You trust(or have faith in) that the umbrella will keep the rain off you. Some things are easier to believe than others. But your response above I think is proving my point...that when people act on their beliefs, they are putting their trust (faith) in them. The typical Christian definition of faith is "putting your trust in something in which you have good reason to believe is true". Let's go to an extreme example: Some people are deathly afraid of flying...they may believe that they are getting ready to board an aircraft for which the airline has a good reputation, and they may believe that the pilot is well experienced, but those beliefs alone will not cause that person to board the plane. Rather, the person in question must decide to trust what he has good reason to believe is true...he must put his faith in the airline and in the pilot.
I disagree -- I do think that those beliefs alone would cause a person to board a plane. If you take those beliefs away, they are certainly not getting on that plane. The relationship between belief and action is complex, and more than one philosopher (Jason Stanley and John Hawthorne are two) has argued that knowledge is the standard for action, but that the standard for such knowledge is sensitive to context. These sorts of deliberations -- deliberations about what action is warranted based on a given belief and its justification -- are common to daily life, but I do not see how "faith" is a unique example of this. For example, if I'm driving in my truck and the "low fuel" light comes on, and I know that I have twenty miles to my destination, I have the option of stopping to get gas or continuing to drive. My continuing to drive is a product of my beliefs about the low fuel light, my gas tank, my truck, etc. It has nothing to do with me "trusting" my truck to get me there. In fact, I don't even know that we can sensibly say that one can "trust" a truck.
So, I'm still not sure how exactly "faith" is different than belief.
That's why I doubt that those that say such things have actually studied the arguments and evidence for the Christian god sufficiently. But for those that have investigated the evidence and remained atheist, I suspect that some of them have made a conscious decision not to believe it...as in my example with the evidence against OJ and the jury actually deciding not to convict.
Beliefs are never a product of conscious decision. One cannot decide to believe anything.
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