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Old 07-20-2002, 12:49 PM   #11
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Automaton:
Quote:
I'd believe I should up my medication.
In other words, you do not trust your own judgment. This being the case, how can you be sure that your current beliefs are sound?
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Old 07-20-2002, 01:05 PM   #12
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Quote:
Originally posted by AJ113:
<strong>Automaton:

In other words, you do not trust your own judgment. This being the case, how can you be sure that your current beliefs are sound?</strong>
I think auto reffered to one time experiences rather than learning.
Generally, an atheist's belief is not based on a single experience.
Even if a person's belief was triggered by an experience/miracle he must rely on information for identification.

[ July 20, 2002: Message edited by: Theli ]</p>
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Old 07-20-2002, 01:21 PM   #13
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Quote:
Originally posted by Theli:
<strong>

I never understood Deism.
Is a deist a person who only believes in a designer god, but has no additional attributes to that god?</strong>
There are a couple of different forms, but I suppose the most common is that of a rational belief in a creator-being who exerts no supernatural influence over the natural world and who engages in no revelation-type actions with regard to his creations.

<strong>
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And, what is the difference between deism and pantheism?</strong>
Pantheism is the doctrine that the totality of universal forces and laws can be called "God." It makes nearly no sense to me, unless, perhaps one wants to endow a minimal degree of anthropomorphism in order to have something to worship or give thanks to.
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Old 07-20-2002, 01:26 PM   #14
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Theli:
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I think auto reffered to one time experiences rather than learning.
Generally, an atheist's belief is not based on a single experience.
Even if a person's belief was triggered by an experience/miracle he must rely on information for identification.
I'm sorry, I have no idea what you mean. Some clarification needed, please.
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Old 07-20-2002, 03:47 PM   #15
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Philosoft...

Thanks for the info.

Quote:
There are a couple of different forms, but I suppose the most common is that of a rational belief in a creator-being who exerts no supernatural influence over the natural world and who engages in no revelation-type actions with regard to his creations.
In what way is the deist's god a "being"?

Quote:
Pantheism is the doctrine that the totality of universal forces and laws can be called "God." It makes nearly no sense to me, unless, perhaps one wants to endow a minimal degree of anthropomorphism in order to have something to worship or give thanks to.
Yeah... seems pretty silly to me to.
I don't think the patheistic "god" can be much of a hit. Most people will probably not want to believe in it, since it apperantly has no emotional appeal.
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Old 07-20-2002, 04:02 PM   #16
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Aj113...

I don't know if I can put it more clearly.
If you base your belief on a onetime experience that was "out of this world" so to speak, the chance that your belief was based on hallucination or a false assumption is greater than if your belief was based on knowledge/logic.

This is one reason why people tend to tie every freak accident or overwhelming experience with the godbelief they know most about/is most common where they live.

I don't think good judgement is of any use if the knowledge you have prior to the experience is false.

[ July 20, 2002: Message edited by: Theli ]</p>
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Old 07-20-2002, 05:00 PM   #17
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Quote:
Originally posted by Theli:
<strong>

In what way is the deist's god a "being"?</strong>
In the sense that it is said to be a singular thing that exists, rather than a label for a collection of things, as pantheism.

<strong>
Quote:
I don't think the patheistic "god" can be much of a hit. Most people will probably not want to believe in it, since it apperantly has no emotional appeal.</strong>
In addition, it doesn't really describe a 'thing.' It's like a "whole is greater than the sum of its parts" or an 'emergent quality,' as per theories of the mind. I don't regard the 'mind' as a separate thing, so I don't feel the need to refer to emergent qualities of the brain as 'mind.' Similarly, I think the pantheistic "God" doesn't describe a thing.
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Old 07-20-2002, 06:37 PM   #18
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In other words, you do not trust your own judgment. This being the case, how can you be sure that your current beliefs are sound?
I do trust my judgement, my judgement whether or not something is merely a hallucination. Or are you saying that in a circumstances where what you are seeing is very likely a hallucination (Jesus and John Lennon riding around town on a walrus), would you simply say, "Well I am seeing this, so it must be actually happening?" Presuming you are a theist, why don't you apply the same standard to God's -lack- of manifestation, as evidence that the phenomena of God's love, or whatever, is not actually happening?

Most people's "direct, mystical experiences" with their personal diety of choice reflect very closesly a fluctuation in neurotransmitter balances in their brain, to give them a similar to LSD experience. Theists may claim that the drugs, or 5-HT receptors, or whatever, have some kind of magical curse on them, so when you take a certain drug which binds to neurotransmitter sites, God somehow springs into action and reveals himself to them. Now this is a very arbitrary way to behave for a deity. Instead of condoning the use of potentially dangerous hallucinogens, why doesn't God simply reveal himself to those who seek him (this way he could prevent a lot of hellfire, but for some strange -- or not so strange, according to atheists -- reason, this does not occur.)
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Old 07-20-2002, 07:15 PM   #19
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Within human experience, I think the best argument for the existence of a god always boils down to "I/We don't know."
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Old 07-20-2002, 07:29 PM   #20
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Quote:
Theli: I don't know if I can put it more clearly.
If you base your belief on a onetime experience that was "out of this world" so to speak, the chance that your belief was based on hallucination or a false assumption is greater than if your belief was based on knowledge/logic.

This is one reason why people tend to tie every freak accident or overwhelming experience with the godbelief they know most about/is most common where they live.

I don't think good judgement is of any use if the knowledge you have prior to the experience is false.
Thank you for the clarification. So it is reasonable to regard sensory experiences as hallucinogenic if they do not corellate with our personal beliefs?
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