Can a person be a theist, without belonging to a particular theistic religion?
Can a person be a theist, without also being a Christian, Muslim, Jew, Hindu etc.?
Yes.
jan.
Can a person be a theist, without belonging to a particular theistic religion?
Can a person be a theist, without also being a Christian, Muslim, Jew, Hindu etc.?
How can a person possibly believe in God (or gods) outside of a traditional theistic religion?
If all the information that humans can possibly have about God necessarily comes via other people (as a common theistic reasoning goes), and these people need to be part of a theistic tradition for that information to be valid, then those outside of that tradition are cut off from knowledge about God.
Those within a theistic tradition may or may not be imagining and inventing things.
But those outside of a theistic tradition are necessarily merely imagining and inventing things.*
Can a person be a theist, without belonging to a particular theistic religion?
Can a person be a theist, without also being a Christian, Muslim, Jew, Hindu etc.?
Yes.Can a person be a theist, without belonging to a particular theistic religion?
Can a person be a theist, without also being a Christian, Muslim, Jew, Hindu etc.?
Define ''believe in''?
Where is your evidence for the claim ''all the information that humans can possibly have about God necessarily comes via other peopl'e''?
Those within a theistic tradition may or may not be imagining and inventing things.
A gross materialist can only see it that way, just like the colour blue to a completely blind person.
What is a ''theistic tradition'' that it makes God a reality?But those outside of a theistic tradition are necessarily merely imagining and inventing things.*
I doubt it. Last time I tried to tell Wynn this it went completely ignored:
http://www.sciforums.com/showthread.php?p=2930737#post2930737
You can only lead the horse to water...
How?
Other than having a personal divine revelation, and other than simply currently not being an active member, but otherwise having taken one's theology from an existing theistic tradition:
How can a person possibly be a theist without belonging to a particular theistic religion?
To believe in God: to believe God exists, to believe God has the qualities as stated in a particular theistic doctrine.
Do you have any information which you believe to be about God, whereby this information has not been imparted on you by other people (either spoken to you personally, or heard from talks, or read from books)?
So you're saying that it is because I am a gross materialist that I have doubts as to whether everything that self-declared theists say, indeed is about God?
So if I would not be a gross materialist, I would believe without hesitation that, for example, Jesus is the only Lord and Savior and that everyone who doesn't believe in him will and deserves to burn in hell for all eternity?
And at the same time, if I would not be a gross materialist, I would also believe without hesitation that, for example, Mohammad is God's only true prophet and everyone who doesn't follow his teachings doesn't have much to hope for?
??
Who said it does make God a reality?
I'm saying that those outside of a theistic tradition (with the exception of those who have personal divine revelation) are cut off from knowledge about God and cannot but merely imagine things.
Come on, work with me.
My aim is to produce an argument that shows that evangelical theism is cutting people off from God and producing atheists.
You're just loading the questions with your own assumptions.
These questions should only apply personally to you.
That's not what ''belief in God'' is.
To believe something exists, does not mean you believe in that thing.
The second option doesn't make sense.
Read what I said, perhaps a little more carefully.
You're saying that one would be cut off from knowledge of God if one wasn't affiliated to an institute. Right. Therefore you are saying that joining these institutes make God a reality, as opposed to just an imagination.
Therein lies the problem. Rather than arguing for what is true,
you're arguing from a preconception. You're not open to that preconception being wrong.
And what would that be?
That there is no God?
Feel free to show it is wrong.
Again, you're assuming that traditional concepts of God are not imaginings themselves. How do you know the traditions of God are legitimate?
I don't know. That's the point. You're insistent upon formulating an argument that says "A," regardless of whether or not "A" is true. You've decided that you're going to argue that evangelism "creates" atheists, as it cuts people off from God. This is a huge assumption, one that you haven't supported.
Feel free to show that it is right. You've only made a claim; you haven't supported it.
I don't know that. For the sake of the argument, I am positing that they are legitimate. If we don't posit that, there isn't really anything to talk about.
Exactly. It's a useless exercise. If an argument relies upon something you still can't demonstrate, you're getting ahead of yourself.
I would think they apply to everyone who is in a similar position as myself: born and raised outside of theistic religion, and with no personal divine revelation.
To you perhaps.
To the best of my understanding, I have delineated what I think that "to believe in God" means.
What if you would read what I said, perhaps a little more carefully?
All I have ever heard or learned on the topic of "God," I have heard from people.
As far as matters of "God" are concerned, I am fully dependent on other people.
Anything that I might conjure up on the topic "God" that is not in line with what other people have told me on the topic "God", I have to dismiss as merely my imagination.
Given that theistic traditions are said to originate from God Himself, it is by belonging to a particular theistic tradition that an ordinary person has any hope of having any legitimate knowledge of God.
Being outside of such tradition, one cannot have any legitimate knowledge of God (other than in the exceptional case of personal divine revelation).
What if those traditions, are just saying that for effect?Given that theistic traditions are said to originate from God Himself, it is by belonging to a particular theistic tradition that an ordinary person has any hope of having any legitimate knowledge of God.
Being outside of such tradition, one cannot have any legitimate knowledge of God (other than in the exceptional case of personal divine revelation).
Even if we don't know whether something is true or not, we can still make arguments that appeal to morality.
This is precisely what I am doing.
I am appealing to the moral sensibilities of theists that they should not place people into absurd decision-making situations as they (ie. the people) seek happiness.
I grant the theists that they may have legitimate knowledge of God; but I appeal to their moral sensibilites in how they present that knowledge and what expectations they have of people.
What?
Are you now playing The Big Atheist??
Have you forsaken your Founder Acharya and the disciplic succession?!
This is the disciplic succession that I have so far been under the impression that you follow:
1. Kṛṣṇa
2. Brahmā
3. Nārada
4. Vyāsa
5. Madhva
6. Padmanābha
7. Nṛhari
8. Mādhava
9. Akṣobhya
10. Jaya Tīrtha
11. Jñānasindhu
12. Dayānidhi
13. Vidyānidhi
14. Rājendra
15. Jayadharma
16. Puruṣottama
17. Brahmaṇya Tīrtha
18. Vyāsa Tīrtha
19. Lakṣmīpati
20. Mādhavendra Purī
21. Īśvara Purī, (Nityānanda, Advaita)
22. Lord Caitanya
23. Rūpa, (Svarūpa, Sanātana)
24. Raghunātha, Jīva
25. Kṛṣṇadāsa
26. Narottama
27. Viśvanātha
28. (Baladeva) Jagannātha
29. Bhaktivinoda
30. Gaurakiśora
31. Bhaktisiddhānta Sarasvatī
32. A. C. Bhaktivedanta Svāmī Prabhupāda
And read this:
Qualities of the correct epistemology for perceiving God - a thread started by LG.
Surely you are familiar with the usual pattern in theistic religion:
"In the past, God gave a special man information about Himself. Ever since then, everyone who wants to know about God has to depend on that man and his followers."
So nowadays, everyone who is not that special man to whom God revealed Himself, is in the group of those who have to depend on that special man.
"All the information that humans can possibly have about God necessarily comes via other people" is true for all those people who don't have first-hand information and who have to depend on that special man (and his followers).
Which, nowadays, in some religions, means that everyone has only such second-hand or third-hand information about God.
And even in those religions that teach that one only needs to "look within to find God": even in such an instance, one would still be trusting others that that which one finds within, is indeed about God; one still wouldn't have first-hand knowledge of God.
Yes. people can form their own view of God. People do that every day.
Yes. If God gets in contact with them.
All Praise The Ancient Of Days