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On Supernatural Topics, How Do You Know What You “Know”?

Rhea

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We hear in debates the claim that “I know this” or “we know this” or “this thing *is*”. But it’s often circularly sourced; the bible (or torah or quran or the flying monkeys) is real and true because it says it is.


Well, since his book advises us to kill witches, kill family members if they try to push a new religion, lets us own people as property, tells us to execute disobedient sons....wwwwhat the fuck is abhorrent to him?
Oh, I know. Eating shellfish.

Instead of criticizing what you don't understand, or regurgitating dumb atheist propaganda, why not investigate that stuff for yourself.

Why did he do those things? Making up stupid shit isn't an answer, even if it does validate your ideology.

Also, how do you know what you wrote above is true? What supporting evidence do you have, keeping in mind that the bible cannot logically provide evidence of its own veracity?

Why not?




Many believers have tried to say that Jericho exists, therefore the bible stories about jericho are true

In this thread, I’d like to explore just the foundational issue of what methods people use to decide they “know” something. Personal stories welcome. How did you decide you *knew* the bible to be true?
 
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What evidence would convince you the Bible is true? Will that form the standard against which you measure everyone else?
 
What evidence would convince you the Bible is true? Will that form the standard against which you measure everyone else?

No. I am posting this with the expectation that I will hear things I haven’t thought of.
 
What is convincingly “true” may or may not correspond to what actually exists. And IMHO convincingly true is the highest bar a written document can attain. I’d have to witness a Bible doing magic live and in person in order to be convinced that it is a magic book.
 
Well, on topics normally thought of in the terms of the supernatural, I know what I know because I have observed the real mechanism of action of such phenomena. I saw something happening in nature, had experiences of my own, and needed to understand why.

Whenever I think of the topic, the first thing that jumps to mind is the "fairy". Fairies are real things. Only their logical topology resembles "a tiny lady with wings"; just "sprites" generally. Their physical topology is made of a widespread network of human meat communicating through the wiggling air, and they exist as a function of our belief in them.

They are characters whose traits we are told and which then we puppet to ourselves in our heads in a way not entirely bidden by the ego, which might object to this sort of invasion by memetic squatters.

They are characters whose traits are tied to our stories about them and the traditions we have around them, created by the fact that we can't not puppet them once the words enter our ears (@pood, in reference to double negatives in English, this is one of those situations where I think even English demands their use...), they are in their own way and exotic sort of organism created by DNA made of stories.

And moreover environmental factors reify whatever power these semi-detatched characters of our own mind have over our perceptions.

I would say ghosts, demons, angels, and much of the supernatural landscape is constructed this way in a vast and interconnected way through human communication of stories.

I would say ghosts, angels, demons, and even in some ways "gods" (again, note the "g"), however, have distinctly different properties. Angels and Demons and even "gods", at least in the traditions I've tried to take context from, would be natural precipitations of the human nervous system, like little LLMs trained to perform as a character in the neuronal ex changes that inform and occasionally directly drive our behavior.

Dissociation of identity is part and parcel to what I see such things being, and they are in part informed and dressed up in our culture.

Perhaps the existence of their discussion in our culture is what allows such things to distinctly precipitate, but I would reckon that the original belief in such things, the first invention of any such story, was to discuss something about the storyteller that the storyteller didn't have the words to say otherwise.

So, I know what I know about the "supernatural" because I observe that it's more... Sub-natural. As in, a phenomena emulated by the action of other stuff.

This may be a fancy way of saying "it's all hallucinations", but discarding it as such is throwing out the reality that this has a heavy impact on human behavioral dynamics. The literal devil in your brainmeat does whisper in the literal ear-analogue (also in your brainmeat) from which you (as some inner subsection of your brain) "hear" it speak, in my understanding.

And who is to say it has no "lever" on your arms and legs, or to say that it is impossible to give it as much in some way? Or that they are unable to gain personality and loaned leverage of your own mind, through some mechanism related to "belief" or that other parts of your mind must lack "consciousness" of their own?

Anyway, I think even our own personalities end up being laid down in some basic substrate but similar mechanisms and phenomena and social interactions in a complex way, and that such phenomena often thought of as supernatural do have play in how that comes together.

I think that humans just have a really hard time expressing this all in words that can be fully understood, or lack the basis of understanding how all these kinds of "linguistic systems" interact to produce behavior of stuff through the exchange of signals and so end up "believing it must be outside or above nature" rather than explicitly operating through nature.
 
@Rhea, thanks for starting this thread. It is quite an interesting topic above and beyond the religious aspect to it. How do we know what we think we know about … anything?

Here is where philosophy steps in. Some people think philosophy is worthless, but they are wrong.

In fact, philosophy might help us get at the core of the distinction between how naturalists and theists view the world.

There are four classical theories of truth, which overlap in places, and there are others as well. But the big four are correspondence, coherence, consensus and pragmatic. At the risk of great oversimplification:

Correspondence theory basically says that truth inheres in propositions that describe what actually happens in the world.

Coherence theory says that truth “coheres” in a manner that is consistent with a great deal of other knowledge, and is used in making valid and sound arguments.

Consensus theory basically is that truth is an intersubjective construct of what many people agree to be right.

Pragmatist theory says if your “truth” works for you, go for it. This might accord with what Richard Rorty called the non-existent “view from nowhere” and his claim that truth is what you can convince yourself and others is true.

Now I think science basically uses correspondence theory, perhaps with elements of other theories, such as coherence. Coherence is often used philosophy, in constructing arguments that are both valid and sound, and as such has a place in science.

Consensus theory is used when people who simply can’t check stuff for themselves agree to defer to the knowledge of experts, who may themselves later change their minds based on new evidence. For hundreds of years we had a consensus view of the total validity of Newtonian mechanics, and then suddenly we didn’t.

Pragmatic theory of truth holds that whatever is useful for you, is true. If Jack Daniel’s gets you through the night, then Jack Daniel’s getting you through the night is true for you. If Jesus dying as payment for your sins gets you through the night, then Jesus dying for your sins is true for you.

On this account truth is subjective, not intersubjective or objective. And there can be no other kind of truth because of Rorty’s “view from nowhere,” on this account. There is no view from nowhere.

Pragmatic theory has fascinating aspects to it. It means that one can embrace a truth instrumentally, without being wedded to its actuality. To take an obviously unlikely but nevertheless possible example, it might be the case that a young earth creationist intensively studies evolutionary biology. Perhaps he even becomes a professor of it, and teaches it impeccably, while remaining a young earth creationist. How could that be?

Well, he might conclude that evolutionary biology is an instrumentally useful account, and that in any case it is best to teach it rather than risk tenure. But “instrumentally useful” does not mean true in an absolute sense. He might even then deduce that his own young earth creationism is instrumentally useful, and indeed that all truths are such.

And this is where I find overlaps between the four classical theories. While I think most scientists probably adhere to correspondence with some coherence theory thrown in, it can very definitely be the case that our models of the world can be instrumentally useful without being strictly true — once again, Newtonian mechanics serves as an example.

There are other theories of truth as well. Kant made the distinction between the noumena and the phenomenal; in modern times it has been suggested that most of us are like people using a computer with no idea of what goes on “under the hood.” What we call the actual world is equivalent to icons on a desktop, which symbolize an underlying reality beyond our grasp. We just manipulate the icons to get the prize, like lab rats pulling levers to get a treat.

Then there is the issue of justified true belief and Gettier counterexamples. And there are truths of math and logic. But are they really true? It was once thought that Euclidean geometry was axiomatically and self-evidently true. Then we discovered the geometry of the world is non-Euclidean. Or is it? There are counterexamples that would attempt to restore Euclidean geometry as the true ontology of the world.

One could go on. Philosophy is endlessly beguiling and most definitely informative.

For the purposes of this discussion, I suspect a lot of the reason naturalists and theists find themselves talking past each other is because while most naturalists pretty much adhere to a correspondence/coherence view of truth, most theists adhere to a pragmatic view of truth with some consensus thrown in, particularly when they subscribe to a community of believers.

The upshot here is that failure to agree on a theory of truth, rather than failure to agree on facts, is probably at the crux of the disputatious threads we are seeing with RIS and other theists.

Here we might also introduce the philosophy of ethics into the discussion. The issue of God’s monstrous behavior in the OT was raised. RIS seemed to dismiss it as of little importance, though I admit I skimmed that post and might not being doing him justice; but be that as it may, I suggest that naturalists and theists also disagree on a theory of ethics, as well as a theory of truth.

The issue goes back to the Euthyphro dilemma. Does god love the good because it is good, or is something good because god says so? The root of the dilemma of course is that if god loves the good because it is good, then god is not the standard for good and there must be some objective standard for it that is beyond god. That would make god superfluous as far as ethics is concerned.

But if something is good because god says so, then the good is arbitrary — subject to god’s whim. This is called Divine Command theory, and it seems to me that many theists subscribe to it, including I think RIS. Most naturalists would find Divine Command theory appalling if they actually believed there was a Divine Commander. But many theists do not. On Divine Command theory they can support the God-ordered genocides of the bible, because if god says it is good it must good.

Here again, I think, on the theory of ethics as well as on the theory of truth, naturalists and theists talk past each other because, perhaps in many cases without even knowing it, they each have a different set of metaphysical assumptions. Philosophy can help in laying bare those assumptions so that naturalists and theists could perhaps communicate more profitably.
 
Note that Hebrews 11, “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen,” is itself a metaphysical theory of knowledge. to the Correspondence/Coherentist, clause 1 is called wishful thinking, and clause 2 is called magical thinking. But to those with a consensus/pragmatist metaphysics of truth, or a faith-based view of truth, those clauses look very different. They look veridical.

I think discussions between naturalists and theists would profit from each side exploring and clarifying which metaphysics of truth they are using.
 
Note that Hebrews 11, “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen,” is itself a metaphysical theory of knowledge. to the Correspondence/Coherentist, clause 1 is called wishful thinking, and clause 2 is called magical thinking. But to those with a consensus/pragmatist metaphysics of truth, or a faith-based view of truth, those clauses look very different. They look veridical.

I think discussions between naturalists and theists would profit from each side exploring and clarifying which metaphysics of truth they are using.
What would you consider the metaphysics of the tested methodology of science, combined with the pragmatic proof of engineering or reverse engineering?

For me I think each metaphysical theory of knowledge needs to be applied at different stages.

Faith is applied insofar as when there is a lack of science or engineering beyond broad and intuited principles. It is the thing that gets you through the day before you can do the work to build better knowledge.

Then, once you are at least consistently functional in a conservative sort of way, everything that is based on faith needs to be tested, observed, documented, and figured out. This is where science takes over.

Once the science is done, finally, that theory of operation must be borne out in a device of some kind whose effects of operation mirror the operation of the natural observed phenomena. This is where engineering takes over.

Then once things have been figured out, people continue operating, and the best begin consideration that there is something taken on faith, or some smaller part to begin building intuitions about!

Perhaps our engineering is not up to the challenge to try to build the thing science says is a stable construction of matter, if only matter could be assembled thus!

To me, them, knowledge has differences in quality based on whether it has been touched by only the believer, whether the scientist has reached it, or whether the engineer has reified it.
 
I think discussions between naturalists and theists would profit from each side exploring and clarifying which metaphysics of truth they are using.
Right? Only, doing that would probably obviate the need for discussion in most cases.
 
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