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So much of what we consider knowledge is actually belief.
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So with a concept of a supreme creator, matters in that domain are beyond the mind to comprehend. We don't have the tools to get our heads around the why or how, and shouldn't demand non existence on the basis of our inability to understand.
Back to topic - read John 10 to understand
more about the voice of God within and listen to this video right through for a contemporary and dramatic example.
I Am Week 5
It seems to me that mathematical truth is the closest we can get to objective truth.
This is a contradiction. If the claim is that one can determine the "truth" via a creator speaking to us (somehow, which is still not clear), then claiming it's likewise beyond our ability to understand contradicts that idea.
We can't simultaneously claim to have truth but at the same time claim to not understand the very same.
Care to summarize or point to the relevant time stamp? It's an over half hour video and I don't want to sit through the whole thing if I only need to watch 5 minutes to get to the material that is relevant.
I dont agree with your definition of contradiction.
We can simultaneously have truth and not be able to explain in detail how we got it in a way that satisfies the skeptic.
If you were seriously seeking you would watch it right through.
Only because you say that though ... and what you say there, is just another belief.I'd say that there is a single objective truth. Whether or not we can find it is another matter. But that truth is there.
Knowledge is more like a repository our minds acquire as we go through life. Its up to us to distinguish beliefs and then whether or not to fill that repository with mostly beliefs(?)So much of what we consider knowledge is actually belief.
It comes down to plausibility of the explanation. Your claim is that it's (somehow) objective that a creator can speak to a person through their Spirit.
Yet, by the same token how would we distinguish between this purported external 'speaking' versus experiencing intrinsic thoughts, feelings and emotions?
When I apply Occam's Razor to this scenario, I see no reason to accept the former in lieu of the latter.
It's poor forum etiquette to link to a lengthy video without at least a synopsis or relevant timestamp.
I've been burned numerous times in the past by posters linking videos that either have no relevance or the relevant sections are a handful of minutes long.
If you won't even post a brief summary as to why the video is relevant to this discussion, I'm not inclined to spend over half an hour to watch it.
I gave a synopsis - it's right on topic about hearing God's voice - but not as you know it...
30 minutes is nothing if you are truely thirsty.
I spent years of being burned before connecting to the truth, you don't sound hungry.
So much of what we consider knowledge is actually belief.
I'm not even sure what this is supposed to mean. I'm not looking to be converted, if that's what you're wondering, which is the vibe I'm getting from your posts.
I was looking to discuss the claim you made in this thread (especially in light of the thread's topic), but if you'd rather not then that's fine.
So much of what we consider knowledge is actually belief.
More generally, (and more recently), Bertrand Russell restated Aristotle's 'Laws of Thought' as, (Reference: Wiki: Law of Thought):public hermit said:The traditional (western) account of knowledge goes back to Plato and is generally rendered Justified-True-Belief (JTB).
Accordingly, someone knows proposition p, if and only if, the following three conditions hold:
1. They believe p
2. p is true
3. They are justified in believing p
More generally, (and more recently), Bertrand Russell restated Aristotle's 'Laws of Thought' as, (Reference: Wiki: Law of Thought):
i) The law of identity: 'Whatever is, is.'
ii) The law of non-contradiction (alternately the 'law of contradiction'): 'Nothing can both be and not be.'
iii) The law of excluded middle: 'Everything must either be or not be.'
All of which are built on the same assumed, untestable, undistinguished posit of: 'truth exists'.
They therefore come across as a bunch of worthless truism-based word-salad (IMO).
Again .. it depends on what you mean by 'true'. I claim that meaning is dependent on our minds.Oddly enough, everything you just said would be meaningless if those three were not true.