Mae von H wrote: ↑Sat Mar 02, 2024 12:34 pm
The problem here is you are bypassing the process by which an honest and intelligent person evaluates the evidence to arrive at the truth.
No, I'm going by exactly what you said. I even quoted it in my reply. You said that beliefs are a choice. Perhaps that's not really what you meant?
I fully understand and even explained that what we observe and learn about drives our beliefs, but the belief itself is not a choice. We believe something because we have become convinced by something.
i.e. I let go of a hammer over my foot by accident and smashed my toe. I guess gravity is a real thing. I believe in gravity. I didn't choose to believe in gravity first, my belief was driven by experience.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sat Mar 02, 2024 12:34 pm
Essentially you are saying “be dishonest and ignore the whole body of evidence you’ve examined over many years (perhaps) and decide against the obvious conclusion.” It is like asking a jury to ignore the evidence and decide guilt or innocence in full denial of the evidence. You’re asking for dishonesty.
No. You have missed the point. You said belief is a choice full stop.
Now you are tap dancing around what we both know. Belief is in fact not a choice, but a byproduct of our lived experiences and the input we receive from various sources.
Yes, if we only consume one side of the story, we are likely only going to believe whatever that data points us at. This is the central issue with many Christians including myself when I was one. I only consumed Bible study material from Christian sources. Lo and behold those Bible studies never mentioned or focused all the contradictions (2 different creation stories to name one of dozens), the likely dating of when these materials were written and by who (anonymous gospels written decades after the fact - if any of it was even fact), the blatant plagiarism among some of them (synoptic problem), the wrong understanding of some of the authors on previous scriptural materials (bless Matthew and riding on two animals at once LOL), and the practical complete lack of extrabiblical materials to corroborate any of the wild tales.
I do get your point that we choose what to question, what to read, what to study, etc. However, the belief that falls out of all that is not itself a choice. We are simply convinced one way or the other and there's no way around it. New data can change a belief. Simply wanting to believe something cannot.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sat Mar 02, 2024 12:34 pm
This again defies the known laws of gravity. But I could ask you. If you witnessed a real miracle, no show, a severely injured/sick person suddenly made whole/well, you would have to process that, right? Or would you choose to ignore it? I am curious.
First, flying pigs do not defy the known laws of gravity. I assume if a flying pig were to exist it would likely have wings. This is beside the point and you know it. If you saw 'something' that you believed impossible before, you would now have no choice but to process it correct?
As for the sick person becoming suddenly well. Of course I would have to process it. Unlike you though, I would not immediately jump to "it's a miracle of God!" because I don't believe in gods. If you asked me what actually happened, not being a medical doctor I could only tell you what I saw. Sally was on her death bed and now she is dancing in the street. That doesn't mean the God of the Bible had anything to do with it. Could be. Could also just as likely be another god, aliens, or more likely a natural process we don't understand yet. I would be perfectly fine saying "I don't know what happened, but something certainly did".
How about you? Would you simply jump to the conclusion that your God cured Sally when you for a fact don't actually know what happened? Unless of course God chose to give you a call and explain it was Him?