Haha! That might get interesting. Shall we start with chapter 7?I thought you were going to start quoting from Song of Solomon![]()
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Haha! That might get interesting. Shall we start with chapter 7?I thought you were going to start quoting from Song of Solomon![]()
Are we picking dates and the odds for this one already? How much syrup on the line?Not the new one.
Sirhr
So that’s why the Catholics drink so much?On St. Patrick's day.
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I will reiterate, ultimately any position you take requires faith. As you said nothing can be 100% proven, so any position you take requires you to trust or have confidence in your position. However some positions correspond to reality more than others.So faith then. Not actually "truth".
That is not correct. There are many facts that we know about the Christian faith, facts that are historically verifiable.Belief in the absence of actual fact based on testimony.
You are right, I am not looking for a metric for truth, nor did I ask anyone to try and give me one. When I said “ this shows that we need to have a metric for understanding truth other than someone's sole interpretation” I was not soliciting ideas for this metric, rather I was showing that one was needed and I gave that needed metric immediately after. I already have a metric and have spent much of my adult life pondering epistemology.So you're not actually looking for a metric for truth. Because one exists already.
Sure. Funny snippet.... a coffee cup does not hold water...
As you said nothing can be 100% proven
There are many facts that we know about the Christian faith, facts that are historically verifiable
It would appear there are "many" facts in this document which are are verifiable. You conceded one of these statements to be true earlier.A hydrogen atom contains one proton.
A hydrogen atom contains quarks which are the smallest particles in the universe.
A hydrogen atom contains one electron.
I am not looking for a metric for truth, nor did I ask anyone to try and give me one.
All this shows that we need to have a metric for understanding truth other than someone's sole interpretation.
I never said facts were the same as reason. We reason based on facts and I have not conflated these terms. Additionally there are different types of evidence direct and circumstantial. One relies on inference, one does notThis doesn't falsify the statement that belief in the absence of fact is faith. (Careful here before you start substituting words again. Fact is not the same as reason or evidence.)
Finally it is not true that belief in the absence of fact is faith. What you are talking about is blind faith.
I will quote a few parts here but I suggest you read the whole article:
Question:
In many conversations with atheists and agnostics, they insist that "faith" means "belief without evidence".
Virtually every atheist I've known defines faith in that way.