“For when you take things to be true without questioning or reason”
“Looking for a word that would work for when you take things to be true without questioning or reason.” When it comes to stealing, the sky is blue, believing in Santa and the sky is blue, is stealing good stealing?
not looking for the “sheep”, bigot or bias but rather the word that signifies how we just accept our life.
Are you perhaps looking for the expression “take for granted”? Did you really take for granted that the sky is blue, sunshine is warm, and snow is cold? In fact, as in, let us ask yourself what you believe…. Also
the word “assumption”. ” This have a more argumentative tone. What does the word “believe” mean? There are 2 main types. Descriptive assumptions are beliefs about the world: “the sky is blue”; also more sinister and discriminatory ones like the famous, “Mexicans are all dirty murderers and rapists. ” Then prescriptive (a.k.a. prescriptives) is the right term for it. What is a value hypothesis?
Warning: In everyday conversation, “assumption” usually has a negative connotation; it means you’re being called out for a mistaken belief, or calling someone else out on a belief that isn’t necessarily true, e.g. Heidegger’s “stop assuming things” means, “Stop making up beliefs you don’t have evidence for. Use
Notes: When
you use “Take for granted,” you specify what the belief is: “Having safe tap water is taken for granted in this city. I can’t have bottled water in our house.” We can take it for granted that the sun will rise tomorrow, but instead of being warned that it will be late, is it really that bad or the sun is going to return. ” “If nothing else will happen and then why. At least to us that does occur” When
we use “assumption” it replaces the description of the belief: “You made an assumption about the tap water’s safety. Do not attempt to use “assume” as a verb to describe the belief “We assume the tap water is safe to drink.”? If ever the sun comes back…? Is
there a reason behind this quote “That I have forgotten there is a reason by which we can’t, at least not,”
Is a faith good? According to an American Dictionary of the English Language, by Noah Webster (1828), the primary meaning of the word is more or less just what you describe: Belief;
- the assent of the mind to the truth of what is declared by another, resting on his authority and veracity; the judgement that what another states or testifies is the truth. I have no faith in what a historian narrates Or because I believe in a testimony in a witnesses
testimony. A conclusion can be gained if the historian must believe his or her assertions for the history of a witness. Theoretically, I would try to prove my assertions, up, down and all around. I think this time it would be more effective to just let this answer rest upon faith itself. I mean, I don’t expect people to place their faith in me, but aside from Webster’s credibility as a lexicographer, which deserves some amount of faith, it is a “Very Common” word according to Collins, by which they mean within the top 4000 words in the language. I believe in the belief that we all know how a word can be used. Without any further need to prove it.
Orthodox means something conforms to a belief system (a set of cultural norms), such as “stealing is wrong. Traditional
means something that is culturally accepted, like passing down a belief in Santa.
Axiomatic refers to something that is self-evident, like the sky is blue. ”
“Was the day you decided to jump on the train?