That doesn't answer the question, that just repeats the assumption.
Yes, it assumes, despite your argument to the contrary, that to believe in something means that you think it exists. When did "I believe in X" stop meaning "I believe X exists"????
Some love is evidential. Don't fall into the trap of thinking that all crows are black.
It only takes
some love to be evidential to undermine your implied argument that "love" equates with "god". As soon as you have available evidence, the one becomes more real than the other.
You don't think there is any love that isn't detectable?
Never said that. Only that some of it is. See above.
My point is that they are in love with a concept. Just as you can be in love with the concept of..say, anarchism. You don't need to be a practicing anarchist to be one.
So they fancy themselves believers? Pretend to believe?
You can't dictate what and how other people believe. You have to go with what they claim.
I'm not dictating it - you are. The logical conclusion of what you say is that they play at believing, they dream up a god. If true, they can't possibly "believe in god" in the commonly accepted sense of assuming existence.
I can really sense a lot of resistance from you on this issue.
You must be bleedin' psychic.
You simply won't accept that other people see things differently than you. Why does your definition have to be the only correct one?
Of
course I can accept it - I accept that some people think all sorts of things. I just don't agree with this one, and I can't help that. The fact that I actually
care what they believe should be clear from the amount of time I've spent genuinely trying to understand. My definition doesn't have to be the only correct one, but to me, it's the correct one in the absence of any evidence (and if you are to be believed, any genuine belief). Give me evidence for god, I will re-assess my position.
What is the difference between Harry Potter, Jedi Knights and Jesus? For all we know, Jesus could be a figment of some writer's imagination (helped by some pretty good marketing people).
None at all as far as I'm concerned. The difference is in the nature of the belief in them. People that believe in Jesus and God do so because they are misinterpreting the evidence, but their belief is as a result often genuinely. I can see no way to genuinely hold a belief in a god you know
and accept to be fictional.
You have to take their words for it - but how they mean it, not the way you do. That's where BigLes is going wrong.
So basically they can say what they like to justify their imagined fancy as somehow worthy of belief? You're right, they can. I was wrong in that I assumed "believe in" meant "believe exists". As I said, I think you can forgive me, and the others, this error, because as far as I can see, the two statements, in context, are the same.