Anpu99 wrote:Did anyone ever see the film "Monty pythons life of Brian" the "Peoples Front of Judia" leaps to mind on this forum. Without direct experience you will always know nothing. Stop the talk and DO. Reach for the sword and strike. Only then will you know the true meaning of battle. Aircraft were built by men who longed to fly, not by those who only spoke of it. There is a knack to flying that is gained only through experience. Talk as much as you like about riding bikes but cornering one at a hundred miles an hour takes a different skill. We should all be seeing the obvious here. The answers lie within, in deeper experience that is. Can it not be more plain to your sight?
Excellent! It is most important to distinguish between believers who have experienced God, and therefore believe. They have authentic faith, "the evidence of things hoped for." The dogmatists assert a choice to believe. Similarly, atheists who simply won't bother looking for evidence or experience, like the dogmatic believers, assert their choice. Some atheists like to claim that their unbelief is based on some sort of logical position, instead of simple preference choice. These are probably under ethical pressure, since if God really is out there, He has all sorts of ethical claims on those He created, and loves. Being an atheist is then sort of like saying your biological father doesn't exist. Like some parents write off children who broke some rule.
But, logic is good stuff, and is rather damaged by being dragged into such choices. Those who logically defend their atheism bend the rules of logic and ruin it. Technically, in philosophy, logic is simply a set of rules that derives the consequences of certain presuppositions. If one presupposes one's own long term survival is good, or desirable, then atheism is quite illogical. But, a masochist seeking a logical solution to getting as much pain and suffering as possible, with it's attendant pleasure of course, will find atheism a very logically derived wisdom.
Good post!