That’s a rather good point. I suppose I assumed that everyone (on some gut level) endorses logic, that it was just my failure to communicate my point clearly, not that they were viewing logic as external in the same way they did the other evidence.
Yet, I don’t see where to go from here. Without getting some sort of commitment to logic, anything I say using any methodology can be rejected for no reason.
Perhaps I ought to use scriptures to show that God endorses logic? Hmm. What a twisted path that is.
If they really are rejecting logic in its entirety, as you suggest, then they have insulated themselves from being forced into accepting conclusions they don’t want to accept simply because they follow from premises they’ve previously accepted, so any attempt to convince them that depends on that sort of force will simply fail.
It seems to follow that, if you want them to accept your beliefs, you will have to induce them to want to accept those beliefs.
All of that said, I’m somewhat skeptical that this is actually what they’ve done, although of course I don’t know the people you’re talking about.
No, you’re right about that. They’re not rejecting logic. They use it (selectively). They’re just saying “I reject logic” as a tactic to stopsign any arguments in which they get cornered.
I like the idea of getting them to want to accept my beliefs. That’s a rather large task though, isn’t it? I’m not quite sure how I managed it myself. Sure, now I look back and say, “what a dreadful and frustrating perspective that was in comparison”, and now the beauty of what we might achieve without a god, and the natural world, are overwhelming, but how to get that across?
In this specific context, I would recommend thinking carefully about what made you want to change your beliefs, assuming you did want to. If you can figure that out and articulate it, you may find that other people in the same position you were in will react to it the same way.
I actually didn’t want to. It was more of an overwhelming evidence deconversion. But I was willing to look at that evidence because I had a strong desire to be a defender of light, to boldly face the philosophical abyss of unbelief—for God.
Yet there was a key difference somewhere between what I did and what I see a lot of believers do. I read enemy texts, not just friendly texts on enemy ideas. Why did I, in that frame of mind, do that? That might be the thing to figure out and then articulate, as you put it.
That’s a rather good point. I suppose I assumed that everyone (on some gut level) endorses logic, that it was just my failure to communicate my point clearly, not that they were viewing logic as external in the same way they did the other evidence.
Yet, I don’t see where to go from here. Without getting some sort of commitment to logic, anything I say using any methodology can be rejected for no reason.
Perhaps I ought to use scriptures to show that God endorses logic? Hmm. What a twisted path that is.
If they really are rejecting logic in its entirety, as you suggest, then they have insulated themselves from being forced into accepting conclusions they don’t want to accept simply because they follow from premises they’ve previously accepted, so any attempt to convince them that depends on that sort of force will simply fail.
It seems to follow that, if you want them to accept your beliefs, you will have to induce them to want to accept those beliefs.
All of that said, I’m somewhat skeptical that this is actually what they’ve done, although of course I don’t know the people you’re talking about.
No, you’re right about that. They’re not rejecting logic. They use it (selectively). They’re just saying “I reject logic” as a tactic to stopsign any arguments in which they get cornered.
I like the idea of getting them to want to accept my beliefs. That’s a rather large task though, isn’t it? I’m not quite sure how I managed it myself. Sure, now I look back and say, “what a dreadful and frustrating perspective that was in comparison”, and now the beauty of what we might achieve without a god, and the natural world, are overwhelming, but how to get that across?
My general answer to that question is here.
In this specific context, I would recommend thinking carefully about what made you want to change your beliefs, assuming you did want to. If you can figure that out and articulate it, you may find that other people in the same position you were in will react to it the same way.
I actually didn’t want to. It was more of an overwhelming evidence deconversion. But I was willing to look at that evidence because I had a strong desire to be a defender of light, to boldly face the philosophical abyss of unbelief—for God.
Yet there was a key difference somewhere between what I did and what I see a lot of believers do. I read enemy texts, not just friendly texts on enemy ideas. Why did I, in that frame of mind, do that? That might be the thing to figure out and then articulate, as you put it.