GaryLouisSmith wrote: ↑September 9th, 2019, 6:40 am
What I write on this forum is traditional metaphysics and also in line with modern and postmodern logical analysis. The others on this forum, who know nothing of those ideas, think I am a raving, stupid idiot. You and I both know that there is nothing I could say that would convince them otherwise. They will never spend time learning the history of philosophical ideas. So what am I to do? I play along and just get on with it. I'm used to it.
Somewhere along the line philosophy became common sense/trickle down science groupism. So you have a tension between more traditional theists and the occasional new ager vs. 'Team Rational'. Woe unto he who does not fit these categories.
And there is a tremendous dearth of believe based on experience: religious, exploratory, scientific, anomalous. It is all based on what is read.
This is a tangential rant. But let me tie it to the thread title....
Why Believe in a God when It is Impossible to Prove?
Notice the way the issue is framed. In terms of proof - as if proof was even on the table for most alleged phenomena, including mundane phenomena and 'things'. Notice the implicit: if you can't convince me, you should believe it yourself, even though the person asking ABSOLUTELY must have beliefs that cannot be demonstrated to be true to others. For example, things they experienced in private that have left no residue.
Note the absence that one might come to a belief via experience.
The assumption that if one knows something and is right you should be able, online no less, to create a verbal proof.
The theists who arrive will probably, in the West, accept this framing and work within it, disagreeing of course. Strange but true.
Philosophy as arguing over multiple choice answers on a reading comprehension test.