Robert the Pilegrim said:
It is a bad habit to Ass U Me you know what is going on in other people's heads.
Not to say I don't do it occasionally.
You're right, it is a bad habit, but I don't think this assumption is unwarranted.
Robert the Pilegrim said:
Profound religious experiences are quite real do not come under the heading of "what others have told you is true."... unless you want to posit that the other is God.
Two points apply here:
1) Members of all religions have profound religious experiences, and they take away different conclusions regarding specific beliefs. Your belief that the experiences in your religion represent God's true beliefs, but those from other religions don't, is based on what
humans have told you. Even if you feel that in your profound religious experiences, God told you that your beliefs are true, others can say the same about their beliefs.
How do you judge someone's report of such an experience and decide whether they've interpreted it correctly, or even had it in the first place? What standard do you base such a judgement on? God's standard? But the point of the judgement is to determine God's standard, and you can't use something to prove itself. So by whose standard do you determine that your religious experiences (and those of people who agree with you) are real and not delusional, but everyone else's are either delusional or misinterpreted?
I say by human standards. I don't see where else the standard could possibly come from. Even if you're basing it on Biblical standards, you're still using a book penned by humans, whether or not you believe that God inspired it.
2) How do you know that you're not misinterpreting what you experience? Ultimately, your observations are based on reactions within your brain -- you do not directly sense reality, you sense your brain's reaction to reality. If your brain reacts in a way that does not precisely correspond to reality, something can seem real that is not at all real. Typically, when we observe unusual psychological phenomena, we assume that these have physical causes and investigate them. However, popular belief has it that religious experiences are special, and should be considered "revelations" as opposed to "disorders."
While I am not going to claim that this popular belief is wrong, that is just what it is -- popular belief. If you were staying up all night every night to obsessively detail-clean your house, you would assume that there was something wrong with you and go to a psychiatrist. But if you have a profound spiritual experience, you assume that a great truth has been supernaturally revealed to you, rather than that your brain is misfiring. Why? I say, because you've learned from humans around you to accept that religious experiences are fundamentally reliable.
I'm afraid that you will immediately reject the above out of hand, because I appear to be calling you insane. Please understand, that is not my intention. We all have oddities in the way our brains function, and we are all susceptible to certain stimuli. Mob psychology can turn nice, friendly, caring people into murderous animals -- does that mean that humans are insane or does it mean that human brains react in certain ways to certain things? And your religious experiences may
be reliable, and not a matter of your brain misfiring -- I'm pointing out that the fact that you had them is not in itself proof that they're reliable.
And again, you may be right that these things you believe are accurate; the point is that religious beliefs are too far based on the word of men (and too variable from person to person) for the argument, "That's a sin," to stand as the unchallenged final word. If God came down to Earth and informed all mankind that a certain thing was sinful, then it
would be the final word; but without that confirmation, calling something a sin is nothing but a statement that everyone else must believe that your preferred sources are reliable.
Robert the Pilegrim said:
You are most welcome to debate the precise meaning of those experiences and what they prove in the context of making secular law, and I suspect that you and I would be pretty close in agreement at least with respect to the latter discussion, but in the meantime I would suggest not assuming that there isn't something beyond blind acceptance of authoritative teaching.
Right, but I didn't say "blind acceptance" or "authoritative." Acceptance need not be blind, but it does not justify itself. That is, the fact that you've accepted certain teachings is not proof that the teachings are correct -- in order to prove that, you have to make objective arguments from the world
outside of your beliefs, the secular world (since a proposition cannot prove its own truth).
When I say that your beliefs are based on what men have told you, I don't mean that they're blind or unreasoning. When someone makes an argument based on religion (for example, listing Bible verses to support a position whose scope extends beyond the Bible), the implication is that the argument is correct because its source is God, and God is reliable by definition. The problem is that the source
isn't God, at least not directly -- the source is human. If you believe that God is
indirectly the source, then objective arguments are needed to prove that before you can demand acceptance based on the absolute divine standard. Hand-in-hand with this is the responsibility to prove that there even is a God who can provide an absolute standard.
Robert the Pilegrim said:
As far as that goes, even beyond religious experiences, both profound and subtle, your statement, as formulated above, is way too simplistic and more than a bit insulting. Many people's faith is based on their own study and cogitation. Again we can debate the value and meaning of that but it is not merely an acceptance of authority.
Peace be with you,
Robert the Pilegrim
I think you find my statement insulting because you misunderstand me. I'm not saying that you don't have good reasons for your beliefs. They may be true; but the fact that you believe it doesn't prove it. You can't reasonably argue that your beliefs should guide lawmakers simply because it is
your opinion that God agrees with you.
In other words, when someone says, "It would damage society to legalize gay marriage because homosexuality is a sin," I simply don't see how that's proof that gay marriage will damage society. It's proof that somebody believes that God thinks it will damage society, but it isn't proof that such a thing is actually the case. To provide proof, you have to draw on material from
outside of your belief. If that's unreasonable, I can't see how.