Lincsong
I'll Lock Up
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Exactly the type of response I intended to get with this thread.
carebear said:...But, in spite of the fact that reason can take me only so far, I choose to have faith in that other person. Reason would leave me uncertain, forever looking for a sign to mistrust, never truly trusting in fact. My faith is not blind, it is supported by reason, but reason alone cannot rationally lead to absolute trust in another fallible person....
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Lincsong said:Faith is a positive, fear is a negative.
Reason is used as a crutch for those who have no faith. Reason is used to justify the negatives and not the positives.
Lincsong said:This thread is not about religious faith. I never intended it to be and don't intend it to go in that direction. What I intended this thread to be about was using persistence in order to achieve faith in oneself in order to achieve a set of goals and overcoming obstacles.
So if a person sets out to achieve a goal, how persistent will that person be, and what types of persistence does he use in order to achieve his goal?
jazzbass said:I guess I'm confused why you would WANT to have this level of "faith' in another "fallible person". Your decription of your faith just seems like denial to me.
jazzbass
Lincsong said:The basis of persistence is the power of will. Will-power and desire, when properly combined, make an irresistible pair. The majority of poeple are ready to throw their aims and purposes overboard, and give up at the first sign of opposition or misfortune. A few carry on despite all opposition, until they attain their goal. How persistent are you in life and what do you do to attain that for which you are peristent?
carebear said:Never been in love? Heck, forget love.
You'd never get married (even for strictly monetary reasons), sign a business contract, get a mortgage, or even fly on a commercial aircraft if you didn't, in the end, rely on a not-directly supportable by reason faith/trust in others performing their jobs/duties correctly and as promised. Contracts provide deterrence and a recourse for betrayal but not enough to typically even get back one's losses. The ultimate risk of a mechanic's or pilot's (or fellow driver's or et al's) negligence is death. Logically/rationally/reasonably the feeble protections of contract or criminal law cannot outweigh the risk involved.
Like it or not, you rely on "faith" daily. Life has too many variables to crunch the numbers accurately.
carebear said:Never been in love? Heck, forget love.
You'd never get married (even for strictly monetary reasons), sign a business contract, get a mortgage, or even fly on a commercial aircraft if you didn't, in the end, rely on a not-directly supportable by reason faith/trust in others performing their jobs/duties correctly and as promised. Contracts provide deterrence and a recourse for betrayal but not enough to typically even get back one's losses. The ultimate risk of a mechanic's or pilot's (or fellow driver's or et al's) negligence is death. Logically/rationally/reasonably the feeble protections of contract or criminal law cannot outweigh the risk involved.
Like it or not, you rely on "faith" daily. Life has too many variables to crunch the numbers accurately.
And you're smart for thinking that way. We are all human, and will at some time or other make mistakes and let people down. But to have no faith, I would think a person would become extremely bitter. To have faith is to have hope, and that is what spurs us all on, to conquer the goal set before us, when engaging in a new friendship, having faith in the person to keep your trust and you learn to trust them more and more.jazzbass said:I DO trust people, but never 100%. That would seem foolishly naive.
jb
mysterygal said:To have faith is to have hope, and that is what spurs us all on, to conquer the goal set before us
mysterygal said:We need those kinds of people when we're discouraged and losing hope to come along beside us and spur us on, encourage us and renew our motivation.
jazzbass said:I DO trust people, but never 100%. That would seem foolishly naive.
jb
Etienne said:My husband kept this on his desk until he recently retired; (I do not know who penned these words, perhaps one of you might?)
"It is not the critic who counts, not the one who points out how the strong man stumbled or how the doer of deeds might have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred with sweat and dust and blood; who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, and spends himself in a worthy cause; who, if he wins, knows the triumph of high achievement; and who, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, SO THAT HIS PLACE SHALL NEVER BE WITH THOSE COLD AND TIMID SOULS WHO KNOW NEITHER VICTORY NOR DEFEAT."