AB,
After consciously choosing to re read one of your recent posts, I have employed my brain to interpret the words - and as their meaning enters my conscious awareness, I contemplate their meaning and consciously choose words to convey my consciously thought out response to selected parts of your post:
Provided by “I” you mean Alan Burns rather than some invisible hobgoblin you’ve asserted into existence to do the choosing, fine...
My take on reality does not contradict anything in theoretical physics. What I am implying is that there is much more to reality than the unavoidable consequences predicted by the laws of physics.
First, you seemed to think that not being able to test theories with experiments makes the theories wrong. It doesn’t.
Second, if you want to imply “that there is much more to reality than the unavoidable consequences predicted by the laws of physics” you’re free to, but you’ll need to provide some justifying reasons if you want that to be taken seriously.
I do not ditch the existing parts of the jigsaw of reality - I add to them with what I believe in order to achieve a more complete picture of reality with meaning and purpose.
Yes you do. The “existing parts of the jig-saw” suggest a materialistic model for consciousness. What you “believe” on the other hand causes you to junk that for no parts of the jig-saw at all – they’re just faith claims.
If you approach the question of prayers being answered or witness stories of miracles with the premise that God does not exist - you will inevitably search for reasons to dismiss these stories instead of reading them with an open mind.
No – you have it backwards. It’s examining such claims and testing them (with double blind trials for example) that shows them to be false. That’s what an open mind looks like. A closed mind on the other hand insists
a priori that prayers work and miracles happen, and then dismisses out of hand the evidence to the contrary.
I find overwhelming evidence for my Christian faith and see no contradictions with reality we all perceive.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confirmation_biasThe Christian Bible is a collection of books written by numerous authors over a period of hundreds of years. You cannot simply dismiss it as circular reasoning. Each author claims to be inspired by God or to have had encounters with a person whom they believe to be God incarnate. If you read the Bible from a premise that there is no God, you will search for reasons to dismiss the writings (see Sassy's opening post). If you read it with an open mind you should come to one of three conclusions - (i) The authors are deluded. (ii) The authors are telling lies or (iii) they witness to the truth.
You’ve missed the point. I was just illustrating circular reasoning with an example – I could just as well have said that claiming
any book to be true because a character in says it’s true is circular reasoning.
I see nothing circular about an intelligent being forming an intention and then using their intelligence and powers to fulfil their intention. It happens all the time with humans.
Then you need to try again. The circularity is in deciding that the likelihood of your existence by chance is so small that there must have intentionality
ab initio – therefore a “guiding” god to steer the process. You also though need “god” to have been involved to start with to decide that Alan Burns was the plan all along. That is, your premise “god” and your conclusion “god” are the same thing. And that’s circular reasoning.
You seem to ignore the unfathomable complexity needed to bring about such creations and the unlikelyhood of random unguided forces being able to achieve this.
FFS Alan – see above.
Our ability to reason goes far beyond what can be achieved by unavoidable material reactions.
Now you’ve collapsed into a statement of blind faith. Could you try at least to understand what’s being said to you? You’re like the winner of a lottery with a trillion tickets in the draw who decides that there must therefore be special about you, oblivious to the fact that the lottery company neither knows nor cares who will win (or indeed if anyone will).
This isn’t difficult to understand Alan. Really it isn't.