Do you really think there’s a 40% chance that one out of the Bahá′í, Christians, Jews, Mandaeans, Muslims, Sikhs, theistic Hindus, or Zoroastrians are right?
Or do you think maybe there’s a 5% chance that some form of religion is right, and that there might be a sub-chance of that that theism is right, and then there’s a sub-sub-chance of any of the particular living theisms I just listed is right?
That’s about right. Five percent was basically a buffer for, “I don’t have full confidence in my epistemology, maybe I’m confused and Christian faith actually is a virtue.”
But I get what everyone has said about privileging the hypothesis. If by faith I’m supposed to choose a religion, after choosing I’d have no answer for, “Why did you trust in those unverifiable claims as opposed to some other unverifiable claims?” This would be true of all religions and supernatural claims, or at least the ones I’m aware of.
Do you really think there’s a 40% chance that one out of the Bahá′í, Christians, Jews, Mandaeans, Muslims, Sikhs, theistic Hindus, or Zoroastrians are right?
Or do you think maybe there’s a 5% chance that some form of religion is right, and that there might be a sub-chance of that that theism is right, and then there’s a sub-sub-chance of any of the particular living theisms I just listed is right?
Neither, I’d guess. The 5% is a number that sounds disbelieving but open-minded.
That’s about right. Five percent was basically a buffer for, “I don’t have full confidence in my epistemology, maybe I’m confused and Christian faith actually is a virtue.”
But I get what everyone has said about privileging the hypothesis. If by faith I’m supposed to choose a religion, after choosing I’d have no answer for, “Why did you trust in those unverifiable claims as opposed to some other unverifiable claims?” This would be true of all religions and supernatural claims, or at least the ones I’m aware of.