On Nov 22, 3:19 am, Joe <
thelemiccatho...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Nov 22, 1:59 am, Deidzoeb <
deidz...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > > First I define what behaviors I will consider sins.
> > > > Then I refrain from those behaviors.
> > > > Miracle! God has given me the strength to refrain from those behaviors
> > > > which I decided to refrain from (and the power to rationalize all
> > > > behaviors that I feel like continuing).
>
> > > Straw man. The Saints did not invent the Law. God give the Law
> > > through Moses, who himself did not have the strength to carry it out.
> > > He gives His Saints the grace to do what Moses could not do, and you
> > > expect me to believe that you can do it all on your own, no help from
> > > anyone. I think we are not even thinking of the same standard.
>
> > You attribute the Law to God. I attribute the Law to humans who
> > claimed they were speaking on behalf of God.
>
> > Not a straw man. Just another disagreement.
>
> Your straw man was in your assertion that the Saints themselves
> invented it. You wan to say Moses invented it, fine. Then Moses was
> a genius, no doubt, but the Saints, for their part, did not pick and
> choose for themselves what to take of Moses.
This is a big red herring. It doesn't matter whether characters in a
story invented their laws, or whether the author of the stories
invented the laws, or whether they were all following earlier
traditions.
Let's put it another way. I decide to adhere to some law, accepting
that some behaviors are "sins". I avoid those behaviors. Where's the
miracle in following some set of laws that you consciously decided to
adhere to?
> > > > No, I don't have faith in saints or gods or spirits. Given that faith
> > > > is a decision, and I told you my decision long ago, it's funny that
> > > > you'd use an exclamation mark: "You have no faith at all!"
>
> > > Why are we discussing any of this again? If you have already decided,
> > > then why bother?
>
> > You pop in here talking about your grandiose final message, as if
> > people are going to be talking about "The Prophet Joseph Geloso (peace
> > be upon him)" pretty soon, and you wonder why people would bother
> > discussing it?
>
> Aw, well, at least you noticed that. That's good. It's a start. But
> realize it's mot about me.
Could have fooled me! It sounded mostly about you, with a few
paragraphs at the end mixing Crowley symbols with Christianity. I'd
like to discuss licensing this idea from you and converting it to
Dungeons and Dragons or some other fantasy roleplaying rules. Can't
wait to fight Eucharist the Copper Dragon. Or maybe players could play
as the Copper Dragon. Wheeeeee!
> > > Live your life sans faith for all I care. The
> > > problem you create with me is when you insist that yours is the only
> > > logical path there is.
>
> > I don't remember saying that I have discovered any ultimate logical
> > path. I've just been trying to point out the ways you set aside logic
> > and make leaps of faith, as if faith is something we should value when
> > trying to understand objective truths. If you set aside logic and
> > substitute faith, you have decided not to take the logical path. No
> > amount of calling it the logical path or "another logical path" will
> > change that.
>
> There is no setting aside necessary, to have faith. You keep
> asserting it, but you cannot seem to show it.
If you have different definitions of faith and reason, especially
rotating definitions that depend on jargon terms from the church,
throwing in "grace" and "a decision in the will" and whatever else,
then no, I can't show it. Using commonly accepted definitions of
faith, it is by definition that faith is incompatible with reason.
> > There is no logic compelling me to believe.
> > The house of logic that you try to build is set on foundations of
> > faith, which is why it does not hold.
>
> Or why, on the contrary, it does hold. What about Faith do you
> imagine is unreliable?
Faith is an emotion. It's a decision to follow emotion instead of
reason. Faith in the Bible or Catholic dogma is as reliable as faith
in the Qur'an or the Book of Mormon or in a leader like Elijah
Muhammed or Joseph Smith. If you can support your decision to believe
the Bible based on tradition and "subjective evidence", then any
belief could be based on subjective evidence.
> > Any logic with which you try to
> > shore up the walls is undermined by the faith, the anti-logic, the
> > decision to reject reason and logic, that you've poured in your
> > foundation.
>
> You have not demonstrated any abandonment of logic in me. You have
> not supported your claim that faith is "anti-logic." Thus you are
> begging those questions.
We can't agree on a definition of faith. The one I use and believe is
commonly used is by definition a rejection of logic. We've been
through it before.
> > Faith is a thing that people use to support beliefs when they can't
> > use or refuse to use reason or logical proofs.
>
> That is like a slogan or something. That is pure rhetoric, based on
> your emotional reaction to the idea of faith.
Faith: "Belief that does not rest on logical proof or material
evidence."
That definition is problematic, because it tells what faith is not,
instead of telling what it is. I'd tack on to that definition "belief
that rests on hope, or loyalty to an idea based on hope."
I realize there are multiple definitions of faith, but this is a
common one. If a belief does not rest on logical proof or material
evidence, I don't know what else there is to ground the belief in
other than emotion.
The options seem to be that a believer can:
1. consciously decide to take emotions as basis for a particular
belief, as some Christians seem to do when they talk bad about science
and logic and materialism.
2. take emotions as basis for a particular belief, but claim that it's
not emotion.
3. base beliefs on logic, which would rule out belief in unproven
religious assertions.
As I've said before, I don't think a person needs to reject logic from
their lives entirely when they have faith in some things. Each belief
can be based in logic or emotion. But when it's faith, it's emotion,
and it requires setting aside logic and reason, valuing emotion more
highly than logic or reason for that particular belief.
So what we have here is a basic disagreement on definitions, not a
case of me fabricating unsupported rhetoric. Shall we agree to
disagree on the definition?
> There is a perfectly logical reason why the teachings of Faith cannot
> be proved using logic alone. Logic is limited, whereas Faith is
> infinite.
If faith is beyond logic or not something that can be proved with
logic, then why do you argue about it being compatible with logic? If
it's not within logic, then it's outside of logic, which is a
different way of expressing what I've been saying.
> Faith is meritorious, whereas logic is merely necessary.
> If Faith could be arrived at from pure logic, there would no longer be
> merit in it, and God wills that there be merit in it still. God wills
> that you should decide with your free will to believe or not to
> believe.
Your arguments are often weakened when you simply repeat assertions
based on dogma, like I am wrong because "faith is infinite, faith is
meritorious." They don't work as support for your claims. They just
bring up new assertions that need to be supported, in addition to the
old assertions. It's like saying the sky is blue because blue is good.
> Your doctrine, above, that "Faith is a thing that people use to
> support beliefs when they can't use or refuse to use reason or logical
> proofs," is not the truth, and belief in it prevents you from coming
> to Faith, because you erroneously believe you would be committing a
> logical error.
My doctrine above is the obvious conclusion based on a common
definition of faith.
My appreciation for logic prevents me from consciously basing my
beliefs on emotion. By this definition, faith is a logical error, yes,
that's another way of putting it.
> But there is no logical error in believing.
That sentence just looks funny out of context. It's not the believing
that is logical or illogical. It's the support for a belief that we
should be talking about. Beliefs based on logic are logical (clearly).
Beliefs not based on logical proofs or material evidence (i.e. the
common definition of "faith" that I am working from), are clearly not
logical. It's not that hard.
> There is no logical error
> in disbelieving. It is free will, either way.
Yes, we have the free will to reject logic and consciously base our
beliefs on emotion. Having free will about the decision tells us
nothing about whether the decision is logical or not.
> ... That is why I said you have no balls.
Thank you for the Ann Coulter effect. I believe I can make a good case
against your claims even without *your words being your worst enemy*,
but feel free to help me in that way if you want to.
[The part above in between asterisks is what I like to call *The Ann
Coulter* effect. It doesn't imply a political value, only a person's
ability to say things that undermine their own credibility, requiring
no rebuttal for reasonable people.]
> I, at least,
> can admit that it is my will to believe, and I believe even though
> there is no logic compelling me to do so, because I want to.
Hey, whoa there, why are we arguing then? I'm arguing that you're not
using logic. I thought you were arguing that logic is compatible with
whatever it is that you think you're basing beliefs on. But you admit
"no logic" compells your beliefs. Are we just splitting hairs about
whether faith is an emotion, or whether it's some non-logical thing
that is compatible with logic? It sounds like you don't care about
logic much, which makes it conspicuous that you argue so desperately
in favor of it, almost.
> > Given that reason and
> > logic are the only proper supports,
>
> It is impossible to build anything supported by reason and logic
> alone. What supports reason and logic?
Didn't you tell me in the past that we should take reason and/or logic
as "axiomatic"? You're asking for them to be supported, but agreeing
that we can take them for granted and don't need to support them?
> 1. Reason and logic are the only proper supports.
> 2. Reason tells us that nothing can support itself.
> 3. Logic tells us that a thing either has support or it does not.
>
> Thus, to be logical (3), we must admit that either reason and logic
> have support or they do not. Now if they properly have it, then they
> must support themselves, since 1. But they cannot support themselves,
> since 2. Therefore they are unsupported.
>
> I am not arguing the invalidity of reason and logic, only the fallacy
> in 1. Reason and logic are valid and axiomatic. I.e. we accept them
> "on faith."
If we accept logic and reason on faith, then we can accept anything we
want, because faith is just an emotion. There would be no logic or
reason to oppose our desires for any belief. If logic and reason rest
on faith, then everything rests on emotion.
If we don't take it as axiomatic, then all reason and logic are ways
of rationalizing, fitting arguments to support one's desired
conclusion. It seems to eliminate the possibility of our finding or
observing any truth. We would just be stumbling over the truth
occasionally, guided by our emotions.
"I am not arguing the invalidity of reason and logic, only the fallacy
[that reason and logic are the only proper supports]."
Let's set aside whether the validity of reason and logic and talk
about whether there are any other proper supports. What else would you
rely on besides reason and logic? Is faith compatible with reason and
logic, or is it a kind of support other than reason and logic (by your
understanding of the word faith)?
How does anything other than logic and reason function as a support,
since the idea of a claim needing to be "supported" is a way of saying
that it's logical? I mean, when we say "support" it's basically saying
"logical support". How can subjective "evidence" or a non-logical
tidbit work within a framework where we are looking for logical
support?
The need for support is only something a person looks for if they
value logic. If you don't value logic or reason enough to use those
kinds of supports, why not just throw out the requirement for
"support" of any kind? Why not say that no support is needed?
> > > Given that faith is a decision, and
> > > given that you have already decided, I think the rest of it is a vain
> > > intellectual exercise, and I wish, if that is how it is, that you
> > > would cease to waste my time.
>
> > Funny how that works. I'm wasting your time, but you're not wasting my
> > time.
>
> Because you enjoy all this arguing.
And you respond because someone puts a gun to your head? Because you
have pure motives to help your fellow man find the truth, but I don't
have that motive?
What.
Evar.
> > > > You're willing to set aside reason,
>
> > > I am unwilling to do so.
>
> > Choosing to value faith when seeking these kinds of truths necessarily
> > requires you to set aside reason as a standard.
>
> Since when was reason a "standard?" I thought reason was a tool. i
> do not worship reason. Setting up standards smacks of worship, and
> that is idolatry. Reason is not the arbiter of everything.
This gets back to the discussion of "support." You seem to accept that
arguments ought to be supported. You argued that you had some other
kind of valid support, not that support was unnecessary. What else
besides a standard valuing reason and logic would you base the need
for support?
Setting up standards smacks of worship? I don't follow. It's a matter
of priority, the decision to value reason or emotion.
> > If you valued reason,
> > you would rely on it instead of faith.
>
> No, reason is not God. I rely on God, not "faith." Faith is relying
> on God. Faith is an action. Reason only helps faith; it does not
> determine it and it is not opposed to it.
This makes for an interesting line of thought:
1. "I rely on God, not 'faith.'"
2. "Faith is relying on God."
So to rephrase 1, "I rely on God, not [relying on God]."
> > If you value faith, you are
> > relying on it instead of reason.
>
> False dichotomy. There is no contradiction between faith and reason.
> The one does not require setting aside the other. It is your
> contention that they do, but you have not once showed anything
> illogical or unreasonable in Faith.
It is my understanding that faith and reason are incompatible bases
for any particular belief, by definition of the word faith.
> > You define it all up and down and left and
> > right, but it still comes back to emotion.
>
> You wouldn't know, so you are talking right out of your ass there,
> chum. Not fooling anyone either.
Hi, remember me? We have participated in debates on internet groups
and message boards at lengths that could amount to books. If we
gathered together all of our written communications back and forth
between each other, we would need to break them into multiple volumes
to make them more marketable.
I have read how you defined faith. I have read how you redefined
faith. I have argued about it extensively. Perhaps we could issue a
slim volume devoted to our discussions about the definition and
implications of faith. I didn't agree with your esoteric definitions,
but I certainly know them.
> > If reason were involved in
> > any of these decisions, theists would give their logical proofs for
> > why these things are correct, and there would be no need to claim it's
> > a matter of loyalty or trust or hope, aka faith.
>
> If faith could be compelled by logic it would no longer be faith.
Then why do you continue arguing that logic is compatible with faith?
How can it be outside of logic but not illogical?
> > It's a strong feeling that
> > proves to you God exists and Catholic dogma is best.
>
> It is the Holy Spirit proving that to me. It is on a far deeper level
> than emotions, which really are pretty close to the surface. Yes I do
> feel it sometimes. I also feel the sun on my face sometimes, and that
> is not an emotion.
"Feel" the sun on your face. That's a PUN, not an argument about
emotional feelings. Step up your game. Bring those balls that you like
to keep talking about.
> There is no way for me to convey the experience to
> you using words, nor even to describe it, since analogies necessarily
> fail.
That's convenient. Let me try it.
"You're wrong, but I just can't express why."
Hmm. No sir. I didn't like it.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=CN-5-_2xJJI
> There is also no way for me to convey to you the conviction
> that experiences are not even the primary thing. I am sure you base
> your whole life on your experiences. What else? But there is more to
> life than what you can experience of it, and the action of the Holy
> Spirit in the interior of the soul transcends the experience of the
> one upon whom He is acting.
So does the dark hand of Kali Ma, but I don't see you cutting off any
heads in deferrence to her. These are the same empty assertions of any
other religion, any huckster like Sylvia Browne selling her miraculous
psychic abilities, any mistaken person who voted for Bush because they
got the impression he would sign the Kyoto treaty. Unsupported by
anything that would be accepted as support. Acceptable only if you
don't value support, or accept emotion as a valid support.
> And, I know that it transcends my
> experience, in a way that transcends experience. By now you should be
> able to admit that you don't have a clue what I am talking about.
I know what you're talking about. You keep talking about my balls.
> Or,
> you can take the more predictable route, and conform yourself to your
> history, and state that I am talking about some emotion or other.
> That will satisfy your zeal to categorize everything and believe you
> have it all pegged. The only thing it won't do is actually peg it for
> you, but since you believe it is all just my emotions anyway, why
> should that matter to you? If you can convince yourself that it is
> all just my emotions, then you can dismiss it as such, and never let
> yourself be bothered by another Christian for as long as you live.
Except in so far as they dominate my community and often announce
their intent to discriminate against non-Christians like me. I
shouldn't be bothered by that much.
(Instead of finding individual cases of discrimination against
atheists, let's talk about GHW Bush saying he didn't consider atheists
to be citizens, or the recent polls that found a majority of
Minnesotans would not vote for an atheist.)
> > > > and
> > > > logic,
>
> > > I will not set aside logic. Faith does not require such a setting
> > > aside, and I value logic highly. Were it not for logic, no one could
> > > know anything at all about anything, much less about God. As it is,
> > > logic is as valuable to theology as it is to the lesser sciences.
>
> > > > in favor of emotion.
>
> > > Faith is not emotion, and a decision in the will is not an emotion
> > > either.
>
> > So where did "decision in the will" come into this? Is that supposed
> > to be synonymous with faith?
>
> No. But if this terminology is new to you, then you have been paying
> even less attention then I thought, if that were even possible.
This is not a group intended to quiz each other on our favorite dogmas
and esoteric terms. Don't pat yourself on the back too hard for
winning a game that your opponent didn't even know he was supposed to
be playing.
> > A decision is reaching a conclusion. It could be based on logical
> > proofs or emotion.
>
> No, that is not a decision, that is an argument. A decision is to do
> something.
Would you say "I decided I'm going to the store later today" or would
it only make sense if you were on your way to the store?
A decision might be invalidated if you don't follow through on it, but
it doesn't stop being a decision based on the fact that you haven't
done something yet. Where do you get this? What are you going to argue
next, that red and yellow don't make orange?
> The conclusion of an argument can be supported by logic or emotion,
> usually referred to in this context as rhetoric. Then you can take
> the conclusion of your argument and decide to do something with it, or
> decide to do nothing with it, and those would be decisions, in your
> will, after you had reached a conclusion in your mind. Not the same
> thing.
Is this an esoteric definition of "decide" as spelled out by some
member of the Golden Dawn or OTO?
Common definitions of "decide" from
http://www.answers.com/decide&r=67
v.tr.
To settle conclusively all contention or uncertainty about: decide a
case; decided the dispute in favor of the workers.
To make up one's mind about: decide what to do.
To influence or determine the outcome of: A few votes decided the
election.
To cause to make or reach a decision.
v.intr.
To pronounce a judgment; announce a verdict.
To make up one's mind.
None of those explicitly mention carrying out the judgement, following
through on it.
If I reach the decision that I will clip my fingernails, and someone
knocks on the door distracting me from doing it, it doesn't cease to
be a decision. It doesn't become a decision only when I pick up
clippers or apply pressure to them.