Don't you care if what you believe or assume to be true actually is true?
You mean that it "actually" works? Sure. That's what I've been saying. I'm not particularly interested in theoretical truth because I assume most of what we humans think is true is untrue to one degree or another, anyway. But if I/we act on a
supposed truth, and it works for us, then I think we should accept the supposition as being true until it's proven otherwise.
Don't you?
It doesn't seem to me that you care too much about testing what is apparently believed true, it only has to have some kind of perceived beneficial utilitarian or remedial action, perhaps for something undesirable from the real world and which only has to work but doesn't actually need to be true, and a delusion will do…?
The 'test' is does the theory actually work. If it doesn't, then it's just a theory that doesn't work. If it does, then it's true until it's proven otherwise.
Why on earth would the onus be on me to prove a negative?
Because proclaiming something to be untrue (or "probably untrue") is making a claim, which then puts the onus on the claimant to verify. If the claimant can't reasonably verify his claim of untruth, then he shouldn't be proclaiming it.
If you want to argue to me that it is true then the onus is yours, …
I am not arguing that anything is true. Only that it works, and as long as it works it makes sense to treat is as being true. I don't really care about truth as some absolute theoretical. I only care about it to the extent that it works for me. Because as a human being, I cannot ascertain absolute theoretical truth. All I can ascertain is what works, here and now.
I suspect that you want to have your own spiritual "reality" unsullied by religious doctrine and dogma. I too have also experienced my own kind of spiritual "reality", but to rationally conclude that it is in fact real and not just the normal workings of one mind I remain firmly unconvinced. If we experienced a common spiritual "reality" perhaps not centred on ourselves then that might be different.
I don't think we get to dictate the conditions and criteria of a "spiritual reality". I think it is what it is, and all we get to do is perceive it to the extent that we are willing and able.
How do you know that it isn't true and there is no divine plan on account of there being no divine entity?
I don't. And neither does anyone else. But assuming there isn't doesn't work very well for me, while assuming there is, does. So I'm assuming there is. It would be silly for me not to. But don't mistake my assuming there is for knowing there is, or even thinking I know there is. Because I don't know there is, and I know I don't know there is.
You have simply stolen my argument as your own, of course there are many uses for our imagination, we wouldn't be here without it, but all that only confirms its utter inseparability from the workings of the human brain, not an indication of some other metaphysical place or higher power.
I have tried to explain that transcendence does not depend on separability, but you continue to fail to grasp this. I don't know what more I can do. The physical brain manifests consciousness, which in turn manifests ideas and concepts, that we then assemble into a whole "conceptual reality" that IS reality to us. Thus, a new "realm of existence" that, because it is founded in imagination, and because it is NOT physical, transcends the limitations of actual, physical reality. Yet even as it transcends actual, physical reality, it is still manifesting
from within it. This new, transcendent realm of existence is different from actual, physical reality, but it is not "separate from" it.
The god idea within human cultures seems to work, which brings me back to what I said before, Darwinian evolution has produced people who tend to believe in spiritual entities, perhaps because of the resulting social cohesion, not because of any actual divine truth, it only need work, not be true.
Truth that doesn't actually work is only a theoretical truth. And as we are humans, it's also likely to be only half true if it's true at all. So I don't see much reason to put much stock in it. Do you?