ahint, what about the possibility that your brain did all of that on its own? if our brains can make us feel the extremes of emotion and sensation that we feel, and it can trick us into believing people are with us when they are not; if we can induce an experience of god/jesus with electrodes and with drugs
Droppin' said:I know the mods are tough in this forum, but just b/c you disagree with me I feel this thread has merit and shouldnt be deleted.
In short: the sensation of 'being sure' of something is an exclusively emotional response, and as such is by definition irrational.
Assurance is satisfying and the very reason to why confirmation is sought; the goal of satisfaction drives one to be sure of a fact, rather than to have a fact confirmed. Driving those of hope and faith to bypass the logical use of confirmation to whatever end in a bid to simplify and ultimately to relegate oneself to facing an untested doubt rather than a tested one. That is to leave open whatever gulf of possibility for their wanted outcome rather than to what maybe would be to work against the last vestiges of that specific hope's own current territorial reach by quarantining what remains to its sphere as unchecked.
The crux of the dichotomy is that for certainty to be attained truly it must be not assurance itself but rather confirmation, as it has the all encompassing quality of standing as a fact were it either satisfying or nonsatisfying and outstripping any reliance upon other alterior precepts contingent to assurance: here one precept being, paradoxically, satisfaction itself. The action taken under such pretenses effectively being the placing of the verification outside of ones own self for the neutrality purpose of omitting a bias arising from in oneself from occurring, while making a legitimate and purposed analysis of what is an external to ones own internal understanding's consideration. Though that assurance would be seeking confirmation to achieve its own answer outside of what would be its native dynamism, and instead having confirmation's. It would be as if the method of assurance was presupposing in such venture what for all intent was different than itself, from within itself, and would put as a result confirmation into a mode that must be indifferentiated from assurance in the specific instance for which it was to deviate from self identification.
Therefore confirmation's mode must always be the nonsatisfying and could then never satisy assurance's aims. The externality of the possibility for confirmation in such externalness being therefore what must not be the same to the self is putting oneself into the power of a foreign windowless monad that shall never yield a law pertinent to the necessities that are required of the self. The logic of confirmation is a grasping way for what is already had in full for where it is originated as a method without regard to what exact origin it ever may be. Meaning whichever self in question so doing. However, assurance and confirmation followed to completion in their respective modes rather than being put over to the power of one for the ends of the other, both to the same issue at the same time, may be understood to yield opposing results but both be used for their former rational and latter empirical outcomes and thusly then establish methodologies, for to act in one mode to satisy and the other one to comport with further interactions when crossed.
Confirmation innately can never make the self happy by its very natural laws of what it means to be confirming, and assurance of anything projected out from you will never pose any use to the world at large. Too however, as the paradox mentioned earlier if assurance is put over to confirmation without supposition, then it is the private laws of confirmation that answer for assurance in which leaving the internal dynamics of the laws of assurance abandons satisfaction for satisfactions sake, and on its first volition before the logic takes to having confirmation's nonsatisfying answer always prevail if so sought. This shows the congruency between all closed systems of windowless monads which does make them appear to be so windowed and acting in the interest of another if put in the power thereof. When however it is simply the pure act of separated systems as they are wholly autonomous to fit as they are enumerated in the greater scheme that has its own unperturbing laws itself as such without having any for the range of lawed systems whether if construed as subordinates or not to a conceived plane of collegiality among untouching rules of differed operating principles.
i dont know if its been said or not but i feels like a lot of atheists a just so fucking arrogant sometimes. but people who believe can also be pushy, if im talking religion
with people it seems the agnostic people are the easist people to talk to IMO
could our cognition be inherently emotional? emotions aren't just an "extra layer" added to our thoughts/experience, i think they are very integrated with our "rational" idea-making.In short: the sensation of 'being sure' of something is an exclusively emotional response, and as such is by definition irrational.
i don't know why i'd feel "absolutely sure" about anything, and i never really do (unless it's something irrational). but i feel levels of probability with different thoughts, and i think i can go about ascertaining these probabilities rationally. and some thoughts are designated 99% probable, which i suppose is basically belief.In short: the sensation of 'being sure' of something is an exclusively emotional response
could our cognition be inherently emotional? emotions aren't just an "extra layer" added to our thoughts/experience, i think they are very integrated with our "rational" idea-making.
Who is "right" is a matter of opinion and their opinions are no more valid, or better, than a religious persons imo.
if you let fashion dictate what you believe then youre a bit stupiddislike the trendiness that currently surrounds it
the only belief is there is no reason to believe in any god or supernatural. theres never been one single piece of evidence to suggest the existence of these. i think, technically, we all have to be agnostic about god though because we cant disprove his existence.They're suggesting that their beliefs are somehow of higher quality because they are based upon what they believe is right
what is arrogant about simply saying that we just do not know all of the mysteries of the universe? if anything, religions are arrogant because they claim to know things that we just cannot know.Aside from that their arrogance
yes atheists know this and it is pretty scary. anyway believing you are right and being right are totally different.don't they understand that a religious person can truly believe that they are right?
nope, i surely dont need to say more.Who is "right" is a matter of opinion
"Yes, you can call it that," Einstein replied calmly. "Try and penetrate with our limited means the secrets of nature and you will find that, behind all the discernible laws and connections, there remains something subtle, intangible and inexplicable. Veneration for this force beyond anything we can comprehend is my religion. To that extent I am, in fact, religious."
I think that's a pretty vacuous definition of religion and many people who state themselves to be non-religious or atheist would agree with the sentiments expressed by Einstein above, simply because they are so open ended and non specific in terms of venerating 'that which we find ourselves existing within without a complete understanding of'.
I don't think Einstein was quite so signed up for christianity, organised religion or God in any commonplace sense of those ideas as proponents of those ideologies would have the rest of us believe.
This is about as clearly and demonstratably wrong as anything ever.
If i think that i have enough of an understanding of gravity etc that stepping of a 500m cliff face will kill me, that may be my opinion, but it also has a firm basis in reality. You could test for it experimentally (using a cow or something so you'd be alive afterwards to observe the results) or you could just use the theory to work out what is likely to happen to a large living organism when it hits the bottom of a cliff at terminal velocity.
Who says that Einstein was trying to define religion for everyone, for all times? I think he was just talking about himself, in reference to his own spirituality.
It's not very atheist or secular to have veneration for a force that cannot be measured or proven, is it? I'm not disagreeing with you - I'm just wondering why it's not okay (according to some atheists) to believe in something called God, yet it's okay to believe in a background force which governs all of us, and is perpetually beyond our comprehension?
All studies I have read on neuro cognition and perception of the world revolve around the brain taking raw data, processing and filtering it, and then projecting an image of that data into itself, which is then experienced. In other words, when you look at a rose, your brain has to inwardly project that rose, and your entire experience of the rose is based on that. There is no "objective" outside.
Then add a psychedelic to the picture like LSD. Suddenly gravity isn't such a simple matter anymore, is it? A lot of things are going up and down in that state of mind. Sometimes I have felt stuck to the ceiling even though I am lying on the floor - or sometimes I can't tell which is which.