Gabs,
I see no resemblance between what you stated above and Len's stated belief that he is lucky to not need faith and that theists are deluded because he has not experienced what ever they have experienced therefore their interpretation of their experience is a delusion.
Well, our Len is more than capable of replying for himself but since you ask it was the second part of that I was responding to. So far as I’m aware he’s never said that, because he hasn’t “experienced” these supposed visitations and the like, those who think they have must
therefore be delusional. What he (and I) say is first that we’ve never felt that we’ve experienced them, but second that there are countless non-divine possible causal explanations for these interpretations (delusion being one of them) and unless we’re to accept all asserted claims of the supernatural as necessarily factually true then it’s incumbent on their proponents to tell us why they’re
not mistaken, guessing, delusional etc.
Could you please explain what you mean about some theists expecting their beliefs to be taken more seriously? I don't take Len's beliefs about delusion and happiness more seriously than any other individual's belief - that's not a problem is it? I think if Len finds happiness in his belief and he is not imposing them on others and forcing them to believe it too, and he is not discriminating against theists in any measurable way, then he is entitled to hold his beliefs if they make him happy.
Gladly. It’s always seemed to me that anyone should be free to have any private belief they want to have – in the Christian god, Allah, the Nigerian Ant God, pixies, whatever. It’s no-one’s business but his own. What happens a lot though is that often these people will insist that their personal beliefs are factually true for the rest of us too – their various gods are my god too – and will insist on certain rights and privileges for that belief in the public square: protection from criticism; being taught as facts to children; tax breaks etc.
And it’s the latter that causes me to respond with a, “now hang on a minute”.
I feel neither lucky nor unlucky that I hold different beliefs from Len about delusion and happiness.
No doubt, but I’m not sure that you’ve reflected accurately Len’s beliefs in the fist place.