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How does one distinguish a 'belief' from a delusion?

DogmaHunter

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I'm not giving you an argument. I'm sharing an observation.
 
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devolved

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Secondly, hapiness, joy and patience are not things . There are concepts that define a certain state of human being in their own perception of their experience.

Our experience is brain-driven, thus these concepts encapsulate a state of mind, which resides in the brain.

Thus, these things don't "come from" anywhere. THESE ARE OUR REACTIONS TO EVENTS. When you say "Joy", joy is a brain-reaction. When you say patience ... patience is a stereotypical reaction to certain circumstances. These are not somehow external to our brain function.
 
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ToddNotTodd

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If every claim Joe makes is true, then it is a pretty good bet that Joe exists.

Nope. I could write a completely accurate history book and attribute it to a fictional person. And if I throw in some unverifiable miracles, I could attribute the book to a fictitious god.
 
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Goatee

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Faith! Faith in God!

A massively strong feeling of Love for God. Its hard to explain but it is overwhelming. It is intense. Your whole being knows that God is real. Its an amazing feeling!

One knows that God is everything to that person. For me, i would give my life for God in an instant. God for me is 'life'. He is my breath, He is my heart beat.

It is hard for a non believer to understand. I hope that one day, those that dont believe will. That they will see God and know him for without God we are nothing.
 
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toLiJC

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when it comes to practicing faith, only the persuasion that is in accordance with the overall salvation in God the Father and His Son, Jesus Christ, is not a misbelief, i.e. if any persuasion supports non-salvation, it is surely a misbelief, excluding the doctrine of eternal judgment, which explains the circle of life and existence

Blessings
 
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devolved

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The problem is that many believers would actually disagree with you. They'd say that faith is not a feeling and is a purely intellectual endeavor. Many people don't feel any different after they belief than before.

http://www.relevantmagazine.com/god/practical-faith/dont-let-emotions-dictate-your-faith


What would you say then?
 
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jeanetteflint

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jeanetteflint

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All this means is that you have changed and that it is noticeable to others. It doesn't mean the change came from God. As a non-believer, I can do this as well. I can decide, just as an example, that I will be more cognizant of really listening to others, rather than being prepared to express my own thoughts. This is a good thing to do, and if one practiced it, it would definitely be noticed by others.
 
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jeanetteflint

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razzelflabben

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The entirety of it.
so, you can't be specific, okay, let's give you the benefit of the doubt and break it down.

Do you think that the Bible making a claim that X will happen if Y is present is magic? Cause I know a lot of people and texts that make claims and I have yet to see someone claim that making a claim is magic somehow

Okay, next part of the equation...do you think that there is something that is magical about offering measurable things as evidence that X will happen if Y is involved? Cause last time I checked, the majority of people do not think that there is something magical about offering a measurable outcome in a theory or hypothesis.

The only thing left that you could think sounded magical is that if we have a claim and a measurable outcome we can test to see if the source of the claim is the actual source of the claim. Is that the part that you think sounds like magic, that we can test for something if we are given something we can measure to test for?

That was the three things I offered that you are arguing sounds magical...so specifically what part is sounding magical to you...I beginning to wonder how far the delusional thoughts on this thread are becoming when the scientific method sounds "magical" to you.
 
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razzelflabben

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What indicates that there is a God making any claims about himself through this or that holy book? It seems that there are human beings making such claims about a God. So are you really testing "the claims that God makes about himself"?
as per the book or books that claim to be the authority on that deity, we talked about that ages ago, where were you?
 
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razzelflabben

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Are you comparing Joe to God? You haven't made it clear in your analogy. I think I could respond better if you make things more clear.
I just brought our 17 year old home, as we were coming home he asked what was going on in the forums, I told him about this discussion and that I used the analogy of Joe and the light. He didn't even hesitate to know who Joe represented and laughed at you trying to change it to suit your agenda. Then he told me to not even bother because that is just how atheists try to argue anything about God...BTW, he is an agnostic and has little to no respect for atheists because of this type of non sense. Now in direct answer...yes, in the analogy, Joe is God, the one making the claim. [/quote]

We don't need to test that Joe exists because you actually insert the Joe into experiment and name him. I guess you could name an automatic ligh-switch Joe. How would you know a difference then? You can't just presume the causes because you ascribe some effects to these causes. The whole analogy is very confusing for this reason.[/quote] we aren't testing to see if Joe exists, geesh that is at least the second time I have told you...we are testing to see if the claim Joe makes is true. Your twisting the analogy so hard and fast I am starting to get dizzy.
Secondly, we know that people exist, therefore the claim that there's a person named Joe who is flipping the switch isn't in the same realm of plausibility of what you are talking about.
now, I'm dizzy enough I'm confused...who is trying to figure out if the one making the claim exists? We are testing the claim being made, not the one making the claim...if then every single claim tests out to be true, that being nothing falsified, then, we can be confident the one making the claim exists, if even one thing is falsified, we have no assurance. It's really that simple. Not sure why you are so determined to throw out scientific method, but okay....just don't drag me down that delusion that scientific method is meaningless.
That's the core fallacy of this issue. You inject a presupposition, and you don't see a need to validate it, and then you falsely correlate your presupposed causes with your observed effects.
lol all this because you are twisting what I said into something I didn't and claiming I don't know what I am talking about....lol...no wonder my son doesn't respect atheists too much.
 
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razzelflabben

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That these things are mental is a scientific fact . We actually know that it's a fact, because we can emulate these mental states by injecting various drugs and hormones. In fact it's already widely done.
you need to look at the research again, but that is all off topic so either do your homework or don't just stop asking me to defend things I didn't say. except we aren't talking about ADHD or OCD...we are talking about the source of joy and you don't even know what joy we are talking about yet because you aren't addressing what I am saying. enough to defend the claim you previously made that you now change your position on in order to make some point that you can't really make. I don't have to do any such thing. You made the claim that the source of all joy is the mental aspect of man. I challenged that and you disagree with me by showing other things than the mental nature of man as a source for joy....see how easy it is to defeat someone who refuses to address what is actually being said!
 
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Goatee

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razzelflabben

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There are no guarantees of reliability with the scientific method, but it's the best we have. Without a link or quote of the post you're referring to, I can't really comment further.
yep...what am I suppose to link you to, that the scientific method is the most reliable way to determine if something is delusion or not....you just said we agree on that, why would you need a link to evidence it if we agree. Wouldn't that mean you already have seen enough evidence to agree with me in the first place?
 
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razzelflabben

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as important maybe, but not the same thing at all, shall I get the dictionary out for you or do you think you can open the tab yourself?
 
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razzelflabben

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I'm not giving you an argument. I'm sharing an observation.
but you are suppose to according to forum rules address the post not what other people claim at least when you quote my post and act like you are responding to it.
 
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devolved

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we are testing to see if the claim Joe makes is true. Your twisting the analogy so hard and fast I am starting to get dizzy.

Your analogy doesn't make sense in respect to what you are trying to demonstrate and that's the whole point.

The whole concept is predicated on the assumption that God exists. If God doesn't exist, then your claims about what God does are largely irrelevant.

You are telling me that we don't need to test whether God exists or not, but merely test the claims... but the claim is that the God is the cause of the things that you are observing. I'm not sure how either you, or your 17 YO can see this baggage of presupposition that you are smuggling in with this assumption.

You can't claim that the results are an effect of the HS until you demonstrate the HS is a real thing. But you can't demonstrate it. All you point to is to some attributes like "measured increase of patience", or "Joy in all circumstances of life, even when these are sad"... etc.

But you are not demonstrating how your you are linking any of this to HS and God, when it's seemingly a result of following through certain expectations.

For example, in Russian cultures the couples have less difficult of a time of getting through infidelity than in US cultures. Why? Because in certain instances it's a cultural expectations. They looks at it as "eh, men be men", and then scold them, but they don't go on grieving and divorcing like you would see in US cultures.

Cultural expectations of behavior end up shaping the behavior... including the "Joy in the middle of sorrow". When sad events happen, Christians follow the "well, I should be happy" routine, and that's the alternative explanation that you ignore
 
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