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| Belief and Spirituality General thinking beyond the boundaries of religion and organised belief |
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#31 (permalink) | |
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~~~~~~~~~
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Gator Country, FL, USA
Posts: 4,061
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Re: knowledge vs. belief
Kindest Regards, Kathe!
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I want to be sure I am not imposing, but at your convenience could I ask you to consider looking at the "morality in evolution" thread in the philosophy section. It is very long, I am not asking you look at all of it, but the first page or two (about 30 posts). There you will see I asked a question that would be suited to your outlook, in that I would be interested to hear what you may have to add. Thank you in advance. I want to add I think you are a great sport. It is seldom we get active participation from pagans outside of the pagan board. It is appreciated, on my part. |
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#32 (permalink) |
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Kitchen Witch
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: California
Posts: 140
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Re: knowledge vs. belief
juantoo3,
I'll look at the thread you suggested as I have time. Thank you for your welcoming attitude, I appreciate it. As for participating anywhere and everywhere...why, I'm a Pagan, and the whole wide Multiverse is my Church, so why not play/dance/worship in all of it? |
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#33 (permalink) | |
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Kitchen Witch
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: California
Posts: 140
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Re: knowledge vs. belief
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Because I know that I am the source of my thoughts and feelings and beliefs (and judgements and evaluations and so on), I MUST BE personally responsible for what they bring about. There is no abdication of responsibility; just the opposite, in fact. I own my "relative" views of things. My ownership applies even to those things I have "inherited" and have not examined. |
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#34 (permalink) | |
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Kitchen Witch
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: California
Posts: 140
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Re: knowledge vs. belief
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At some point I may decide to thoroughly investigate one board at a time by going back to the first pages of topics and working my way forward, but for the time being I'm quite happy to follow the method I'm using right now to find things of interest. |
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#35 (permalink) |
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In the Spirit
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: The Rockies
Posts: 3,144
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Re: knowledge vs. belief
I think that there are different kinds of knowledge and to have a meaningful conversation the particpants need to first agree to what kind of knowledge they are talking about. I'm not a philosophy scholar, so I apologize in advance to laying out an amateur's framework for this.
scientific or literal knowledge--knowing based upon fact supportable, or at least theoretically supportable, by material evidence and observation. wisdom knowledge--knowing based upon culture or tradition, or in contrast to culture/tradition (one way or another it is in reference to tradition) sacred knowledge--knowing based upon faith (in the lack of objective evidence, not in spite of contrary evidence) rational knowledge--knowing based upon reason--must accept a base assumption, even if that base assumption is "only things that I can touch/observe/measure are real." I also see that there is overlap in these catagories. So, for example, I consider Jesus turning water into wine as sacred knowledge. As literal knowledge I would expect to find material evidence that such a thing is possible without trickery or illusion. It is also wisdom knowledge in that it teaches us something about Christ's mission in contrast to conventional/traditional wisdom. just some thought, lunamoth |
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#36 (permalink) | |
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New Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 22
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Re: knowledge vs. belief
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Also, I suppose that you would like to have a set of categories that are mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive. I am not sure that, for example, rational knowledge isn't really part of scientific knowledge (or vice versa). |
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#37 (permalink) |
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In the Spirit
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: The Rockies
Posts: 3,144
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Re: knowledge vs. belief
Just thought about the term gnosis, which is also knowledge or perhaps more specifically 'recognition.' Maybe another way to say this is 'unveiling' that which is there but we previously failed to see. Thus, there is no new information given, but a new understanding or a paradigm shift. I think this is seen in our baptism where the Holy Spirit, which is always present, is not so much as imparted as it is discovered as our old self dies. Likewise, opening up the parables of the Kingdom of God show that that Kingdom is not something to be built as much as it is something to be found.
lunamoth |
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#38 (permalink) | |
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In the Spirit
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: The Rockies
Posts: 3,144
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Re: knowledge vs. belief
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I edited my post to reflect that these types of knowledge are not mutually exclusive nor exhaustive. Belief is a slippery word, even more so than knowledge. That's why I disagree with Thomas, or perhaps it was you, when above it was said that scientists have 'beliefs' about their work. Scientific language is intentionally precise and non-emotive, even if it is true that scientists can not always perfectly separate objectivity from subjectivity. That's why we have peer review to expose those things that are not empirical. A scientist will use the term hypothesis. A well-supported hypothesis may be considered a theory. Data are measurable facts. But you are right that to have a meaningful conversation about belief the definition of 'belief' must first be agreed upon, just as the definition of knowledge must be agreed upon. I realize that in philosophy there are definitions of these things already, but not all of us converse in philosophical logic. Anyway, to answer your question, I would place belief within the catagories of wisdom or sacred knowledge, which I have already said are not mutually exclusive. I see sacred knowledge as knowledge supported by divine revelation. Thus, if that divine revelation is found in an accepted scripture or tradition, as in Christianity, then sacred knowledge is a subset of wisdom knowledge. But if that divine revelation is personally received, then it may or may not also be wisdom, depending exactly what the belief is about (i.e., personal or community). |
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#39 (permalink) | |
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New Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 22
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Re: knowledge vs. belief
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Right now I'm thinking of a discussion around knowledge as a function of 'degree of uncertainty' and 'degree of agreement'. Quahom1 has posted definitions of belief and knowledge that I found thought-provoking... I'm visualizing a person that starts with a vague belief, full of doubt...he studies the matter, gathers observations, formulates theories...doubt begins to scatter, i.e. the 'degree of uncertainty' decreases as he turns more and more convinced of the 'truth'... Finally, there is no doubt and uncertainty whatsoever. Then the belief has been replaced by 'knowledge'. Or is there more to it? Maybe others have to agree to the new truth for it to really be considered true? Or is it enough that a single person has no doubt in his mind? I guess I'm looking at knowledge as a social dimension, something that is created by the perception and social structures of human kind, and thus, constantly changing and never fixed. Hmm. Just some unstructured thoughts, sorry. DIKL |
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#40 (permalink) |
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In the Spirit
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: The Rockies
Posts: 3,144
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Re: knowledge vs. belief
Further, sacred knowledge is also rational knowledge. The difference is that the base assumption does not require a material proof. In fact, even the statement I chose as an example of rational knowledge, "only things that I can touch/observe/measure are real," or Descatres famous "I think therefore I am," are basic assumptions that can't be proved. In essence, even these are based on a certain amount of faith.
lunamoth |
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#41 (permalink) | |||
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In the Spirit
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: The Rockies
Posts: 3,144
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Re: knowledge vs. belief
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But, how would you apply this path to certitude about things that are spiritual, if you accept the premise that there is Something More than we can measure. Quote:
I'm rambling here too. lunamoth |
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#42 (permalink) | |
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New Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 22
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Re: knowledge vs. belief
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I do agree that the aim and language of science is to be objective and non-emotive. But as science is a human process, it can never be truly objective. At the heart of science is the relation between observations and theories. An observation is worthless without a theory that explains exactly what that observation is indicating. If the theory lets us predict the future (within some limiting conditions), then it is a good theory. Observations that do not fit the theory (but are within the limitations) are either categorized as measuring or test setup errors of some kind, or they are indicating that the theory does not hold. So science evolves as new theories with better predictive value and less constraints replace old theories. Theories are also rooted in culture and history, as is everything human. How could we then ever declare to have reached "the one and only truth"? Once the earth 'was' flat. Now it is round. Once wood and other fabrics burned according to how much 'flogiston' they contained. Now they burn according to how much oxygen is available. Once it was 'natural' for objects to fall. Now objects follow curvatures in space, caused by other larger objects. Once light travelled at infinite speed. Now only at ca 300 000 m/s. Yet all the direct observations continue to be the same! As I see it, most knowledge evolves like this, albeit not in such a structured manner as for scientific knowledge. Even you and me Lunamoth, in this discussion are trying to prove our varying theories of what "knowledge" is, pointing to different observations, etc. |
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#43 (permalink) | ||||
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In the Spirit
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: The Rockies
Posts: 3,144
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Re: knowledge vs. belief
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data: observable/measurable pieces of information (average temperatures are warmer near the equator than near the poles of the earth) hypothesis: a model or assumption based upon an observation, formulated in a way that is experientially testable (a mutation in gene x will affect function y). theory: a 'grown up hypothesis' strongly supported by testing and empirical data. A model useful for making predictions about the related phenomeon (evolution) fact: an objectively irrefutable piece of information (the earth revolves around the sun; the boiling point of water is 100 degrees C) Quote:
lunamoth Last edited by lunamoth : 03-21-2006 at 08:58 PM. |
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#44 (permalink) | |||||
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New Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 22
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Re: knowledge vs. belief
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Objectively irrefutable piece of information = A piece of information that you, me and everyone else in this culture at this point in time agrees to is 'true'. Quote:
A minor caveat can be that you imply a strictly linear progress. It sounds like ideas that were once held for 'true' can never have that position again. I would keep the possibility open for old ideas to come back in some form. Quote:
It is important to make a distinction between data and information: Data on its own has no meaning. Only when interpreted by a person (or machine) does it take on meaning and become information. It might be that 'belief' is not a useful term to use when describing the material universe. But then again, I'm not trying to claim that. Here's what I wrote earlier to Thomas: I really do believe that all positions are equal in worth. The universe holds countless possibilities, and each human has his intepretation of each possibility. I cannot help but feel humble in front of such complexity. Nevertheless, I believe that we must have the courage to take a position and to act, in spite of all this insecurity. As we act, we are also showing what position we deem 'truer' than all other. |
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#45 (permalink) | ||||
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In the Spirit
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: The Rockies
Posts: 3,144
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Re: knowledge vs. belief
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peace, lunamoth |
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