(no title)
christianfn | 12 years ago
Do you think because I have a religion that I am a poor empiricist? Or that because I know programming languages in the high double-digits I am a poor believer?
Einstein's 1930 NYT article [1] might serve as common ground for us to discuss this rationally. I have to point out, though, that my faith is not out of "fear, social morality, [or] a cosmic religious feeling." I believe as I do because it is an essential part of who I am (identity).
I actually agree with you that there is plenty of unwarranted, blind nationalism in the USA.
[1] Summary https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_views_of_Albert_Eins...
enko|12 years ago
Interesting. I do not think I've heard someone put it quite like that before. I find it quite bizarre and circular:
"I believe in X because I define myself as a person who believes in X, and therefore not believing in X means I lose my identity, therefore I believe in X"
So it's literally impossible for you to stop believing in anything, no matter how ridiculous, without losing your entire sense of self. Kind of defined yourself into a corner there, eh?
ebrenes|12 years ago
Besides I don't see what would prohibit the OP from changing his identity or evolving it. Unless we've somehow established identity is unchangeable, of which I'm not convinced.
3amOpsGuy|12 years ago
>> I believe as I do because it is an essential part of who I am (identity)
You've not left much of a case for pi18n to debate with that statement.
pi18n|12 years ago
panacea|12 years ago
christianfn|12 years ago
I hold multiple degrees above my BSc in Electrical Engineering, one of which is in Computer Science. I'm also PE certified (US Professional Engineer certification).
So I believe the answer to your question is: yes.
shadowfox|12 years ago
arethuza|12 years ago
Is your belief in a God falsifiable?
mikeash|12 years ago
What an odd reason to believe something. I generally try to only believe things because they're the conclusion that best fits the available evidence. Why would you use any other technique?
freetibet|12 years ago
xradionut|12 years ago
As for geology, it's pretty evident that prophets that wrote the "Truth" millennia in the past probably didn't listen when the voices from on high droned on about plate tectonics and such.
christianfn|12 years ago
I don't believe that, however.
The pentateuch's creation story differs enough from how it appears in modern English translations that I have no problem believing it is literally God's word.