unseen1 wrote:For the rest of your post...If I would to go into a debate we would just end up in circle argument.Because for me it would be like disproving god or for you proving something that isnt there.But yet If you can twist words to that amount that it appears to be there I cannot win nor can you.I can invent dozen of green spaghetti monsters but that doesnt make them real...or does it...
It would just be another mindless brawl...
Not at all. It's really quite simple. If you can't prove that something exists, it's POSSIBLE that it doesn't and if it's possible for it to exist or not exist, then, how can you know if it exists? You can't know.
Seeing a thing does not constitute proof of the existence of that thing. It only constitutes proof of having seen a thing, but says nothing about the true nature of what was seen. It could have been an illusion. Because it is a possibility that it was an illusion, however unlikely you believe that possibility to be, you cannot know exactly what you've seen. This goes for other senses, too. That said, KNOWLEDGE cannot come through the senses. Understanding can, but knowledge is absolute.
I gain an understanding of my environment through my senses, but I do not know my environment. I do not know what is present in it and what is not. I do not even know what my environment is. As far as I'm concerned, for something to be knowledge, it must:
1. Be completely true.
2. Necessarily be true.
3. Be accompanied with the reasoning that demonstrates that it is completely and necessarily true.
Otherwise, it is an understanding, but not knowledge. Understandings can be false, can be true, can be partially true and partially false. They are just what you understand something to be. Science contributes to understanding only, but so does religion. In fact, one of the only fields that's actually interested in knowledge is a field of philosophy called epistemology.
Agapooka



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