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On Mon, 03 Dec 2007 19:11:11 -0700, Patrick Elliott wrote:
> Just for the sake of argument, show me any case where blind faith that
> something is true has every turned out to be right, save by pure
> accident,
I do believe this is an unwinnable argument, though - if someone shows an
example of "blind faith", the obvious counter is "well, that was an
accident".
I am probably best described as emphatically non-religious, but I do have
a certain set of beliefs that could be described as "faith". I have
faith, for example, that for me things will work out even when it looks
like they're not. Consistently that has been my experience; I lost a
job, was unemployed for a period of months (4 IIRC), and I landed a much
better job than the one I lost (it's debatable whether I resigned or was
fired, but ultimately it matters very little).
Now, was it "blind faith" that I had that things would work out and that
I wouldn't lose my house? Probably not - I didn't sit and wait for
something to land in my lap, but rather after a couple weeks started
trying to find something. The connections I made over that time were not
expected, and I probably wouldn't have gotten the job if I'd applied
directly for it instead of the way I did (but of course we'll never know
if that's the case or not). For me, that was a sort of faith that things
will work out better in the end. It took longer than I would've liked,
but the end result was a positive outcome.
Someone once said "the harder I work, the luckier I am" (or something to
that effect). There's an element of truth in that - so maybe instead, my
"faith" as it were, is that when the chips are down, I'm going to do
what's necessary to make things better.
Is self-faith blind? I dunno; maybe not blind per se, but it is
certainly coloured by one's experiences.
Jim
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