by jimwalton » Sun Nov 03, 2019 5:22 pm
> I would ask if you could choose to believe "like that" so to speak, as if one day you woke up and said "I'll just believe Christianity isn't true today", with virtually the exact same information that you possessed the previous night when you fell asleep a theist.
Of course not. That's self-contradictory. You're asking me if I can disbelieve what I believe, or count as false what I count as true. I examined the evidence to make the decision I did, and I would examine the evidence to change it. No one can just disbelieve what they believe. We've passed from reason into absurdity.
But I don't know what that has to do with anything. I make my choices based on evidence, not self-contradictory blind decisions.
> If their thoughts are not arbitrary, they must come from some experience, however illusory such an experience might be.
Not necessarily. I have found that many people make decisions (even about truth and falseness, right and wrong, and what they choose to believe) on visceral intuitions, not even on experience, let alone research. People can have exactly the same experiences and yet react totally differently.
> but their impetus to do so often comes from some part of themselves that they don't freely will into existence.
I don't think so. The impetus, I think, comes from predispositions combined with experiences combined with visceral intuitions. We are quite complex beings, and I don't agree that we can pin it down to one source. Nature and nurture; predispositions, personality, and experiences that weave together to create not only an identity but also a perspective.
> Many people can "rise above" malevolent desires, but to me it seems that they do so due to a counterbalancing factor such as a desire to do good, for example.
I agree that many do, but the reasons are more complex than a desire (and possibly you are not implying that desire is the only factor involved). Some people just seem to be born optimists. Some are, like, born complainers. And some, we have to wonder, seem to be born psychopaths. Not that "born" is the whole picture; it never is.
> my contention is that if people are not treated fairly in this world, I don't see why I should trust that it be any different in the next.
It's because this world is for a different purpose, and is therefore operating on different rules. A rugby player acts very different in the arena on the field than he does at home (well, hopefully, right?). The rules of each arena are different, and suited to not only the environment but also to the purpose.
Churchill knew that wartime required a different mode of governance than normal life. Instead of a chicken in every pot and a car in every garage, he promised blood, toil, tears and sweat.
The only way we know anything about the afterlife is in what is revealed to us. Since I have been convinced by evidence to trust the Bible, I then choose to believe what it tells me about the afterlife. According to the Bible, the "rules" will not and cannot be turned around.