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You mean this challenge?How would you answer your own challenge AV?
More like faith, as in believing something, even when evidence says otherwise.
What's your definition?Thus blurring the lines between faith, delusion, and plain old being wrong.
What's your definition?
Can you give me one that doesn't exclude martyrdom of men whom God considers "the world not worthy"?
What's your definition?
Can you give me one that doesn't exclude martyrdom of men whom God considers "the world not worthy"?
Well ... I asked ... didn't I?The belief in something in the absence of evidence ...
The definition I have always used for faith is a belief held in the absence of evidence. I define delusion as a belief that is held in contradiction to 200 years of solid scientific evidence.
I consider faith to be one's commitment. I place my faith in a chair when I sit in it. The fact that I have lots of evidence in favor of the chair's ability to hold me does NOT mean "faith" isn't a good word to use when I sit in the chair - I still placed my faith in it, even though I have evidence. On the other hand, if I dread sitting in the chair, and refuse to sit in it, in spite of my knowledge of its strength, I lack faith. Or if I am told a chair is flimsy, and I see it's flimsy, and I sit in it anyway, I showed my faith. And I suffer the consequences.
So I never deny that I have faith in science; I figure the faith is pretty much justified by the evidence. I also have faith in God, and I even have evidence that I accept for doing that.
Oh, and "faith" also needs to be qualified as to what the faith is, exactly. I have faith in the math my calculator does, but I don't trust the fate of my soul to my calculator.
I consider faith to be one's commitment. I place my faith in a chair when I sit in it. The fact that I have lots of evidence in favor of the chair's ability to hold me does NOT mean "faith" isn't a good word to use when I sit in the chair - I still placed my faith in it, even though I have evidence. On the other hand, if I dread sitting in the chair, and refuse to sit in it, in spite of my knowledge of its strength, I lack faith. Or if I am told a chair is flimsy, and I see it's flimsy, and I sit in it anyway, I showed my faith. And I suffer the consequences.
Try this experiment:Myself personally, I don't use the term faith, to believe in something I have a good deal of evidence to support, I tend to use the term; trust. I trust my car will start in the morning, I trust the light switch will turn the light on, etc. etc...
Try this experiment:
1. Get yourself a quarter.
2. Hold the obverse side toward you.
3. Hold it so George Washington's head is pointed upward and the date is across the bottom.
4. What are those four words just below his chin?
Try this experiment:
1. Get yourself a quarter.
2. Hold the obverse side toward you.
3. Hold it so George Washington's head is pointed upward and the date is across the bottom.
4. What are those four words just below his chin?
I would describe that as trust, which is different than faith.
Irrelevant, can you tell me what direction Abraham looks on a penny without looking at one? That will show you just how much you pay attention to currency.Try this experiment:
1. Get yourself a quarter.
2. Hold the obverse side toward you.
3. Hold it so George Washington's head is pointed upward and the date is across the bottom.
4. What are those four words just below his chin?
IMO, one of the reasons non believers and believers talk through each other at times on these boards, because they use the terms; faith and trust differently.
And sometimes "theory" vs "just a theory"!
D G REG F DTry this experiment:
1. Get yourself a quarter.
2. Hold the obverse side toward you.
3. Hold it so George Washington's head is pointed upward and the date is across the bottom.
4. What are those four words just below his chin?