My only gripe here is that it seems as if you are saying having confidence in gravity does not constitute a belief. I think if we look at what belief is and where it comes from, you would have to say evidence is more closely related to beliefs than is faith. If we are going to exclude one process from the title of belief, then it should be faith. Faith should not lead to belief.
Yes, i know, i am saying that confidence in gravity does not constitute a belief. I think belief here is an illusion, belief is the psychological state in which an individual holds a proposition or premise to be true.
I think i understand where you are coming from. I think simply stated, you are saying that we do believe in things like gravity etc. But i have a different opinion. I don't think that belief is a requirement to understand that gravity etc. exists. We do not have to have a belief, because we know. We have knowledge about them, tangible, testable, repeatable...
Why would anyone be required to believe in something, that we know exists. I don't believe that gravity exists, i know it does. I don't believe atoms exist, i know they do. It doesn't matter if i propose it to be true, it is, regardless.. and i know it.
When speaking about theological or metaphysical claims... we are not dealing with knowledge at all what so ever. We have no evidence we can share, no observations we can share, no information we can share. Therefore, i state again, and this is just my opinion. That theological/metaphysical/supernatural beliefs, are merely a poetic expression of an idea that we hold, that we claim is true, without having any evidence to support that claim.
If we did have evidence, observable, testable, repeatable... we would know. Knowing does not require belief, maybe before we know something, it requires some amount of faith... which would turn into belief, but once we become aware of it through observation, inquiry, or information... we can discount faith and belief for knowledge.
You said faith should not lead to belief, but i don't understand how it can be any other way. How can you believe anything, if you don't have some amount of faith (A strongly held belief or theory/ A system of religious belief/ Strong belief in God or in the doctrines of a religion, based on spiritual apprehension rather than proof/Complete trust or confidence in someone or something)?
I think in order to hold onto a belief one must have faith, in order to hold onto knowledge, one must have information/evidence.
I think knowledge is different from belief, in a way that faith promotes belief, and information/evidence promotes knowledge.
In my opinion, if we have knowledge about something, belief is not a requirement to understand that the idea or concept is true... because now that we have enough evidence and information, we now have knowledge about it, we KNOW it is true.
Which is why i think, that if/when we can gain enough information and evidence to support an idea or concept, we are not required to believe anymore, because we have gained knowledge... and now we know.
When we know something to be true, faith and belief are irrelevant.