Upon further inspection it seems you're pushing your opinions pretty hard, maybe doing a bit of free traffic to your web site?
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I find talking to atheists to be very easy. Now, forcing an athiest to believe, that's another thing (we should not aspire to be doing).
Wait, you're not supposed to be forcing people to believe?
To quote Nietzsche:
"A casual stroll through the lunatic asylum shows that faith does not prove anything."
A major part of the epistemological basis of science (and most of philosophy) is the problem of discerning our personal, subjective experiences with objective reality. Anyone can feel things and say they understand they know the way the universe works, but I also know many people conflict on this universe and that people often get the nature of reality just wrong, much like the insane do.
The question emerges: how can I differentiate between subjective opinion and genuine reality? The only way is to, at some point, generate a tangible effect upon the world in a clear way or to extrapolate from already accepted facts through careful reasoning.
Merely feeling a bunch of emotions does not prove anything beyond the fact that you feel emotions. Just because you connect those feelings with something else does make it the origins true unless you have something tangible to back it up. Merely getting a bunch of people together who connect their feelings to the same thing doesn't change anything; it just adds more people to the mix who can't back up their claims.
Unless there is something to distinguish your claims from either being true or false, then your claims are pretty much subjective, and should be dismissed as such.
No, religion asserts understanding. You don't actually possess it.
No, religion asserts wisdom. You don't actually possess it.
Good, because they're not. They are, at best, exercises in imagination.
So, you assert an opinion, but you don't actually possess it?
You're not stating opinions. You're making claims about the nature of reality, which you cannot substantiate. You will be called out on it.
You have no monopoly on reality, you will just as well be called out on that.![]()
You have no monopoly on reality
Of course not, which is precisely why you're invited to substantiate your assertions at any time.
If you are going to find the God that is substantiated in the presence of my faith, you will need to do that work yourself,
and if you ever do find a God of your own subjective understanding, you still won't be able to explain it in a way that satisfies the skeptic of your former hiding place in the so called science of logic.
You are the positive claimant. The burden of proof is yours, not mine.
If you've categorically written off logic as your means of demonstrating your assertions, you don't get to just stop there. Your next step is to demonstrate your assertions by some other means. Your 'god', as it stands, is indistinguishable from any other imaginary concept.
* I am not obliged to prove that I know the presence of God to you in your arbitrary court of law. It's even hypocritical for you to make a transcendent value judgment on the worth of my faith then retreating back to a mechanistic prosecutorial platform which presumes uniformity in the analysis of everyone's reality.
* But you compel me to ask, by what technique of logic do you claim to know that I do not know-God?
Not only are you shifting the burden of proof, insisting that you are somehow exempt from all epistemic standards, but you've given Eight Foot Manchild the means to do the same in answering your question. He could simply say that he is not obliged to show you how he knows that you do not know God, and that it is hypocritical of you to even ask him, as though his claims are to be held to some sort of epistemic standard! He just knows - isn't that enough?
Ive responded with some quotes from he UB:
"Reason is the proof of science, faith the proof of religion, logic the proof of philosophy, but revelation is validated only by human experience. Science yields knowledge; religion yields happiness; philosophy yields unity; revelation confirms the experiential harmony of this triune approach to universal reality."
But this is what Atheistic scientist types do, they come out from behind their barricade of cold facts and test tubes, make subjective assertions about the spiritual truth content of a religionist experience, then run quickly back to the lab and pretend as if they spend their days running all their decisions through rigorous logical proofs.
"The magical and mythological parentage of natural religion does not invalidate the reality and truth of the later revelational religions and the consummate saving gospel of the religion of Jesus. Jesus life and teachings finally divested religion of the superstitions of magic, the illusions of mythology, and the bondage of traditional dogmatism. But this early magic and mythology very effectively prepared the way for later and superior religion by assuming the existence and reality of supermaterial values and beings.
Although religious experience is a purely spiritual subjective phenomenon, such an experience embraces a positive and living faith attitude toward the highest realms of universe objective reality. The ideal of religious philosophy is such a faith-trust as would lead man unqualifiedly to depend upon the absolute love of the infinite Father of the universe of universes. Such a genuine religious experience far transcends the philosophic objectification of idealistic desire; it actually takes salvation for granted and concerns itself only with learning and doing the will of the Father in Paradise. The earmarks of such a religion are: faith in a supreme Deity, hope of eternal survival, and love, especially of ones fellows.
When theology masters religion, religion dies; it becomes a doctrine instead of a life. The mission of theology is merely to facilitate the self-consciousness of personal spiritual experience. Theology constitutes the religious effort to define, clarify, expound, and justify the experiential claims of religion, which, in the last analysis, can be validated only by living faith. In the higher philosophy of the universe, wisdom, like reason, becomes allied to faith. Reason, wisdom, and faith are mans highest human attainments. Reason introduces man to the world of facts, to things; wisdom introduces him to a world of truth, to relationships; faith initiates him into a world of divinity, spiritual experience.
Faith most willingly carries reason along as far as reason can go and then goes on with wisdom to the full philosophic limit; and then it dares to launch out upon the limitless and never-ending universe journey in the sole company of TRUTH.
Science (knowledge) is founded on the inherent (adjutant spirit) assumption that reason is valid, that the universe can be comprehended. Philosophy (co-ordinate comprehension) is founded on the inherent (spirit of wisdom) assumption that wisdom is valid, that the material universe can be co-ordinated with the spiritual. Religion (the truth of personal spiritual experience) is founded on the inherent (Thought Adjuster) assumption that faith is valid, that God can be known and attained."