Have I got your attention? Here you are reading in spite of the off-putting title. There are others who have silently declined. I probably lost them with the previous title, "Outside The Box", and the intriguing promise of an explanation for quantum mechanics, which turned out to be a polemic on dogmatism and the limits of understanding.
Anyway, here you are again looking for more confident prolixity. I will resist the temptation. There, I just deleted 854 words. Not sure what's coming next, so I took a look back at the archive. Over ten years ago, I posted this 'gem',
I was thinking of understanding and life as a zero sum dichotomy. That is a popular idea among those who would rather trust their gut than think. I must have been feeling poetic when I thought that one up. Like any idea, this one may be true or untrue or both depending on how you look at it. In rebuttal, consider this: there is more to life than understanding, but if you understand you may live better, and if you live well you understand better. Understanding and life are complementary and synergistic. The head and the heart should cooperate.We all have a box into which we put things we trust. We may or may not have a name for the box. One of the names is god, although there are other names such as intuition, reason, scripture, science, power. We may trust what's in the box because we understand it, or because of what we have read or heard or experienced, or because trust is the price of membership in a group, or because not trusting leaves us without direction or hope, or because thinking it through is just a bother. We have a choice. We can trust blindly, or open the box and go to work on what's there.
I like to take a peek in the box. Among the things I find there are knowledge (information plus what we make of it), understanding (making things we know fit together), wisdom (understanding the limits of understanding), and faith (taking a chance when we aren't quite sure we understand).
I'm sure there's more.
This has been me meeting God.
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A Starting Point For Fundamental Interfaith Theology: Daniel Liechty, Progressive Christianity
Faith-based Beliefs Are Inescapable In Science: Marcelo Gleiser, Big Think