* different things. Nothing you say to or hear from God has any effect on results.
But if that is not your argument and you still maintain that there is a connection, however tenuous, between prayer and results, then without evidence, that belief is irrational. By definition.
Now, as far as actual communication with God goes, we communicate with God in a different way that we communicate with each other.
LOL. Obviously. Unless He has a forum board out there on the net.
