by jimwalton » Mon Jun 16, 2014 8:56 am
> Trust comes with personal experience as evidence.
This is worth discussing, because I'm not sure there's a solid distinction here. If I go down to the store, confident that it will be there because I know the nature of reality and I have no reason to believe it won't be there (I haven't heard any explosions, seen any fires, heard any news reports, or aware of any earthquakes), I am making an assumption of truth (that the store will be there) based on enough evidence that makes it reasonable to make that assumption. Is the evidence the brick and mortar store that is still there, or my personal observation that it is still there? I'm not sure you can separate the two, because "evidence" implies a personal perception. It becomes evidentiary when it is processed as evidence by a rational mind.
> This quote (Heb. 11.1) directly states that faith is belief without evidence
I disagree. First of all, the verse doesn't define faith, but describes it. Both words that are used in the verse ("being sure of" and "certain of") are terms of substance, not trust. "Being sure of" is ὑπόστασις meaning "the substantial nature of a thing; essence; actual being; reality (in contrast to what merely seems to be)." The term was used for foundations of buildings and business contracts as the basis or guarantee of transactions. The second word is ἔλεγχος, meaning "Proof; conviction based on evidence." The idea is clearly that faith is a knowledge of the substantial nature and essence of reality based on evidences that are observable and subject to proof. That's why I define faith as I do, and live by faith the way I live.
You're making a distinction I'm not sure I understand, so I could use some clarification. You say I'm using "faith" as "trust," but you don't really define "belief" for me to distinguish the terms. You say, "No one chooses to be convinced of something," but haven't you ever seen something on TV or the Internet, or heard a story told by someone, and you say, "I don't believe that." I have. When I hear certain reports or certain evidences, sometimes I'm skeptical and choose not to believe. So I don't see where belief is like some indomitable force that overwhelms me with no choice. Some clarifying explanation would help before I "believe" what you are saying. You see what I mean? But again, how's that different from trust? I don't get it and I need your help.
Now, I agree that sometimes I hear things and believe them what seems to be automatically, instinctively, as if I didn't reflect, but I think it's because it makes so much sense to me I intuitively trust the evidence.
I also agree that it's very difficult to "force" myself to believe something that contradicts what I have already accepted as true, or that knocks me into such a state of disequilibrium that I can't process it in such a way as to accept it as truth. Your example of purple and blue sky makes perfect sense. It's an impossible task, but we know such things happen.
For instance, for millennia people thought the world was flat. Evidence starts emerging that maybe it's not. People slough it off as absurd. But more evidence pours in. Academics provide persuasive arguments. Even some friends become convinced and change their minds. Can it be so? Should I "believe" it? Is the evidence compelling enough that I should accept the disequilibrium as truth and change my worldview? I can see with own eyes that the earth is flat. Has it magically changed, or is the evidence now compelling me to a conclusion other than what my eyes tell me is true, my mind knows to be reasonable, and has been established by evidence as the new essence of reality?
Here's where I need feedback from you.
> Trust comes with personal experience as evidence.
This is worth discussing, because I'm not sure there's a solid distinction here. If I go down to the store, confident that it will be there because I know the nature of reality and I have no reason to believe it won't be there (I haven't heard any explosions, seen any fires, heard any news reports, or aware of any earthquakes), I am making an assumption of truth (that the store will be there) based on enough evidence that makes it reasonable to make that assumption. Is the evidence the brick and mortar store that is still there, or my personal observation that it is still there? I'm not sure you can separate the two, because "evidence" implies a personal perception. It becomes evidentiary when it is processed as evidence by a rational mind.
> This quote (Heb. 11.1) directly states that faith is belief without evidence
I disagree. First of all, the verse doesn't define faith, but describes it. Both words that are used in the verse ("being sure of" and "certain of") are terms of substance, not trust. "Being sure of" is ὑπόστασις meaning "the substantial nature of a thing; essence; actual being; reality (in contrast to what merely seems to be)." The term was used for foundations of buildings and business contracts as the basis or guarantee of transactions. The second word is ἔλεγχος, meaning "Proof; conviction based on evidence." The idea is clearly that faith is a knowledge of the substantial nature and essence of reality based on evidences that are observable and subject to proof. That's why I define faith as I do, and live by faith the way I live.
You're making a distinction I'm not sure I understand, so I could use some clarification. You say I'm using "faith" as "trust," but you don't really define "belief" for me to distinguish the terms. You say, "No one chooses to be convinced of something," but haven't you ever seen something on TV or the Internet, or heard a story told by someone, and you say, "I don't believe that." I have. When I hear certain reports or certain evidences, sometimes I'm skeptical and choose not to believe. So I don't see where belief is like some indomitable force that overwhelms me with no choice. Some clarifying explanation would help before I "believe" what you are saying. You see what I mean? But again, how's that different from trust? I don't get it and I need your help.
Now, I agree that sometimes I hear things and believe them what seems to be automatically, instinctively, as if I didn't reflect, but I think it's because it makes so much sense to me I intuitively trust the evidence.
I also agree that it's very difficult to "force" myself to believe something that contradicts what I have already accepted as true, or that knocks me into such a state of disequilibrium that I can't process it in such a way as to accept it as truth. Your example of purple and blue sky makes perfect sense. It's an impossible task, but we know such things happen.
For instance, for millennia people thought the world was flat. Evidence starts emerging that maybe it's not. People slough it off as absurd. But more evidence pours in. Academics provide persuasive arguments. Even some friends become convinced and change their minds. Can it be so? Should I "believe" it? Is the evidence compelling enough that I should accept the disequilibrium as truth and change my worldview? I can see with own eyes that the earth is flat. Has it magically changed, or is the evidence now compelling me to a conclusion other than what my eyes tell me is true, my mind knows to be reasonable, and has been established by evidence as the new essence of reality?
Here's where I need feedback from you.