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Author Message
25 new of 432 responses total.
kingjon
response 288 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 21:46 UTC 2006

The problem is that God can't (normally) be perceived with any of the physical
senses, but there aren't words for the sort of perception used to perceive him,
so we are forced to use analogous words that don't mean precisely the same
thing. "See him" also sometimes is used to mean "see his 'fingerprints'" (with
"fingerprint" being used in a metaphorical sense).

"'I see,' said the blind man to his deaf companion, as he picked up his hammer
and saw."
tod
response 289 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 21:51 UTC 2006

re #285
You refer to Descartes but don't seem to practice methodological skepticism
when people think (i.e. doubt)  Your faith deceives you.
drew
response 290 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 21:57 UTC 2006

You've actually *met* God?
Like that chick on _Joan of Arcadia_?
Or like people who from time to time say
that they've been visited by Mary with
the Cherry?

(btw I think these claims do bear some
investigation.)
marcvh
response 291 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 22:02 UTC 2006

Of course there are words.  The phrase used to describe perceiving something
by some method other than the 5 senses is "extra-sensory perception" or
ESP.  If you perceived God by some method other than seeing, hearing,
touching, smelling or tasting him then it was ESP.
kingjon
response 292 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 22:06 UTC 2006

"ESP" by now has obligatory connotations that preclude the use of the term.

marcvh
response 293 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 22:07 UTC 2006

So it's not PC to call it ESP?  What is the PC term for it?  I mean, you
call it perception, and clearly it's not sensory...
kingjon
response 294 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 22:12 UTC 2006

Political correctness has nothing to do with it. And the reason I used
analogous sensory words -- joining quite a long tradition, I might add -- is
because I don't know any better terms.

marcvh
response 295 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 22:39 UTC 2006

I've heard "vision" (used as a noun) used to characterize something similar
to what you describe, but never the verb "to see." 

I'm not sure what "obligatory connotations" come along with ESP, other than
the fact that the term has a strong association with charlatans and fraud.
I'm not sure that any other term would serve you any better in this regard.
gull
response 296 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 00:27 UTC 2006

Re resp:274: The evidence is currently far from clear. If one is to 
believe the Bible, God used to prove his existence with all kinds of 
interesting miracles, but He doesn't seem to see fit to do that any 
more. 
 
It's also hard to see how free will can fit in with the doctrine that 
everything follows a plan preordained by an omnipotent, omniscient God. 
 
 
Re resp:277: There's evidence that we act first, and *then* rationalize 
our actions -- the motor centers of the brain "light up" before the 
cognitive ones, suggesting that our conscious mind has very little 
control over what we're actually doing; it just sort of comes along 
later and decides why we did it. 
 
There are also some interesting split brain experiments, involving 
people who have had the connection between their right and left 
hemispheres damaged. The left and right eyes are shown different 
images, and the person is asked to draw what he's seeing with his left 
hand.  Of course, he draws what he's seeing through his left eye, but 
when asked why he drew it, he has to use his left brain's language 
centers to come up with the answer -- and the left brain can only see 
the image being shown to the right eye.  The subject usually comes up 
with a highly convoluted rationalization for what he drew, and seems to 
firmly believe it. 
 
All this suggests to me that free will *may* be an illusion.  It's a 
pretty disturbing idea. 
keesan
response 297 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 00:30 UTC 2006

There are more than five senses, and taste and smell share sensors.  Touch:
perception of heat, pressure, pain, possibly also electricity or magnetism,
gravity.   There are also receptors for pheromones.  
kingjon
response 298 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 00:47 UTC 2006

Re #296: As I understand the Bible's teachings, God didn't use miracles to
establish his existence, but rather to establish his *primacy* in the Old
Testament and his *identity* in the New. I already gave you several possible
explanations for this "problem" that seemed reasonable to *me*, at least.

Fitting free will in with omniscience and omnipotence is one of the major
problems of Christian philosophy and theology. I'm grateful that it isn't *my*
problem.
gull
response 299 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 00:53 UTC 2006

I guess I was never destined to be religious. I'm just not capable of 
ignoring problems like that with my basic belief system.  How free will 
fit in with God's plan is the kind of thing that kept me up at 
night...especially considering that His plan seems to *require* a 
certain number of people to go to Hell, since presumably He knows from 
the start whether you're destined to believe or not. 
kingjon
response 300 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 00:58 UTC 2006

My personal view on it is that there is no conflict, but the _prima facie_
conflict is enough to drive some people away.

If there are two things which I think I know to be true that seem to be in
conflict, in my experience either one of them will lose its seeming-veracity or
the apparent conflict will vanish.
rcurl
response 301 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 06:09 UTC 2006

Re #285: Jon wrote: "There may be some relevance in thinking of free will 
as a neurobiological question, but your claim of "no evidence" betrays, 
again, your assumption that nothing nonphysical, immaterial, etc. can 
possibly exist."

I never said that. Information is at least not material, and it definitely 
exists in the forms of the *relations* between physical entities. It is 
made quantitative in the concept of entropy in thermodynamics, and is
obviously fundamental to life functions.

Re #288: Jon says gods "can't (normally) be perceived with any of the 
physical senses, but there aren't words for the sort of perception used to 
perceive" them. There certainly is a word. it is "imagination".
kingjon
response 302 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 20:27 UTC 2006

Re #301: I included such things you mentioned there in my "etc."

"Imagination" has a perfectly good meaning already; it is used to describe
things, persons, and situations that don't exist and are known by the person
imagining them to not exist. Since I believe that God exists, it can't be
imagination.
marcvh
response 303 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 20:43 UTC 2006

OK, but the word for perceptions which are not the result of any
external sensory stimulus and which are believed by the subject to be
real is "hallucination."  Is that any better?
kingjon
response 304 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 20:45 UTC 2006

No, because it includes the necessary precondition of the perceptions not being
real. Besides, hallucination isn't stimuli not received by the normal senses,
but false stimuli received by them.

marcvh
response 305 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 20:59 UTC 2006

The "not the normal senses" constraint brings us right back to ESP,
I'm afraid.  You may dislike it but it's a whole lot more accurate than
"see."
cyklone
response 306 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 21:37 UTC 2006

Klingon has a whole lot to learn. There is an entire body of psychology 
called NLP that explains quite clearly that his definition of 
"imagination" is incomplete, if not entirely wrong. In addition, the 
phrase "dreams into reality"  reflects that for some, imagination has a 
very close connection to reality. Finally, as a musician who 
"hallucinates" or "imagines" songs that I make real, his definitions are 
false. I guess music doesn't really exist in his world, although I'm 
curious where he thinks the music he likes comes from.

bru
response 307 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 22:03 UTC 2006

second sight
extra sensory perception
womens intuition
Hunch

all are used to refer to feelings or ideas we get from non-direct stimuli.

In many cases, this may also be refered to as experience.  Police stop and
talk to possible perpetrators because years of experience gives them the
ability to recognize certain tell tale signs that this is a person of
interest.  He has a hunch.

A woman thinks there is something wrong with her child because he is not
acting normal.  Womens intuition.  her experience in dealing with this person
closely on a daily basis has told her something isn't right.

esp and second sight are probably closely related to the above.  Teh brain
has made a perceptual link between his personal observations and his logic
center.
rcurl
response 308 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 23:20 UTC 2006

At least Jon now writes "Since I believe that God exists, it can't be 
imagination", which means that he just believes it and it isn't an 
"absolute truth" anymore, but it can still be just his imagination. People 
imagine many things to be true - and consequently believe them. Many 
superstitions, including Jon's, are in that category.

I mentioned earlier Dennett's new book (resp 200) "Breaking the Spell - 
Religion as a Natural Phenomenon". Coincidentally there appears in the 
Mar-Apr 2006 issue of American Scientist the article "The Cognitive 
Psychology of Belief in the Supernatural" by Jesse Bering. "Supernatural" 
here includes deities, ghosts, afterlife, etc. The gist of the article is 
that such superstitions seem to have had evolutionary advantages, and are 
therefore Darwinian adaptations of early humans.

Such superstitions arise from the awareness of other's awareness, called 
"theory of mind", and result in attaching agency first to people and then 
to inanimate objects and finally to imaginary beings.

Bering illustrates he evolutionary advantage by several examples. One is, 
if an early human is walking in the woods and a branch drops nearby, this 
could be interpreted as caused by the wind or by a threat from an animal 
or another human - that is, to a malevolent agency. It is advantageous to 
attribute the event to agency as then the reaction will be one of 
heightened awareness and preparation for fight or flight. Those humans 
that have a heightened response of this nature will have an advantage in 
surviving and reproducing, and the trait will increase in frequency in the 
population by this natural selection.

Bering gives many more examples, most from psychological experiments, in 
which even people that are firm extinctivists (believing that all sensient 
existence ends at death) can be induced to repond as if there are ghosts 
or "spirits".

It is interesting that the belief in gods and other superstitions appear 
to be the consequence of Darwinian evolution in early humans.
keesan
response 309 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 17 01:17 UTC 2006

Jon, how do you prove your stimuli were real, when nobody else has any
evidence of them, rather than hallucinations?  Just believing you saw
something does not prove that you saw it.
kingjon
response 310 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 17 01:39 UTC 2006

Re #308: Rephrase that: If God exists, then my experiences aren't
hallucinations. (They can't be imagination, since they are believed to be
true.)

An explanation of a possible mechanism is not the same thing as the proof that
it happened that way.

Re #309: I can't prove that my experiences were real -- but then again I can't
prove that *any* experience I've ever had has been real.
marcvh
response 311 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 17 02:09 UTC 2006

Re #310: Do you know the meaning of the phrase "assuming what you
are trying to prove"?
kingjon
response 312 of 432: Mark Unseen   Feb 17 02:19 UTC 2006

I'm not trying to prove that God exists -- I know it to be true, and if anyone
else doesn't believe it, well, that's their problem, and one I can't help -- on
the order of being convinced that east is west, but still. What I am doing is
vigorously pointing out and objecting to arguments on the order of "nothing
that cannot be subjected to double-blind scientific analysis exists, therefore
God does not exist".

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