NS,
Yes, I meant it. The mathematics example is irrelevant since we aren't comparing like with like here.
You’re derailing. It’s relevant because it illustrates the fundamental difference between the approaches: "I’m right because my faith tells me so" vs "I’m right because this set of calculations tells me so".
For the former, there’s nowhere to go after that – we’re in not even wrong territory; for the latter, there’s everywhere to go just by examining the calculations.
Oughts don't have right answers but people act and speak as if they do.
Oughts are a secondary matter. The primary one is that claim of objective
fact: “There is a god, he’s my God, his rules are accurately written in a book, some of those rules concern man on man action etc” are all claims of objective fact – they’re right or they’re not.
“So you ought to do as this God says” on the other hand is what ensues, and then you’d have point. What I’m addressing though is the claims of fact bit that comes first, specifically claims of fact that rest only on personal faith.
Some people might say that they are certain they are right, but others might admit to a lack of certainty. Both of them may well use the term faith in speaking of it. Some religious people speak as if they are certain, others don't. Some non religious people speak as if they are certain, others don't. It doesn't seem to take a particular type of idea or concept for people to be able to be certain or uncertain about it
All true (though it’d be a relatively rare theist I think who said, “there might be a god or there might not be but I’m going to guess that there is” as if he were talking about raindrops on a window) but I’m talking here specifically about those who attach the label “fact” to their faith beliefs.
I have to go out for a couple of hours by the way, but will pick this up later if that’s ok. Interesting chat though (at least for me).