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Fact vs Belief?

RabbiSatan said:

I don't know - why do you bother? You're a complete fool who doesn't bother to read anyone elses' post, and spouts complete nonsense.
He said it. Not me. I was just agreeing with him there.
 
RabbiSatan said:

Not to mention insane.
In the original sense or the unoriginal sense? Certainly if it's in the unoriginal sense then we can't expect Science to prove this now can we? However, if it's in the original sense, am I to take this to be your own opinion then? If so, then why should I believe you? You certainly don't have the evidence to back it up then do you? If you base everything on the empirical method, then you have no leg to stand on.

"And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye?" ~ Matthew 7:3
 
Iacchus said:
In the original sense or the unoriginal sense? Certainly if it's in the unoriginal sense then we can't expect Science to prove this now can we? However, if it's in the original sense, am I to take this to be your own opinion then? If so, then why should I believe you?

More mindless drivel.

You certainly don't have the evidence to back it up then do you?

There's plenty - all of the threads you've participated in, where you refuse to address the issues and constantly babble nonsense in an effort to throw off people.

If you base everything on the empirical method, then you have no leg to stand on.

I'm convinced beyond doubt now that you truely are insane.
 
I'm beginning to think that derailment is a last-ditch effort of the ignorant, when their ignorance has been illuminated to others.
 
RabbiSatan said:

More mindless drivel.

There's plenty - all of the threads you've participated in, where you refuse to address the issues and constantly babble nonsense in an effort to throw off people.

I'm convinced beyond doubt now that you truely are insane.
Why call me stupid?
 
zaayrdragon said:
Question - could it be that one of the problems with those who have such powerful faith in things like religion be that they regard fact as another form of belief, rather than as fact?

I know, for example, that I don't have to believe in a fact for the fact to be true; and therefore, if I'm shown wrong about a fact, I concede myself to be wrong.

Yet it often feels to me like those who argue for their beliefs tend to ignore or downplay fact as if it were merely a conflicting belief.

I'm sorry if I'm not clear - the thought only just occured to me, and is still sitting in a hypothetical pool of essential amniotic fluid...

Going back to original question

I for one love to try to find out facts, I do not feel as you say that fact takes away my beliefs. Usually it strengthens them at least makes me think about why I believe.

What you said about not having to believe in a fact for it to be true is correct.

Maybe people need to think more about the difference between fact and belief

Now having said that some facts can change which makes that hard, take smoking it was never bad for you. Freon was ok then they introduce a new one then its not good then another thats good and each time they want us to believe them that the newest is ok and we say thats what you said last time:D

The point is each time they say its fact then time proves that fact wrong so it is difficult.
 
It goes to prove that knowledge of a fact might be limited or wrong, but the fact remains.

This is where science is superior - it's always adjusting its claims based on new evidence. Every axiom, theory, or hypothesis remains as such until it can be irrefutably proven - then it's called a law. If, later, something defies said law, the law returns to theorem status until it can be adjusted accordingly.
 
zaayrdragon said:

It goes to prove that knowledge of a fact might be limited or wrong, but the fact remains.
How do you know, without believing it?
 
zaayrdragon said:

I'm beginning to think that derailment is a last-ditch effort of the ignorant, when their ignorance has been illuminated to others.
That must apply to me then because I'm the only one here (up to this point) that doesn't agree with what's generally being maintained. However, I'm not the one resorting to all the ad hominem attacks.
 
Iacchus said:
He said it. Not me. I was just agreeing with him there.

Are you posting and answering yourself?
Rabbi Satan and Iacchus when the profiles are clicked come out as the same person.
 
Radrook said:

Are you posting and answering yourself?
Rabbi Satan and Iacchus when the profiles are clicked come out as the same person.
The empirical evidence on my computer screen says no.

What the heck are you talking about? :D
 
What ARE you talking about, Rad?

Oh, wait, never mind - probably mis-reading your Bible again.

Iacchus, fact is immune to belief or dis-belief. I can know a fact is true, without a need to believe it to be true. That which is true no longer requires belief or disbelief. Only when I am uncertain of a fact can I mention belief or disbelief.

For example, I could claim that I believe Radrook has a mental illness, though I do not know if the fact would support that belief. But there is a fact involved - either he is mentally ill, or he is not; and that fact will NOT change, whether I believe it or not.

The world is round, Iacchus - get over it.
 
The fact is just more immediate, because it's closest to the membrane, but it still requires you to believe it's there. Just like the fact of the apple which is staring me in the face will disappear if I look away. In other words how will I know I was just looking at it if I didn't believe I just did?
 
Iacchus said:
The fact is just more immediate, because it's closest to the membrane, but it still requires you to believe it's there. Just like the fact of the apple which is staring me in the face will disappear if I look away. In other words how will I know I was just looking at it if I didn't believe I just did?
Balderdash, brainlacchus,

this kind of pap is so mindnumbingly stupid. You have never been surprised by anything, brainlacchus? Never hit from behind by a snowball you didn't know existed until the moment it struck? Never stumbled over a rock you didn't see? How you nitwits talk yourselves into this crap should be the subject of an abnormal psychology study.

Brainwashing isn't the problem with you types. The problem is that high dryer setting causing all the shrinkage.
 
BillHoyt said:

Balderdash, brainlacchus,

this kind of pap is so mindnumbingly stupid. You have never been surprised by anything, brainlacchus? Never hit from behind by a snowball you didn't know existed until the moment it struck? Never stumbled over a rock you didn't see? How you nitwits talk yourselves into this crap should be the subject of an abnormal psychology study.

Brainwashing isn't the problem with you types. The problem is that high dryer setting causing all the shrinkage.
Ah, creative writing at its best. But what's it got to do with the evidence?

And what have you got your brain stuck in a vice or something? Want to make sure nothing gets escapes you? :D
 
Iacchus said:
But what's it got to do with the evidence?
It has everything to do with the evidence. This is the drivel you wrote:
The fact is just more immediate, because it's closest to the membrane, but it still requires you to believe it's there. Just like the fact of the apple which is staring me in the face will disappear if I look away. In other words how will I know I was just looking at it if I didn't believe I just did?
I responded to your points, a courtesy you never display here. Your drivel claim is this: The existence of things requires belief. I pointed out to you that you have tripped over holes and rocks in the past. That you suddenlly found snowballs flung at you. That you have been surprised by things in the past, clearly refuting this nonsense that you must believe in them before they exist.
 
Off-topic - what's all this percent thing in people's sigs about, anyway?

On-topic - There is a phase in child development in which a child cannot understand that when he no longer sees an object that the object still exists. If Mommy walks out of the room, she has vanished entirely. Luckily for most of us, we outgrow this phase before we start talking.

Sadly for a few, they re-enter that phase when the get exposed to philosophy.

The alleged apple in front of you continues to exist, irrelevant of your belief of said apple. If you walk away, assuming no other intervention, the apple will slowly rot, attract a variety of insects, and start smelling bad. These are things you may detect later; yet if you didn't believe in the reality of the apple, you would still detect their effects. Your belief in said apple is utterly irrelevant.

Likewise, how many people believed for how long that the earth was flat? That the stars were tiny lights hung in the sky? That the sun circled the earth? That witches could fly on brooms and devils made people ill?

Their belief didn't alter reality one whit; this is what makes reality so obviously real. Your solipsist commentary just goes to show how truly juvenile you are.

It's another observation I'm starting to notice: stubbornly faithful yet ignorant Christians also tend to be solipsist. Perhaps, if they can cast enough doubt on the nature of reality, then their own warped views of reality might seem less ridiculous to others?

I suspect there is something to this...
 
BillHoyt said:

It has everything to do with the evidence. This is the drivel you wrote:

I responded to your points, a courtesy you never display here. Your drivel claim is this: The existence of things requires belief. I pointed out to you that you have tripped over holes and rocks in the past. That you suddenlly found snowballs flung at you. That you have been surprised by things in the past, clearly refuting this nonsense that you must believe in them before they exist.
Don't you have any comprehension about what I'm saying at all?
 
zaayrdragon said:

The alleged apple in front of you continues to exist, irrelevant of your belief of said apple.
I couldn't care less. The thing I want to know, is how do you know that the apple is there? In other words it can't be proven, based upon our senses that is. It's just like lifegazer says, the apple exists (for us anyway) only inside of our awareness of the apple. So whether it exists or not is besides the point.

By the way, I'm reasonably certain the apple does exist (due to my interacting with it), however, I could be entirely wrong. So, if you're going to call me the fool for saying so, you could stand to take a look in the mirror yourself.

So how is it that we can be so damn sure of ourselves, and come to find out later we're wrong? What does that suggest to you? That it's all a matter of belief perhaps?

Exactly!
 

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