If so, why can't you accept that that's what Deists do?
I can accept it, I just can't agree with it! Why can't
you accept
that? I'm not saying they need to bend to my wishes, I'm simply discussing what
I think about their beliefs. Unless you're suggesting that religious beliefs should be off limits for discussion, you'd better get used to it.
The same could be said for what caused the Big Bang.
That doesn't even make sense.
And you don't have to. I don't agree with Deists either, but, unlike you, I don't try to force them to posit something they don't, just because I cannot imagine a god without existence.
How am I trying to force them to do that? At most, you could argue that I'm
suggesting that they do. In fact what I'm doing is expressing an opinion about what they believe. I don't expect anyone to change their minds, I'm trying to understand a group of people I have plenty of respect for. See above.
They can. That you can't, is not their problem. It's yours.
I have a problem understanding their reasoning and level of honesty with themselves, certainly. However, I would suggest that the hypothetical self-deceiver does have a problem, by definition. Self-deception is not a desirable state of mind.
A believer in something evidential, no.
By the end of Sagan's example, the dragon is no longer practically evidential, because every possible test has been proposed. Therefore he decides that the only sensible position is one of provisional disbelief pending evidence. This can only mean that he thinks provisional
belief is not sensible.
I happen to think being sensible is a pretty desirable quality. We can't achieve it 100%, but we can address failures as we become aware of them.
You can do that, because psychics claim verifiable evidence of their beliefs.
That wasn't the point of your comment as far as I could tell. You were equating my claim that majority opinion can be useful with your own strawman that said essentially "if a majority of Sylvia fans believe in her, she must have powers".
Stop wasting my time, please.
Oh, touche. Your response to my question negated your whole line of reasoning vis the definition of belief. You had claimed that religious sceptics do not claim that their god exists, despite saying "I believe in god". I asked you how you would approach a sceptic who
did claim that their god existed, and you come back with the old chestnut of testable claims. You missed my point entirely, which was;
A sceptic who claims that their god exists but cannot be tested is
identical to the invisible dragon believer in Sagan's example. They claim existence, but also unfalsifiability. Just as Sagan concludes that this should be no impediment to adopting a provisionally negative position, I conclude that someone being sceptical about the existence of their god should conclude likewise.
Do you see what I'm getting at? I got sarcastic with you because despite placing great store by Deists
not claiming existence of their believed god, you answered my hypothetical question exactly as you would for a sceptic claiming (as you say they do) to believe in god but not actually believe it exists.
I
don't know, I was simply pointing out your over-reaction to what articulett was suggesting. As I said, it is
arguably one factor in the child's death, just as the availability of the weapon and her mental state otherwise also were. I am not saying that her religiosity was solely to blame for her actions, just that it may have been a factor.
Only religious people kill their children?
Of course not. That's nonsensical. You support (as do I) restriction of handguns with the intention of depriving disturbed people of their preferred means of doing violence. A similar campaign to reduce the influence of religion would work towards depriving disturbed people of one motivation for doing violence. I'm not convinced of this, but it is certainly a more valid argument than you were making out in your apparently hysterical response to articulett.