That's not sufficient support. You offer absolutely no proof that religious people are, as you claim, not capable and commonly supremely logical and rational in every other aspect of their lives. I again point to Lincoln's example.Originally posted by: Infohawk
"Then you have no support for your claim that people of faith should be marginalised."
Sure I do. Marginilizing the faithful will keep serious issues in the hands of people that use /always/ strive to use logic and that can successfully communicate with each other. Moreover, it will take ideas that are baseless out of the debate, saving everyone time. Finally, it will force some of the faithful to understand their irrational ways.
They are on one end of the spectrum in only one specific are. Any claim that people with faith are on the irrational end of the spectrum in any area other than their faith is nothing more than a statement of faith on your part because you cannot prove that your assertion is true.Originally posted by: Infohawk
"This is to prove a point. Prove to me that you are not a figment of my imagination and that I'm not in a coma somwhere dreaming this whole exchange. That's not possible. So according to your argument, I should not believe that you exist because I have no proof. Likewise, you have no proof that I exist."
If you want to argue that there is no absolute reality, then fine, for the sake of argument, I can accept that. There is still a spectrum of observation. Some things can be recorded and sensed, like physical objects, and somethings cannot, like gods. It still remains that faithful are so far to one side of the spectrum that they lack a basic common ground to communicate on. It's one thing to say you don't believe pluto is out there, it's another to say there's a bright light in the sky.
You say that the faithful should not benefit from the "fruits of reason" because they do not contribute to the "fruits of reason". You further say that the "fruits of reason" benefit society. It logically follows from this that you believe that religious people do not benefit society. You don't get to have it both ways.Originally posted by: Infohawk
"The claims I present as yours follow logically from the words and phrasing you chose."
No, they really do not. Let me give you one example:
"So no-one who has faith has ever benefitted humanity? "
Okay, read my first post again. I am saying the faithful can't be communicated with. I am saying the faithful should be brushed aside. That does not mean the faithful have not benefitted humanity. I simply never said that. On the whole, I think they've done more disservice than service, but I'm not going to deny the positive things they have done in specific circumstances.
No, they would come up with some other justification for having the land they want. Religion is almost never a root cause of anything, it is simply used as a justification for doing what people would otherwise do. Even the crusades were not initiated by a religious feeling, religion was warped and co-opted because the rulers of Europe saw that there was great monetary gain in the crusades. Furthermore, you still fail to offer proof for this assertion of yours. Prove to me that without religion there will be no more problems with people like Osama or occurances like Waco. Religion is an excuse for these people. It is not their root cause. Also, prove to me that people like Albert Schweitzer, Abraham Lincoln, and George Washington are problems. All three had extremely strong faith. Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle had faith in the Greek gods. Prove to me that Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle are problems. I can go on, but I think my point is made.Originally posted by: Infohawk
"Just because a very small minority of people who contribute to problems that would exist anyway in one form or another does not make them the cause, and it certainly does not mean that everyone with faith is a problem."
Everyone with faith is a problem. Some are bigger problems than others. I'm not saying one faithful person is responsible for these problems, but they add up. And even if they are not, it is easier just to brush all the faithful aside. Also, the faithful tend to form dangerous groups. So one faithful might be relatively benign, but the group of them are dangerous. Finally, this reminds me of the guns don't kill people, people do argument. The fact is, you get rid of guns, there will be no more shootings. Sure, they'll be murder, but no more shootings. If you get of religion, you'll have no more israel/palestinian osama/waco problems. Yes, hutus will still kill tutsis (or vice versa), but you will not have israelis and palestinians claiming god gave them right to land.
It's in the post I made listing the proofs I requested.Originally posted by: Infohawk
"I notice further that you choose to ignore my rebuttal to your abortion example."
I can't find this? Can you paste it again? Sorry.
Prove it. All you have done thusfar is repeat the phrase, "If you are willing to do that you could be willing to believe anything and do anything." ad nauseum like someone praying a rosary without offering proof of your position. You seem to believe that by repeating it often enough people will believe you.Originally posted by: Infohawk
I strongly believe there can be no meaningful communication between faithful and reasonable people because we have different bases of thought. I also think that all faithful are fundamentally unreasonable, by definition. You believe in something for which there is no reason to believe. If you are willing to do that you could be willing to believe anything and do anything.
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
ZV - I agree with your premise that one act of faith does not mean an individual necessarily gives up all reason and logic in the rest of their lives. In practice it most likely doesn't happen. What I'm saying however, is that this one act of faith means they have a tendency to accept other beliefs on faith as well. It's not an absolute, but at the same time their decision-making process is suspect.
Here's an analogy: Think of it in terms of the journalist. He may fact-check his articles for years on end. If one day, he deliberately fails to fact-check an article that he personally believes in strongly, and later it is revealed that he has done so, his journalism from that point on would be suspect. How can you trust that the journalist has done his due-diligence?
Did you notice where I pointed out that there is no hard, fast rule, only a tendency?Originally posted by: WinstonSmith
Explain Newton.
Name one single person who has never bypassed logic and reason in at least one decision. Not possible. If you say that one must marginalise people of faith because they have once gone outside reason, then you have to marginalise every person who has ever lived.Originally posted by: Infohawk
I re-read dealmonkey's post and I agree with a lot of it. I cannot absolutely say that someone could have faith in god and not use reason in every other place in their life. I do not think that is inconsistent with my original post. At the risk of repeating myself, I think fundamentally we cannot communicate however. That is because they do not fully accept the tools of logic. That one act of faith means they are not really accepting logic (it's not good enough to just accept it in 99.99% of the cases). I do not want to have to guess how much they are using logic and how much they are using faith. An important aspect of my original post is that I am making a policy decision. I think it is prudent to brush aside the faithful because it will save the rest of society time on the whole. It is true a faithful could bring a logical argument to a discussion, but I do not want to waste my time when, as dealmonkey said, because they could be really using some faith. There is an element of trust in there too (as dealmonkey said).
Originally posted by: Infohawk
"Name one single person who has never bypassed logic and reason in at least one decision. Not possible. If you say that one must marginalise people of faith because they have once gone outside reason, then you have to marginalise every person who has ever lived."
To err is human. Everyone makes mistake in reasoning. But those who have faith are choosing not to reason in one situation. For me that triggers a lack of trust and signals that any discussion will be fruitless because they could refuse to accept reason whenever they want to.
"If you say that one must marginalise people of faith because they have once gone outside reason, then you have to marginalise every person who has ever lived.""
That is not true. I could marginilize people of faith because they do not accept reason, but I could accept people who have made mistakes of reasoning. This is not inconsistent. In one case, people are refusing reason in one situation, and in another, they have not applied reason (they are not refusing it, they just made a mistake).
"Your statement, "I do not want to have to guess how much they are using logic and how much they are using faith." is nothing more or less than laziness. That's not rational you know."
I don't think it's lazy. It's a heuristic response. I have a limited time in life. It is reasonable to cut down on unfruitful discussion by eliminating all faithful, even if some of them might lead to fruitful discussions. Many of society's rules are based on such responses. Is it lazy to not do an in depth background check on all airline passengers who have guns and delve deep into their lives to see if they might actually use those guns? No, as a general rule, no gun- no bording, even if it is possible for someone to have a gun on a plane and not use it.
You may want to reconsider that assertion in light of President Bush and his general "appointed by God" mentality, and specifically his statements that God factored into his decision to go to war with Iraq. Furthermore, how can we be sure that an individual's decision-making and perceptions aren't being skewed by their faith? If they're willing to establish belief in a vacuum of facts, how can we be sure they're acting in everyone's best interests. Much is at stake when considering the relative power of the President.Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
The journalist issue is, at best, a very weak analogy. If a journalist fails to fact-check, the consequence is that his readers suffer. If a person chooses faith in the abstract, no-one outside that specific person is affected in any way. Now, if reason is not used when applying that faith, people get hurt and that's bad. Reason and logic must absolutely be used in the application of faith, but the choice to believe in and of itself, as an abstract choice, needs no precursor. Nobody suffers from the irrational choice of faith unless the application is likewise irrational. If the irrational faith is applied in a rational manner (which happens far more often than your availability heuristic fallacy claims) then there is no downside.
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
The journalist issue is, at best, a very weak analogy. If a journalist fails to fact-check, the consequence is that his readers suffer. If a person chooses faith in the abstract, no-one outside that specific person is affected in any way. Now, if reason is not used when applying that faith, people get hurt and that's bad. Reason and logic must absolutely be used in the application of faith, but the choice to believe in and of itself, as an abstract choice, needs no precursor. Nobody suffers from the irrational choice of faith unless the application is likewise irrational. If the irrational faith is applied in a rational manner (which happens far more often than your availability heuristic fallacy claims) then there is no downside.
You may want to reconsider that assertion in light of President Bush and his general "appointed by God" mentality, and specifically his statements that God factored into his decision to go to war with Iraq. Furthermore, how can we be sure that an individual's decision-making and perceptions aren't being skewed by their faith? If they're willing to establish belief in a vacuum of facts, how can we be sure they're acting in everyone's best interests. Much is at stake when considering the relative power of the President.
So no-one else has ever continued a mistake? Sorry, you're not getting out of it that easily. An instance is an instance. Refusal of reason is refusal of reason, whether it be corrected soon, after a long while, or never.Originally posted by: Infohawk
"Name one single person who has never bypassed logic and reason in at least one decision. Not possible. If you say that one must marginalise people of faith because they have once gone outside reason, then you have to marginalise every person who has ever lived."
To err is human. Everyone makes mistake in reasoning. But those who have faith are choosing not to reason in one situation. For me that triggers a lack of trust and signals that any discussion will be fruitless because they could refuse to accept reason whenever they want to.
"If you say that one must marginalise people of faith because they have once gone outside reason, then you have to marginalise every person who has ever lived.""
That is not true. I could marginilize people of faith because they do not accept reason, but I could accept people who have made mistakes of reasoning. This is not inconsistent. In one case, people are refusing reason in one situation, and in another, they have not applied reason (they are not refusing it, they just made a mistake).
Weak analogy. The downside potential of messing up once and letting a person on a plane with a gun who should not have one is almost infinitely worse than the downside potential of not marginalising people of faith even if one accepts your warped worldview.Originally posted by: Infohawk
"Your statement, "I do not want to have to guess how much they are using logic and how much they are using faith." is nothing more or less than laziness. That's not rational you know."
I don't think it's lazy. It's a heuristic response. I have a limited time in life. It is reasonable to cut down on unfruitful discussion by eliminating all faithful, even if some of them might lead to fruitful discussions. Many of society's rules are based on such responses. Is it lazy to not do an in depth background check on all airline passengers who have guns and delve deep into their lives to see if they might actually use those guns? No, as a general rule, no gun- no bording, even if it is possible for someone to have a gun on a plane and not use it.
Originally posted by: WinstonSmith
Originally posted by: Infohawk
"Name one single person who has never bypassed logic and reason in at least one decision. Not possible. If you say that one must marginalise people of faith because they have once gone outside reason, then you have to marginalise every person who has ever lived."
To err is human. Everyone makes mistake in reasoning. But those who have faith are choosing not to reason in one situation. For me that triggers a lack of trust and signals that any discussion will be fruitless because they could refuse to accept reason whenever they want to.
"If you say that one must marginalise people of faith because they have once gone outside reason, then you have to marginalise every person who has ever lived.""
That is not true. I could marginilize people of faith because they do not accept reason, but I could accept people who have made mistakes of reasoning. This is not inconsistent. In one case, people are refusing reason in one situation, and in another, they have not applied reason (they are not refusing it, they just made a mistake).
"Your statement, "I do not want to have to guess how much they are using logic and how much they are using faith." is nothing more or less than laziness. That's not rational you know."
I don't think it's lazy. It's a heuristic response. I have a limited time in life. It is reasonable to cut down on unfruitful discussion by eliminating all faithful, even if some of them might lead to fruitful discussions. Many of society's rules are based on such responses. Is it lazy to not do an in depth background check on all airline passengers who have guns and delve deep into their lives to see if they might actually use those guns? No, as a general rule, no gun- no bording, even if it is possible for someone to have a gun on a plane and not use it.
Your position is illogical. You have a belief unsubstiantated by data. You have faith in it. I know many scientists, some of which are Christians (although I expect it would hold for any religion I am familiar with). Their data or conclusions are not in any more or less suspect than any others. They do the job and do it rationally. More often, when something is bogus happens it's a matter of ego. When errors happen it's is often do to an experimental bias or mistakes in analysis. Never have I know a problem to be due to faith.
What you have done is state a belief completely unencumbered by data. Unless you can provide data as to the unreliability of those who posess faith vs. those who do not, you have no argument at all. You present a view as you think it OUGHT to be, rather than how it is.
You have presented a thesis, but your research does not allow for a defense.
Also, why do you think the the totality of existence is amenable to reason? What if the most basic levels of reality are either too complex or too simple to comprehend? Why is human reason sufficient? How could you understand? Gödel wants to know.
How do you know what is in everyone's best interest. I'd love to hear it because that topic has been hotly debated since the dawn of time and minds wiser than anyone in this forum (myself certainly included) have been unable to figure it out.Originally posted by: DealMonkey
You may want to reconsider that assertion in light of President Bush and his general "appointed by God" mentality, and specifically his statements that God factored into his decision to go to war with Iraq. Furthermore, how can we be sure that an individual's decision-making and perceptions aren't being skewed by their faith? If they're willing to establish belief in a vacuum of facts, how can we be sure they're acting in everyone's best interests. Much is at stake when considering the relative power of the President.Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
The journalist issue is, at best, a very weak analogy. If a journalist fails to fact-check, the consequence is that his readers suffer. If a person chooses faith in the abstract, no-one outside that specific person is affected in any way. Now, if reason is not used when applying that faith, people get hurt and that's bad. Reason and logic must absolutely be used in the application of faith, but the choice to believe in and of itself, as an abstract choice, needs no precursor. Nobody suffers from the irrational choice of faith unless the application is likewise irrational. If the irrational faith is applied in a rational manner (which happens far more often than your availability heuristic fallacy claims) then there is no downside.
You say that people should never operate on anything aside from reason. If you believe than then you must logically believe that reason is capable of making sense of any and all situations which will ever be encountered. Otherwise, to abandon reason would have to be acceptable in certain instances and therefore you could not make the claim you are making, namely you could not make the claim that to abandon reason marks a person as being incapable of communication.Originally posted by: Infohawk
"Also, why do you think the the totality of existence is amenable to reason?"
Who said I believe that? You are making assumptions.
No, but if they are then it throws one gigantic monkey wrench into this little logical house of cards that you've built up.Originally posted by: Infohawk
"What if the most basic levels of reality are either too complex or too simple to comprehend?"
What if? Are you suggesting that is proof for Allah?
Sufficient for the work you purport it to be able to do, i.e. everything.Originally posted by: Infohawk
"Why is human reason sufficient?"
Sufficient for what?
Wrong. Sorry. You're making the freshman mistake of confusing correlation with causality. In almost every instance the impetus for so-called "religious" wars has been secular. Religion has been pasted on top of conflicts that would have occured with or without the presence of faith.Originally posted by: Infohawk
History shows hundreds of millions of deaths because of faith.
Originally posted by: WinstonSmith
The topic was about religious faith. What about faith in any "ism" though? Communism? What about Conservatism, or Liberalism for that matter. I maintain it isn't the presence of faith, but the lack of doubt. People can have faith in a thing or idea, but yet ask themselves if they are doing the right thing. Most do. In Bush's case, I begin to wonder about basic sanity. IMO Bush co-opted religion to validate his view not that religion told him what to do. The often maligned question "What would Jesus do?" is a very important for those who do have faith. Would Jesus pick up a gun and don a helment? I think not. I think so called Christians have ignored the most basic tenets of their own religion which they believe came from the author himself. That is a fault in character. WWJD? Not what Bush is doing. Many Presidents had faith. Unfortunately faith and insanity are not mutually exclusive.
Originally posted by: alchemize
I have a theoretical question...
If I could prove God existed, would you believe?
