GrowingSmaller
Muslm Humanist
Not a scientific proof, but we get by with less than science most of our workaday lives. IOW not every proof has to be scientific to be a proof.The whole "lightning storm feeling" experience was the equivalent of what most people call a "gut feeling". There is no "empirical data" to support any type of conclusion from this. It doesn't prove that anything exists, or doesn't exist.
Ok fine.I don't have a "passion" for atheism, in fact I've made it a point to emphasize my "neutrality" or "neutralism" towards the entire atheism/theism debate.
I suppose you were just bored then, starting the thread?If anything I'm more of an apatheist, an apathetic ignostic at that. I don't think a deity has ever been proven OR dis-proven, and either way it doesn't seem to matter.
I disagree. Faith can change both behaviour and outlook.We still have the same feelings, senses, perceptions and experiences regardless of what might exist in or outside our bubble of reality. Nothing in reality changes whether or not we can ascertain this "ultimate truth".
Ok good for you.How do I know something isn't there? I honestly don't know. Which is why I've labeled myself an "apathetic ignostic neutralist".
Subjective likelihood, as far as you know that is.I see the claim "god exists" as being either possibly true OR false, with equal likelihood.
Cool.Equipossible if you will.
Ok the test is complete then, there is not sufficient reason for you to believe.All I'm saying is that it seems random and coincidental to rely on these particular occasions as a way to justify a deity's existence. The evidence is still sorely lacking in this scenario.
I may well, thank you.Now if you can go about proving that lightning storms are the manifestation of a deity, then go right ahead.
They could have been right.At least we're dealing with a semi-clear concept at this point. This is probably a huge part of the reason why the Greeks named Zeus as the god of lightning and the sky. They felt that all that crazy flickering of electricity in the sky must've been the work of a deity.
OK not all knowledge is direct you know. Do you have direct knowledge of my inward mental life, or of China for that matter?It seems much hasn't changed from even the Greek era, as people continue to rely on assumptions based on little to no observatory evidence. Which is why Ignosticism strikes at the heart of the matter: What IS the deity? Not "what does the deity do?" or "how does the deity make you feel?" This philosophy asks for direct knowledge of this thing, whatever it is, which is seemingly nigh impossible to obtain.
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