rusmeister wrote:And so we come to the dogmatic parting of the ways. I hold that evidence can be something internal as well, based on one's own personal experiences.
IMO, that's the
most important kind of evidence. I believe humans, by and large, act on what they feel, not what they know. No, it's not at all scientific, but it's impossible to disregard things that seem to resonate in every cell of our bodies. An example that applies to me is (to Loremaster's exasperation

) free will. I don't care that, as far as I can tell, the rules of cause & effect rule this universe. I don't care that I have no explanation for free will. I
feel it. I cannot feel otherwise. I see no reason to believe free will is an illusion. (And that premise is... Well, it doesn't make sense to me.)
However, I have no internal evidence for God's existence. I have no feelings of any sort at all. I've never been visited by any sort of angel/spirit/ghost. I've never heard any voice from on high. No doubts or discomfort about my beliefs. There's nothing.
rusmeister wrote:Point is, you make a conscious choice based on your experience. Faith is a choice, not something impelled externally. You CAN press your 'belief' button - if you choose to. (For years I told myself that I could not choose to believe - that I needed external proof. I later learned the fallacy of that.)
Yes, "based on your experience." I have none. You did not press your "belief button" out of the blue. People do not make such life-altering decisions for
no reason. There was reason. Maybe it was a feeling you had had for years, even as you tried to deny it. I have no such feeling that I'm denying. Maybe you had a visitation. I have not had one. You did not have to press that button for no reason, because there was something driving you to your faith.
rusmeister wrote:Accepting that the universe is uncaused is equally as mystical as the idea that it created itself ("just happened") and at least as mystical (more so, I believe), then the idea of, as GKC put it, and admittedly unthinkable God, and so, requires just as much faith.
Maybe so. But it takes no faith to believe the universe exists.
rusmeister wrote:Of course, and this is why dreams like Star Trek are patent nonsense. Here we have a logical problem for pluralism, which tries to say that multiple systems all express valid, if incomplete truths, and at the same time that we cannot arrive at complete truth. The logical conclusion is that the human race's problems are insoluble, because some will always disagree. The only solution would be admitting that there is a complete Truth that CAN be arrived at. (A whole elephant, not merely component parts)
Only dogmatic religion offers this. I think it is unacceptable to people because it involves surrendering ourselves (and our selfishness) to it.
In my case, it is unacceptable because I do not believe such a being exists.
If I did, as I've said before, I would not follow a God who insisted on things I feel are wrong. But we're nowhere near that bridge.
rusmeister wrote:So there's the problem. We could really solve the problems of the human race. We just don't want to - or perhaps more accurately, we would be fine with everyone else submitting, as long as I can do what I want.
Yes, there are plenty of people out there who insist nobody else murders, yet they do it whenever they want. Not that belief in your God is needed to
not feel as they do. But yes, I agree that that attitude is found everywhere.