"The Definition of Faith"
First, I agree with
@Loudmouth: you are conflating multiple senses of the word 'faith' — an equivocation fallacy.
Let me reiterate that Loudmouth's focus on the definition of faith is a red herring. Christians believe based on divine authority, and that act of belief has traditionally been called faith,
but we can call it whatever we want--it doesn't affect my argument.
That said, what if we entertain the red herring? Indeed I pointed to scientific faith and claimed that it is similar to religious faith in my OP. Was I wrong? Are religious and scientific faith completely equivocal, with no common ground?
When we talk about 'faith' in the religious sense, we are not talking about mere confidence.
The primary sense is confidence or trust in God, with the natural corollary of confidence and trust in what God has revealed.
We are talking about believing irrespective of how well grounded the belief is, and maintaining belief even if the preponderance of evidence stands opposed to it.
Suppose we take Loudmouth's
four sources for definitions of faith. I would argue that each definition of each source bears on religious faith. But none of the 14 definitions include your claim of "maintaining belief even if the preponderance of evidence stands opposed to it." The closest we would find is "belief in the absence of proof," which, I might add, is equally true of scientific faith.
This is why religious faith inexorably tends toward dogma.
The reason religious faith tends towards dogma is because the reasons for belief point toward infallibility. If God has revealed something, then it must be true.
This exercise of 'faith' is different from the 'faith' you have in a scientific article, which is based on the authors' and reviewers' demonstrable expertise in the field of study,
This is the same as religious faith. God is the ultimate expert. Faith is based on the expertise of the author. That is true for both religious and scientific faith.
as well as the scientific process itself, which is designed to detect and remedy errors at every stage.
The process which the scientific author is thought to have abided by approaches infallibility and the eradication of error, thus the belief is thought to be reliable. Similarly, the process by which God arrives at his conclusions
is infallible, thus the belief is reliable. This is true for both religious and scientific faith.
So 1) religious faith is not defined as something contrary to evidence, 2) both scientific and religious faith are based on expertise of author, and 3) both scientific and religious faith are based on accuracy of author's method. Thus none of the reasons you give to separate scientific and religious faith hold water.
Let's look at the dictionary definitions. There are three general definitions of faith:
- Confidence or trust in a person
- A firm belief in something without proof
- A strong belief in the doctrines of a religion, based on spiritual conviction rather than proof.
Now 1 & 2 hold equally of scientific and religious faith. The only difference comes in 3. Note first that when 2/3 of the definitions apply equally to religious and scientific faith, the charge of equivocation is clearly false. But what about the third definition? What it is describing is an act on the part of God to aid the believer in the leap of faith. It is, in a certain way, the extra credentials of the Author. But this does not contradict scientific faith, which is also concerned with credentials, albeit by way of natural means. It constitutes something extra religious faith has that scientific faith does not have, but this does not radically alter the definitions. Religious faith is natural faith + divine assistance to believe. The general definition of natural faith applies equally well to religious faith, but there is an added element.
And to be clear, the second definition is true of science. If proof of the proposition were at hand, the act of faith would not be necessary. Faith is belief absent proof
in religion and in science. There is a difference insofar as it is in principle possible to verify scientific testimony taken on faith, but this is too remote to bear on the definition itself (as the dictionary entries show).
To reiterate, faith is essentially the same in religion and in science. It is trust or confidence in an authority, and in the claims that the authority presents. It is a belief that is not based on proof, but rather in the expertise, method, and general authority of the person making the claims. In religion God is able to give a spiritual assurance to the believer to aid his assent, but this does not change anything previously said. Faith is still trust in an authority and the claims he is making. It is patently false to claim that religious and scientific faith are equivocal.
First, I agree with
@Loudmouth: you are conflating multiple senses of the word 'faith' — an equivocation fallacy.
Finally, I will dispel the charge which both you and Loudmouth make, that I have committed a fallacy of equivocation. This fallacy is committed when one uses the same term in two different ways in their argument. You claim that I have done so with faith.
But this is most obviously false. I define faith itself in my post: "Faith is belief in some proposition because an authority has testified to it." I then proceed to use the word faith to describe both believers and scientists. Scientists and believers both believe certain propositions because authorities have testified to them. My usage in both instances is precisely the same, and is precisely what I defined faith to be.
What lies behind these blatantly false charges of a
fallacy of equivocation? Either 1) a dislike of applying the word "faith" to science, or 2) a belief that my definition of faith was erroneous. The first possibility is just silliness, and the second has nothing to do with a fallacy of equivocation. The fact that you don't like my definition doesn't mean I have equivocated.