Gabriella,
Supernatural is a description for something that is outside the various currently known rules and explanations of the natural world that science has come up with based on demonstrable evidence. In this case for example, we are given various descriptions of an entity in the Quran that does not seem to conform to explanations derived using repeatable, testable, demonstrable methods e.g. unique, eternal, no beginning and no end, beyond time and space, nothing like it in this world, etc etc.
No it isn’t. “…outside the various currently known rules and explanations of the natural world that science has come up with” refers to
our state of knowledge about a possible phenomenon, but not necessarily to
a characteristic of the phenomenon itself. Lots of “somethings” were once “outside the various currently known rules and explanations of the natural world” etc but are now inside them. Would that mean that they too were previously supernatural and somehow became natural only once science had explained them?
In short, you cannot conflate a state of knowledge
about a thing with the necessary character
of that thing.
I do not need to demonstrate that the supernatural exists as I am not making an argument that it exists - I am merely communicating my belief in order to confirm that I am a theist - as we are on a discussion forum of theists and atheists.
If you want to justify a belief that a supernatural god/angel exist(ed), then you need to demonstrate first the existence of a “supernatural” state of being for it/them to inhabit
at all. On the other hand if you want to confine yourself to there being characters in a story that are described as “supernatural” and you find meaning in that, then there’s no "supernatural" to be demonstrated.
True some/ many religious people may express a belief that god is a "hard fact" - I think this is done to convey the strength or certainty of their belief. But as they provide no repeatable, testable, demonstrable evidence for god, which means their belief is based on interpretations of subjective experiences, on the testimony of others, and on aesthetics, presumably the way we use language would categorise what they express as a belief rather than fact.
Agreed.
People in society have broadly adopted the view that society should show respect for other people's beliefs within certain limits,…
Depends which society, but in secular societies at least I’d say that it’s more accurate to say, “people in society have broadly adopted the view that society should show respect for other people's rights
to hold their beliefs…” rather than respect for the beliefs themselves. I respect the right of the Archbishop of Canterbury for example to hold his beliefs. I also think his beliefs are if idiotic.
…maybe because they see it as a way of reducing violent conflict in society and because they want respect shown for their own beliefs and aesthetics. Of course there will be some problems in accommodating conflicting beliefs - and as part of the process of a functioning society, these conflicting beliefs are identified and debated, which all takes time. No system is perfect but discussing the issues seems to be a good starting point to managing conflicts.
Which is to miss my point. To paraphrase, two mathematicians for example who disagree about a calculation will likely work together to see who’s right; two clerics who cloak themselves in the certainty of the rules of a factual and inerrant god on the other hand will try to kill each other. Why? Because in each of their minds there’s no possibility that either of them is wrong. The point here is that provisionality and uncertainty often have very different real-world consequences from those of certainty and absolutism.
When beliefs are held by a substantial part of the population, regardless of what the beliefs are, they will influence the rules that society comes up with to regulate its behaviour and morality. Adding a god belief into the mix is one method of persuasion, but there are plenty of others e.g. fighting for a cause, a political belief, beliefs about race or culture or nation states or abstract notions of freedom, honour etc. which are also down to aesthetics and can't be demonstrated as hard facts.
See above.
A religious person stating "god hates gays" seems to be voicing one of their own aesthetic preferences - and by that I mean that there may be many people who experience a "yuk" reaction to the thoughts /visualisation of sexual acts, but only some of them will express it in public and seek to influence large groups of society to enforce rules and try to control people to prevent people from engaging in a particularly activity. They may have various reasons such as a self-serving agenda, preservation of power or creating a particular sort of order and conformity in society, but it seems to come down to aesthetics and particular types of people with the ability to persuade and influence large groups of people into going in a particular direction. Despite it being an imperfect system, democracy and politics and discussion seems to be the preferred way for the individuals who make up society to come up with ways of regulating competing beliefs in society. So I assume you don't want people to stop expressing their beliefs or engaging in the current system to regulate beliefs.
You’re not getting it still.
You might think they’re voicing one of their own aesthetic preferences.
I might think they’re voicing one of their own aesthetic preferences. The point though is that they
don’t think they’re voicing one of their own aesthetic preferences. They think they’re providing the facts, and so feel empowered to act accordingly. After all, when you’re really, absolutely, 100% guaranteed
certain that you’re right about that what need have you of the opinions – or the aesthetic preferences – of other people?
You referred to a god handing down his rules via an angel. Either you think this god and angel are allegorical characters (akin to the hare and the tortoise) or you think they actually exist(ed)
regardless of the stories told about them. I thought you believed the latter, but if instead you think that god/angel are epistemically equivalent to hare/tortoise then well and good.
I don't think they are similar to the hare and tortoise - I assume Aesop made it clear that was a fictional story, whereas it is not stated in the Quran that these are fictional stories to illustrate some point.
That’s irrelevant. The intentions of the respective authors are neither here nor there. What matters is whether the god/angel or hare/tortoise existed
regardless of the accounts of them had been written.As I have stated many times before, I believe that the supernatural entity described in the Quran is real albeit that I don't know how much of the description is literal as opposed to allegorical or illustrative due to the constraints of language, but I am not claiming or making an argument that it is real or that the contents of the Quran is fact as I have no way to demonstrate that it is real or factually correct.
You’re tying yourself in knots here. So you believe it to be a fact (ie, “real”), but at the same time you cannot justify the belief so you are not “claiming” it is a fact/real? But doesn’t a belief that something is a fact require at least a claim to
yourself that it’s real, even if you stop short of saying that anyone else should take your personal fact belief seriously?
You seem to me here to have painted yourself into a corner of a new category of “fact” – a personal fact that’s just a fact for you, but isn’t a also fact for anyone else.
How does that work? Can you have a fact just for you about, say, a planet orbiting between Earth and Mars, or do you have personal facts only in respect of your religious beliefs? And how should we respond when lots of people have their own personal facts, and then use those personal facts to justify killing people for blaspheming against their personal facts?
So for me it remains a belief, not fact. Islam was pitched to its adherents as a way of regulating their behaviour as individuals within society based on a belief in the truth of what is stated in the Quran, and the Quran does state that some parts of it are allegorical and some parts should be taken literally, and only the supernatural entity described in the Quran knows for certain which parts are allegorical and which parts are literal. This has given some space for interpretation and application of the guidance in the Quran, depending on time and location and context.
“…and only the supernatural entity described in the Quran knows for certain which parts are allegorical and which parts are literal”
!!! So you have a personal fact that isn’t an actual fact that there really is a supernatural god and your personal fact that isn’t an actual fact about this supernatural god is also that only this same factual/non-factual supernatural god can explain which parts of a text about himself are allegorical and which are literally (ie, factually) true? Only the “literally true” parts might also be personal facts rather than actual facts. Or something.
Does anything strike you as problematic about this dog’s breakfast of reasoning?