Quote:
Originally Posted by batair
Im not sure what you mean by disbelief based on intellectual reasons. But does someone who has intellectual reasons to disbelieve in the Mayan rain God mean someone else can have intellectual reasons to believe in him? Or is this just for the biblical God?
Sure, you can throw the Mayan rain god in there. Ultimately, this is the pursuit of the "thing" (idea, notion, experience, whatever) that causes these types of shifts in beliefs. There is *some* catalyst of some sort that causes believers to stop believing. And there is *some* catalyst of some sort that causes nonbelievers to start believing.
This is the question: Whatever it is that causes these changes, are they intellectually sufficient in both directions? That is, if it's the same "type" of catalyst in each direction, why should it fair for the atheist to say that their change in perspective is justifiable but the believer's is not? Or if it's not the same "type" of catalyst in each direction, then what makes them different, and is this distinction one that can be successfully justified?
Edit: It's not so much about belief itself, but more about the changing of beliefs.