Difference between revisions of "Faith"

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m ("religious faith" now has a page, so link to it instead of to "religion")
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==Overview==
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[[category:concepts]][[category:slippery words]][[Faith]], as a word, is used in two related senses:
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[[page type::article]]
* '''[[religious faith|religious]]''': a belief in a relationship with a deity (most commonly [[God]]) or other supernatural entities ("Many people of faith pray regularly.").
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[[page type::definition]]
* '''personal''': a belief that a particular person or process will succeed at some goal, especially in the face of past failures ("I have faith in you", "I have faith in humanity" or "I have faith in the legal system").
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[[thing type::concept]]
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[[thing type::slippery word]]
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[[category:concepts]]
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[[category:slippery words]]
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==About==
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In a secular context, "faith" refers to the act of adhering to a particular type of [[belief]] in spite of
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* the absence of substantial supporting evidence
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* the existence of overwhelmingly contradictory evidence
  
It is entirely possible that personal faith in the veracity of another person (e.g. one's parents or a trusted [[authority]] figure) who professes a religious belief may be how religious faith often begins, that faith being later transferred from the personal to the supernatural (e.g. God).
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In general, then, it means belief without regard to [[evidence]].
  
"Faith" in general is usually seen as a positive force; this usage is often [[conflate]]d with having faith in the religious sense.
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By convention, the belief in question must be one that has a beneficial outcome, especially if the benefit isn't just to one's self but rather to the audience to whom one is speaking. An athlete might speak of having "faith" that the team would win the game or that s/he would play especially well (benefiting the team and its fans), but not that s/he would be the one to make the winning shot (benefiting only her/himself).
===Definition===
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===Common Usage===
''retyped in haste after FireFox crashed multiple times and lost my original edit; to be smoothed out later''
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The word "faith" by itself is commonly used as a synonym for [[religious faith|religious belief]].
 
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===Implications===
In the most general sense, [[faith]] can be defined as following one's intuition when logic or reason would seem to lead to a different conclusion, but only if:
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The idea of "faith" is usually seen or presented as a positive force, as it may enable individuals to act on their best instincts when a rational (but less complete) analysis would contradict those instincts; this usage is often [[conflate]]d with having faith in the religious sense, implying that religious beliefs are somehow nobler or more beneficial than rational ones.
* There must be at least ''some'' evidence for the intuitive conclusion
 
* The positiveness of the outcome must relate to a larger ideal, not immediate personal gain
 

Revision as of 02:59, 17 November 2011

About

In a secular context, "faith" refers to the act of adhering to a particular type of belief in spite of

  • the absence of substantial supporting evidence
  • the existence of overwhelmingly contradictory evidence

In general, then, it means belief without regard to evidence.

By convention, the belief in question must be one that has a beneficial outcome, especially if the benefit isn't just to one's self but rather to the audience to whom one is speaking. An athlete might speak of having "faith" that the team would win the game or that s/he would play especially well (benefiting the team and its fans), but not that s/he would be the one to make the winning shot (benefiting only her/himself).

Common Usage

The word "faith" by itself is commonly used as a synonym for religious belief.

Implications

The idea of "faith" is usually seen or presented as a positive force, as it may enable individuals to act on their best instincts when a rational (but less complete) analysis would contradict those instincts; this usage is often conflated with having faith in the religious sense, implying that religious beliefs are somehow nobler or more beneficial than rational ones.