-Removed-At this level of zealotry they cannot be reasoned with no matter how abhorrent or contradictory their belief structure has become...
I deeply apologize for both my zealotry and my abhorrent or contradictory belief structure, but as I've attempted to point out, my Christian faith is not designed to be rooted in human logic, mathematics, physics or any of the classical arts or sciences, but rather it is something outside or beyond those disciplines; because of this your attempts to use logic in your discussions, reasonable as that may seem, is not going to work. The best advice I can give is to let me and other Christians believe what we will, and I (for one) will be happy to do the same for you. 🙂
@mchill saidDismissing logic, physics and laws of nature often leads to misery and hell-on Earth. For example, it leads to Christians engaging in a double standard where they feel they have the right to convert, torture or exterminate any other non-Christian group.
At this level of zealotry they cannot be reasoned with no matter how abhorrent or contradictory their belief structure has become...
I deeply apologize for both my zealotry and my abhorrent or contradictory belief structure, but as I've attempted to point out, my Christian faith is not designed to be rooted in human logic, mathematics, physics or any of the classical arts ...[text shortened]... other Christians believe what we will, and I (for one) will be happy to do the same for you. 🙂
Should, let's say, Pagans have the same right to believe what they will without being attacked?
@bunnyknight saidYes, but for the love of God, both groups need to keep it out of government, whether they are science-starved eveangelicals or science-starved redneck dropped-out-of-school-in-6th-grade types.
Dismissing logic, physics and laws of nature often leads to misery and hell-on Earth. For example, it leads to Christians engaging in a double standard where they feel they have the right to convert, torture or exterminate any other non-Christian group.
Should, let's say, Pagans have the same right to believe what they will without being attacked?
@divegeester
I’d like to posit another (alternative) event horizon*: one where you fall into a “black hole” of open-mindedness – especially open to the possibility that, whatever the seeming surety of your beliefs, you could be wrong. [Metaphorically – and mixing metaphors – there always is the possibility of a “black swan”.]
Such possibility need not impede your ability to make decisions and to act – in moral situations or others. You do the best you can with whatever empirical information you have. You observe; you draw reasonable inferences; you decide – sometimes, perhaps, intuitively.
But you now reject all dogmatic insistences about what you “must believe” (or must not believe). Even if they reflect what you (perhaps nostalgically) would like to believe. You have crossed an event horizon where such dogmatism** is no longer possible for you.
Two opposing event horizons. And with many (most) people iterating between the two?
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* In no way disagreeing with your apt usage in the OP.
** Dogmatism here referring to any belief that dare not be questioned (for whatever reason). In Hellenistic times, it referred to schools who either: (1) declared that they had identified unquestionable truth, or (2) declared that such truth was impossible. The Pyhrronians took a middle position: that such truth might be logically possible, but that it had yet to be demonstrated. Pyrrhonian aporia was a virtue of open-mindedness. (And that "yet" carries over to this day.)