Sriram,
When two mothers talk about loving their babies....how do we know that they are talking about the same thing? Maybe they are talking about two different 'loves' altogether...... Or maybe one of them is actually hating her baby but thinks it is love... and so on and so forth!
That is ridiculous! This is what I call over intellectualizing. We think we are talking something very intelligent and intriguing but are really tying ourselves in knots.
Anyway...as I have said earlier..... Please read my thread on Faith also.
You’ve missed the point. When two mothers talk about their love engendered by their babies there are perfectly commonplace ways to determine beyond reasonable doubt that it was in fact babies they were “encountering”. When on the other hand they each express their love for their god(s) there’s no way to determine that they have actually encountered their own god(s), different god(s) or no god(s) at all. Rather “god(s)” is just a place marker for an explanation that’s justifiable.
Blind faith based on what someone else says is one thing. Real faith is different. It is based on real experience of an inner presence within ourselves. This faith gives rise to further beliefs and anthropomorphic imagery and so on. In intellectually inclined people it would give rise to philosophical musings.
Still wrong. “Blind” faith and “real” faith are the same thing – claims of explanatory truths with no means of verification. If you think there’s some way to distinguish them though by all means share.
There is nothing to discuss here about this because I cannot convince anyone here about the experience itself. That remains the domain of few people who have access to it.
This is your escape clause – when challenged about whether or not you’ve actually “experienced” the thing you think you’ve experienced, you dive down this rabbit hole. Doesn’t work though – when you want your reasoning for having encountered a “presence” (rather than, say just had an endorphin rush or similar) to be taken seriously, that reasoning can be examined on its own terms regardless of the experiences your interlocutor may or may not have had. The alternative of “I’ve had the experience so you just have to take my word for what I think caused it” opens the doors to all manner of gods, ghosts, spooks, ghouls, hobgoblins and, yes, leprechauns if you like too.
Can you see why that's a problem?