Hi Ross
Gyles:
How many times have we been round on this one?
*sings* Dizzy, my head is spinning, like whirlpool it never ends, and it's you Ross making it sin you're making me dizzy ;-)
Seems the burden of proof is on those who claim an external source for these things.
On the contrary, we're quite happy to believe what we believe without folks jumping up and down calling us liars. What's the big deal with that? There is no burden of proof.
No one called anyone a liar. If you are wrong about something but sincere you might be passing misinformation on but you are not intentionally decieving. And extraordinary claims (you know the rest)...
But we seem to agree on the 'faith doesn't need proof' (and on the curious fact that this doesn't stop people of faith trying to prove their faith a lot of the time, even though it is not possible)
I mean, IF they are just internal experiences, it would explain both why no one has ever proved the existence of god or of any paranormal religious experience AND why people would insist on the existence of god despite that.
That might be one potential explanation (and I'm open to that), but why does it have to be the only one (are you open to THAT)?
Because I feel that it is unlikely that there is a god AND that there isn't a god at the same time. It's an either or option. It's like insisting gravity does AND doesn't exist (except you can prove gravity DOES exist). But you know I'm open to the possibility of 'god'; I just find most conceptualisations seem to stem from very human imaginations. If there is a god he's bigger and grander than all these petty human constructs. Unless god is a git, which is a silly idea.
If elephants didn't exist and you'd seen one ANYWAY, you'd consider anyone who insisted they didn't exist because no one had ever proved they exist as silly, as you knew they existed, as you'd seen one.
You're not supposed to be making our arguments for us.
Analogies are not making arguments for you. They might illustrate something about the arguement deists make. If you can fault the analogy, do so, don't fault the making if it.
Of course, faith shouldn't have anything to do with proof. Faith is almost by definiton NOT being able to prove something definitively, but beliving it anyway.
On the contrary, depending on your definition of "faith", for some it IS the evidence.
Faith is the assured expectation of things not yet perceived. I don't have faith in gravity even though I believe it exists, as I believe in it as a result of evidence that is evident where ever it is looked for and whoever it is looked for by.
God or the paranormal are items you HAVE to have faith as they are not evident where ever they are looked for or to anyone who looks for them.
Not that doesn't stop people of faith trying to prove their beliefs are not wrong
I agree, and it's when you enter the field of apologetics that it all goes horribly wrong.
Absolutely. Why people of faith feel they need to apologise I don't know. I don't feel the need to apologise for being a humanist. I know religions have killed millions and caused misery and ignorance, but that I think it to do with the humans, not with the god/s they claim to represent.
How do you scientifically and objectively prove that which is subjective and "state-bound"?
By showing the same experiment has different results depending on where it is perfromed and who by and on whom. Very simple.
It's difficult to achieve consistent results,
IF it is difficult to achieve consistent results you are either playing on the nursery slopes of the bell curve or are proving something IS subjective, or you don't have the right tools to measure with. Or god is hiding behind a Higgs Boson when looked for by someone who doesn't believe but pops out when looked for by someone who does believe. But that is just silly.
Maybe 'the divine' is personified for some (look! the stars! isn't god fab!) and depersonified for others (look! the stars! wow!) , but the personification doesn't make it real (unless one (again) subscribes to Pratchettian theories that belief makes gods exist (and if people stop believing the gods fade away and stop exisiting). Personification might just be a view of the same thing that appears different when viewed from another angle.
It all boils down to this. I am not getting into a horse-drawn cart unless there is a horse in the shafts.
You can tell me how you believe the horse will takes us somewhere nice all you like. You can tell me stories about the horse and your experiences of it. You can tell me how loads of people believe the horse will pull the cart somewhere nice and how you've got a book of stories about the horse and how it takes people somewhere nice.
But there still is no horse in the shafts. Not even an invisable pink one, with or without a horn. And no matter how much you talk about the horse, and how it is there, honest, (or will be soon, or will be visable to me if I click my heels together three times) the cart will not move (unless there is trickery involved; we all know Jesus warned us against people disguising themselves as pantomime horses of light...).
So, obviously, I say 'neigh'.