Socrates
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S
Fade said:
The assumption, in this instance, is rational.
Assumptions are expressions of faith regardless of the usefullness one finds in the particular rational used.
Love,
Socrates
Fade said:
The assumption, in this instance, is rational.
Assumptions are expressions of faith regardless of the usefullness one finds in the particular rational used.
Socrates said:
So, we all have reasons for our Faith.
Fade said:
Language has this thing called "connotation."
The way we use language, or better stated, the way language is used, a concept that means one thing can end up meaning something entirely different.
Yes, I know that's a little twisted sounding.
When a person says faith, they -mean- "Believe in something despite no evidence." That is what we were taught faith means. That is usage. However, depending on which dictionary you use, that isn't the entire meaning. It can also mean:
Imaginist said:
I understand the misgivings that you and others have about the word "faith". I understand that many good and well-meaning people have been verbally beaten with this word. Both the religious and the irreligious use it as a stick. But I'm using the word in its broader and yet still perfectly proper and common meaning, which signifies something more like trust in a certain person, thing, concept, feeling, or behavior. You know what I mean: I have "faith" in my wife. I have "faith" that I'm right about something. I have "faith" in my ability to do something. I have "faith" in my intuition.
It should be clear that one of the objectives of my thesis is to demonstrate that both religious believers and the believers in materialism are operating on such faith, and that both groups contain people at various extremes with regard to their consideration of evidence of different sorts.
Fade said:
No. Materialism isn't only obvious given the evidence, we've never encountered any sort of evidence that isn't materialistic, and goodness knows we've tried.
Ah, more's the joy... once you find evidence for it that by definition means it's materialist. The joy of materialism is that the more you discover the bigger the world becomes.How would you know something was evidence for a non-materialist event in space/time if you found it?
Socrates said:
How would you know something was evidence for a non-materialist event in space/time if you found it?
Love,
Socrates
Aoidoi said:Ah, more's the joy... once you find evidence for it that by definition means it's materialist. The joy of materialism is that the more you discover the bigger the world becomes.![]()
I prefer to think of it as an all-inclusive philosophy rather than circular reasoning, but you can make of it what you will.Socrates said:Is this the circular reasoning of Materialism that one must accepted in faith to be a Materialist? Emperically, only materialist events in space/time are observable, therefore all space/time events are materialist.
That's okay, because that's pretty much what we get from professional philosophers, too. For millennia. I wonder whether they think that if they discuss this stuff long enough, they'll reach an agreement?Kind of like math... it's all in your definitions. Mind you, this is an engineer discussing philosophy, and you get what you pay for.
Aoidoi said:I prefer to think of it as an all-inclusive philosophy rather than circular reasoning
Aoidoi said:if you define nature as what we can see of reality then there is no supernatural phenomena...
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:I wonder whether they think that if they discuss this stuff long enough, they'll reach an agreement?![]()
~~ Paul
Odd, the last person to accuse me of insanity was Franko. (Assuming I'm parsing your sentence right... it's a bit unclear to which assertion you refer, mine or yours).Socrates said:Willful distortions of reality are often referred to as neurotic self-delustion, I don't know if it applies here, but you are free substantiate this assertion.
Yup. Why make things harder than they are?This is simply a definition of convenience--
An unsubstantiated and faith based definition? Methinks that an odd assertion... arguing it's circular logic is supportable, but I fail to see how a circular argument could possible be unsubstantiated or faith based. Irrelevant, pointless, many other things, but unsubstantiated or faith based? That seems just odd.unsubstantiated and faith based. This is not sufficient to accept what follows in your reasoning at face value.
chuckle As you wish it. I have faith that nothing will change your mind.This seems to re-enforce the notion that Materialism is Faith Based.
I rather suspect it's the play that's the thing. "Small Gods" by Terry Pratchett had some wonderful images of philosophers (and gods, for that matter). I happily recommend it.That's okay, because that's pretty much what we get from professional philosophers, too. For millennia. I wonder whether they think that if they discuss this stuff long enough, they'll reach an agreement?
Aoidoi said:I prefer to think of it as an all-inclusive philosophy rather than circular reasoning, but you can make of it what you will.
I had this thought a while back, and it seems fairly simple... if you define nature as what we can see of reality then there is no supernatural phenomena
... anything that is observable is natural. There might be unexplained events, possibly even unexplainable events, but they're still part of reality and thus natural.
Aoidoi said:Odd, the last person to accuse me of insanity was Franko. (Assuming I'm parsing your sentence right... it's a bit unclear to which assertion you refer, mine or yours).
Yup. Why make things harder than they are?
An unsubstantiated and faith based definition? Methinks that an odd assertion... arguing it's circular logic is supportable, but I fail to see how a circular argument could possible be unsubstantiated or faith based. Irrelevant, pointless, many other things, but unsubstantiated or faith based? That seems just odd.
Socrates said:
Is this the circular reasoning of Materialism that one must accepted in faith to be a Materialist? Emperically, only materialist events in space/time are observable, therefore all space/time events are materialist.
Love,
Socrates
I dunno, I have no experience with that.Interesting Ian said:What about what we cannot see of reality?
Well, putting aside my definition for a moment (it is a bit of tautology, after all), how would an observer know whether what he perceives is explainable by physical laws? Without a thorough grasp of aeronautical design it is rather counterintuitive that something as massive as a 747 would fly, yet we see that all the time. How can you differentiate between the supernatural and a natural but not yet understood physical law?No, not ncessarily. Suppose we perceive events which cannot be described by physical laws? These would surely be "supernatural" by definition.
The joy of computers is that they give every idiot who has one access to an audience.That is quite a magic computer you have there. With it, you can write one gratuitous assertion after the other and then pretent that you've said something meaningful.
I'm not sure how you got to idealism, but if one confines discussion to only the physical world and that which interacts with it then you're rather confined to materialism by default. If we can only observe the physical, all else is speculation.It's even better than that.
That is, if anything effects, or affects, the physical world it's also physical. Ergo, dualism of any sort is logically impossible; hi, welcome to idealism!
Yahzi said:Imaginist
Materialism is not based on faith, unless you first define faith to mean something other than faith.
Materialism is based on Reason. Reason is based on Logic. Logic is hard wired into our brains in such a way that we cannot function without it, let alone doubt it.