True belief -- even without "hard evidence" -- is better than false belief. Christ belief = reason + "common sense" + some evidence
Belief IS trivial; All beliefs ARE as good as each other;
So a false belief is just as good as a true belief?
Beliefs that are true are only able to claim the status of 'true' in the presence of hard evidence --
Beliefs that are true are only able to claim the status of 'true' in the presence of hard evidence --
And without the hard evidence, they are not true?
So then, when some people believed that smoking was unhealthy, but it was not yet proved with evidence, that belief held by those people was NOT true? Their belief that smoking was unhealthy was a false belief?
I was raised on that "false belief" which was preached at me in Sunday School, while there was yet no "hard evidence" that smoking was unhealthy.
I'm glad I was taught that "false belief" and did not believe the scientific "facts" from the tobacco company scientists who assured us that there was no harm to health from smoking because they had the "hard evidence" to prove it.
That belief that smoking was unhealthy was based on some "common sense" and some reasoning about the likely harmful effects on the lungs, but there was
NO HARD EVIDENCE yet of the harmful effects.
Lucky you.
However.
Don't you think it might have been better for everyone if this 'common sense' came with actual evidence?
It DID come with some "evidence" already, but not the "hard evidence" or "data" from rigid scientific research. So the "facts" were not in yet, but there was reasonable belief based on some "common sense" and limited evidence. So this reasonable belief was appropriate given the limited evidence available.
We always wish we could have more certainty. Of course it's better to have 100% of the facts and absolute certainty. But we usually don't have that.
Then your church might have been able to convince other people that it was a bad thing. Then your 'belief' might have been accepted by people who did not accept your church as an authority.
Again, there was some limited evidence. It wasn't based on pure "authority" alone. When the scientific "facts" are not yet in, it's reasonable to judge based on the limited evidence available. This true belief was beneficial to some who acted upon it.
True belief is valuable even when the scientific "facts" or "data" are not yet in.
Without evidence, then one church's belief that smoking was bad is no different from another church's belief that smoking was good for you.
But there WAS some limited evidence. The belief that smoking was bad was correct, and it was supported by some limited evidence. It was good that this correct belief, though not proven fact, was proclaimed by some preachers and believed by some. And
this true belief was superior and different from the contrary belief that smoking was harmless.
Without evidence, neither one was in a position to convince bystanders that they were offering facts.
But there WAS some evidence -- it just wasn't the "hard evidence" of scientific research, as per bilby's demand.
The point is that we do not need the "facts" of "hard evidence" in order to have true belief which is useful or valuable to us. So it is not true that one "belief" is just as good as another or that only proven "facts" are useful as a connection to the truth.
I have relatives who believe the most moral stance is not to trust anyone who won't drink with you. They won't do business with anyone who's afraid to let their hair down and get at least a little tipsy. Of course, i also have relatives who think alcohol is sinful and defiles the body and risks the soul. They drink grape juice for the sacrament.
The one side can't offer evidence that teatotallers WILL cheat you in a contract.
The other side can't offer evidence that anyone has a soul.
Which side is wrong?
Both sides were partly right and partly wrong.
Can't tell.
So, yes, while it's reduced to a belief, without evidence, the any one is just as valid (or just as invalid) as any other.
I was taught not to smoke, too.
And not to drink.
And not to masturbate.
WHAT? That's going too far!
And not to do a lot of things.
The reason offered most often was 'Because God.'
If that's the argument, then once someone stops believing in that god, one stops believing in those prohibitions.
But that's NOT usually the whole argument. Again, there is usually some "common sense" or limited evidence also. And one can continue to believe the prohibition based on that, even if they stop believing in the "god" part. And also, even if the "god" part is rejected generally, usually the disbeliever still has some doubts and is not a total absolute atheist, and there is still some guilt feeling and fear that evil consequences will follow from the prohibited practice.
Which worked out well. I'd never have gotten so happily married if i'd listened to all the 'don'ts' i grew up with.
You are better off that you listened to some of them, even in cases where the evidence was limited.
I don't really see a downside of rejecting evidence-free, god-based prohibitions and looking for actual evidence.
That's not what we're talking about. This is about whether "Belief IS trivial; All beliefs ARE as good as each other" because they're not proven fact, like prohibitions against smoking were not proven, only because they are lacking the "hard evidence" demanded above by bilby. I.e., demanding that "beliefs" are of no value, or that ALL beliefs are equally worthless and that only "facts" based on "hard evidence" are useful in decision-making.
Sometimes it's best to believe something even if it's not based on proven scientific "data" but on some "common sense" and only limited evidence.
Christ belief is based on some actual evidence and is not "evidence-free" as most non-Christian religious beliefs are.