Let me start by reposting the exchanges I was responding to and my reply to them. I don't want to lose the context in which I commented.
We don't have a choice to believe. If we believe, we have a choice to follow.
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In my above, I see MG's declaration that "we have a choice to believe in and worship a creator God or higher power than ourselves."
I'm mainly responding to what MG said while picking up Morley's statement that he's "unable to choose to believe in the "creator God" that you outline". in the process.
I made a simple comment about cognition. How I think belief logically works.
Let's continue...
I didn't ask you to question my faith. My faith had nothing to do with the response that I made. But okay.Doctor CamNC4Me wrote: ↑Mon Nov 29, 2021 4:41 amWell. I don’t know if your faith needs to be questioned so much so as the idea one’s free will with regard to a belief is written, so to speak, but actions are subject to choice.Jersey Girl wrote: ↑Mon Nov 29, 2021 3:45 am
Yes, I believe what I wrote with regard to to god belief. It seems logical to me. If you'd like to challenge my thinking, please do it.
If you (third person you) don’t have a choice but to believe in a god, then faith itself is an unavoidable state of belief for you.
You lose me with that statement. I didn't say we don't have a choice BUT to believe. I'm saying that belief isn't a choice. Maybe it is, I dunno. I think it's not an intentional choice that we make. I'll keep trying to follow you.
If I’m to believe that your programming, spiritual or otherwise, is unaffected by any factors that doesn’t lead to god-belief, then the immutability of your faith can’t just be constrained to belief, but also has to apply to actions. One necessarily leads to the other, and we’re now into the question of determinism. If you’re fated to believe in a god I don’t see how you could take any actions to disabuse yourself from that fate, thus your actions are also locked into place, only begetting more faith. You have no free will on this matter, if you have no free will on this matter.
- Doc
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You mean philosophically? Still trying...you're going some place I didn't anticipate. I don't say that our programming (indoctrination) leads to an impenetrable state of god belief. I'm merely saying that belief isn't a choice. We either believe or we don't. Does our indoctrination have something to do with it? Yes, of course it does. Does the fact that many of us were indoctrinated early in childhood mean that we're locked into belief? Of course not. If we're not locked into god belief, we couldn't be fated to it.
You'll have to tell me if my comments are on point...to your point. I'm not sure that they are. I'm willing to continue. I get the feeling we're coming at it from different directions.
I merely attempted to correct a statement that I think explains how cognition works. I don't think god belief is a choice we make. I don't think one chooses to belief in god or not. I think one either believes in the existence of a god or lacks a belief in the existence of a god.
And when I say, god, I am not referring exclusively to the Christian god.
ETA: I feel like my response above is a mess.
