Bandit said:
i am sure i will err til the day i die, but that wont stop my faith & search for more truth. i think i have just about heard it all (so to speak), & i dont want the rocks to cry out- so faith & understanding bring certainty? we dont want to be certain too soon, but certain just enough.
of course at some point we must decide "what is truth?"
Indeed and as in another thread, as individuals must decide for themselves what truth is, so must the decide what it is to be convinced - what is the evidence we accept?
And tied in from another angle on this question of faith, certainty and understanding is the question of being right, and of being wrong.
We seek to be right and seeking to be right can lead to careful weighing of evidence and lead to destiguishing for ourselves what we feel/beleive is right and wrong. As this progresses in a social context we may compare and contrast our ideas with those of others, hear their arguments, and criticisms, and evolve our ideas and beliefs.
But deciding what is right or wrong for ourselves can lead to an arrogance by inflection. As we decide something is wrong, we hold those who have that beleif to also be in error though in some circumstances we will allow for different beleifs or in keeping to our own we will not dwell on the failings of others, noting that we still have failings we are blind to.
When we find the basis of decision is our own, even as a divine affirmation, and that no beleif is conditioned on another, then we find that no argument *can* be ultimately persuasive, only what we accept or not. In otherwords, it is not the argument, nor the crafter of one or another argument which automatically causes acceptance. Acceptance is a choice, a step taken, voluntarily, even if indirectly. It is the step before faith?
We accept that teachers tell us the truth, even if we attempt to solve problems in math that demonstrate the truth. Once the truth is accepted it leads to other implications and we extend our experience and understanding.