ClaecElric4God wrote:I have to lol at these quzzes, though. Some of the questions seem kind of prejudiced. Ah, well, I suppose it takes a lot of pride-swallowing and effort to present a purely neutral, unbiased set of ideas and thought-processes. But anyway, I'm not entirely satisfied with my results on the first quiz (and not because it hurt my feelings). It just seems...off. I wonder if I answered the questions as honestly as I meant to. There were a few times I could have gone either way. And I didn't like how they had a default "because God" answer half the time. It's as if whoever set it up just expected Christians to be mindless zombies that don't really care to think out the logic of things, because "it doesn't matter what anyone thinks because God controls everything". But now I'm just ranting. Ignore me.
ClaecElric4God wrote:Did anyone else notice the copious number of typos? That threw me off, a lot.
George R. Knight wrote:[. . .] mankind is suspended, so to speak, in midair both metaphysically and epistemologically. Our problem is that it is not possible to make statements about reality without first having a theory for arriving at truth; and, on the other hand, a theory of truth cannot be developed without first having a concept of reality. We are caught in a web of circularity. [. . .] The acceptance of a particular position in metaphysics and epistemology is a “faith-choice” made by individuals, and it entails a commitment to a way of life.
Kaori wrote:Based on what I've read in this thread, I'll decline to take the quiz, but generally speaking, my epistemology is that God is the source of all truth. That is not to deny the role of logic and reason, observation of the physical world, or even things like personal experience, intuition, and emotion. All of those things are important and can reveal truth. But if we are able to gain reliable knowledge through observing the physical world around us, it is because God is the creator and sustainer of all things, and he has created a rational and orderly world which can apprehended through a rational use of the senses. Observation of the created world around us reveals how God created things to be (e.g., he created a universe in which things that have mass are attracted to each other following an inverse-square law), so that science can be said to be "thinking the thoughts of God after him." Likewise, if reason can be used to come to an understanding of the truth, we are able to arrive at truth through logical reasoning because God is a God not of confusion but of peace, and it is through his grace as a God of order that we are able to use our minds to reason. God is in all things and filling all things, in him we live and move and have our being, and he has given us divine revelation, our senses, our minds, and emotions and intuition and experiences as ways of apprehending truth.
Sammy Boy wrote:I found it interesting how it evaluates 'belief in God' as something that isn't grounded in reality (regardless of whether people have arrived at that view through looking at the various principles of the universe or not).
Sammy Boy wrote:I loved the use of "cat-a-gories". LOL
Yuki-Anne wrote:PS I'm a believer, guys. That means I'm backwards and confused.
ClaecElric4God wrote:Yuki-Anne wrote:PS I'm a believer, guys. That means I'm backwards and confused.
*high five* We should totally start a club! Or a therapy group, where we can all work on reversing our thought processes.
Yuki-Anne wrote:I came out as a positivist, but I think the second quiz is far too simplistic. So there are only three answers to the question "What's the difference between knowledge and belief," huh? And the first and third answer are essentially the same? My, these quiz authors have so much figured out! I must find them and study at their feet.
OKCupid Quiz wrote:Believer
You scored 33% Materialism, 92% Objectivity, and 43% Dialectics
You are an objective idealist; you beleive that there is such a thing as objective truth, but you consider thought primary to matter. Very likely you are religious. At some level, consciously or not, you believe that an idea can exist without a brain to think it. That leads you to reverse the relationship of many very important aspects of life. For example, you see the problems in politics as being because people are *thinking* wrong, which prevents you from searching for the material causes behind their thinking. You put ideas first. If you can shuck that notion, many things that are confusing to you now will make a lot more sense.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:I think what you are saying is far too egoistic.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:Pragmatist
Peanut wrote:Mr. SmartyPants wrote:Pragmatist
I think this tells me everything I need to know about the first quiz.
Kaori wrote:Mr. SmartyPants wrote:I think what you are saying is far too egoistic.
Although I as an individual certainly lack humility and continually need to work on attaining it, I fail to see what is egoistic about this line of reasoning. To me, it seems a lot less self-centered and arrogant to say that all sources of truth and methods of apprehending it depend for their existence and reliability on a source outside of the self, not within one’s own mind (à la Descartes).
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