Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
There is still a big difference here. You are still describing errors in the process. We don't have detailed research on everything we believe.I'd be interested as to where most sceptics believe they draw the line.
Since clearly none of has the time or resources to check out everything, we rely on information from others for most of our facts which we then base our reasoning on. Science has a good peer review system that allows us confidence when appealling to such evidence and if we were writing a paper which we expected to have any credence we'd check out the sources as thoroughly as was practical, but can any of us claim that same stringency in our day to day lives or behind many of our beliefs or biases?
Anecdotal evidence from sources you've learned to trust from your own experiences might not stand up to any public sceptical analysis, but does that make it irrational to believe them? If a close, trusted friend says he saw a distinctive, rare bird in his garden which all the experts say should not be found within 300 miles of the area, is disbelief the rational approach if there's no apparent reason to doubt his sincerity or competence?
Should a "true" sceptic be the guy getting thrown out of the airport for demanding to see the passenger list, the crudentials of the mechanics and pilots and to be able to check the engine, runway etc, before he will board a plane?
I advocate critical thinking and the scientific method, but I'm quite prepared to admit that my theistic beliefs are largely based on subjective experiences and anecdotal evidence. There's probably some suspension of disbelief and perhaps arguably a null hypothesis thrown in there too, but should strong evidence show me to be mistaken, it's likely that I'd follow it. If that removes a "sceptic" label for me in many people's eyes, I can live with that and would continue to try to apply critical thinking in my approach to my arguments and to life. I'm not a great supporter of labels for people anyway.
Skeptigirl, this post isn't particularly aimed at you. Your quote just gave me a line to follow on from. I'm a little surprised to see "The God who wasn't there" cited by a sceptic as credible evidence though.
That has nothing to do with the point. Give me better research and I'll fix my misconceptions. To believe in the Biblical god you have to stop that critical analysis willfully at some arbitrary point.
Maybe that is the crux of why this point is being missed by some people here and understood by others. Maybe those who have arbitrarily stopped that critical analysis don't realize they have done so. Maybe they believe there is empirical evidence of a god. Or maybe they just don't recognize that god beliefs require ignoring the empirical evidence. That is something I have observed and the point I make when I discuss the two definitions of gods.
There is the science definition of a god outside of the realm of science that cannot be disproved.
Then there are all the rest of the god definitions on a continuum from some spiritual essence to the fundie literal interpretations.
On the one hand, a skeptic who is also a god believer has some definition in mind in the latter category, yet rationalizes the lack of empirical evidence and the evidence specific god beliefs are false such as Creation and Noah's flood do not suggest the skeptic's god belief is false because he/she then switches to the former definition of an untestable god belief.
If you only believe in the untestable god, what do you have left in that belief really? Nothing, it is a concept of nothing which is felt, touched, seen, etc anywhere but in one's mind. It is a fantasy of an afterlife. An imaginary friend.
Anything else and it would be testable. If god answers prayers, you could test that. If god punishes sinners, you could test that. If god wrote or inspired the Bible, it wouldn't be such an inconsistent book and it should have had information a god would have known, not information limited by human knowledge at the time. If god was [fill in the blank with your belief] then the text you believe your god beliefs came from should reflect that. And so on...
But skeptic/believers stop that critical thought process. They only carry it through to a point. When they think about the fact prayer answering should be testable they start defining their god differently. When they see the evidence doesn't support Bible stories they start calling the stories symbolic. When the Bible doesn't have evidence it was written or inspired by gods the skeptic who also believes in a god rationalizes men wrote the text, that's the reason.
Pretty soon you have only the definition of an untestable god. But that god doesn't do anything and certainly doesn't do anything the religious text said it did. If that is god then what is the Bible? An unrelated book? Written by the devil? Not intended to have been used?
The two definitions of god are not compatible. The god that science cannot test for allows the skeptic to believe in god, but only if the rest of the entire human concept of gods are discarded.
