Logic can be used in philosophy. Of course. I don't deny that. Like I said, the only logical conclusion, if the gaps are closed, is the conclusion that there are gods who created the universe. — Hillary
No. theology has no room in philosophical inquiries. Philosophy has a goal to arrive to wise conclusions through sound arguments while theological conclusions are not the product of/ or interested in sound arguments.And just as science is involved in philosophy so is, and should, theology be. — Hillary
-Only Unsound arguments and their conclusions are restricted from being used in additional philosophical arguments.The fantasies are restricted by what we see in the universe. — Hillary
Theology and atheology are irrelevant to philosophy. Logic took care of that issue. Wisdom need knowledge and logic needs sounds argument.It's you preaching atheology. — Hillary
NO they are not...they are assumptions that can't be verified...thus unjustified to be used as auxiliary assumptions in a new argument.The assumptions are fully justifiable — Hillary
There is one philosophy.....the intellectual effort to produce sound arguments and wise conclusions.Only within your conception of philosophy this isn't the case. — Hillary
-Do you know what circular reasoning is?????Rhetorical question, the answer is available above!The existence of gods is justifiable because of their existence, — Hillary
-According to the Soundness an argument must have in order for its conclusion to be used in a philosophical framework...not according to me lolwhich you might claim an unjustified claim, because claims, according to you, are only justified when there is evidence that the claim is true. — Hillary
Again the existence of something can only be evidence...for its existence, not your assumed entities.But like I said, the evidence of the claim is the existence of the universe. — Hillary
-That is kindergarten philosophy...argument from personal incredulity. Your claims are nothing more than fallacious conclusions.The magical explanation, a universe from a divine hat, is the ONLY explanation (if the gaps are closed). — Hillary
-You are making a claim about knowledge...so we are off the Philosophical field...you will need to provide objective evidence for that knowledge claim.In the magician's case, the trick actually can be known. The trick the gods played can't be known, though we can investigate the material universal and life evolving in it. And learn about the gods and their reasons for creation. — Hillary
You really do just make it all up as you toddle along. — universeness
Why isn't it happening the other way round though? Why isn't all that happens running the other way round? Why isn't the universe collapsing, Sunlight moving towards the Sun, or the rain falling up? Why don't my thoughts run backwards, do I hear things after which sound leaves my ear? Why doesn't cause precede effect? Wouldn't it be easy for a god to precisely arrange for it? — EugeneW
-identifying logical fallacies is not your strong point...right?iron age heuristics — Nickolasgaspar
:fire:
Excellent point! No offense Hillary.
Argumentum ad novitatem? — Agent Smith
-The only rackets that are relevant are those conforming to the rules of logic. Your metaphysics need to originate from a sound starting point...not an assumption that you don't care to demonstrate.Concerning the theological play, there are many different rackets to play with just the same. But you play with no racket at all. Which is admirable, but I won't challenge you in that case, as thats unfair. — Hillary
I dunno what you're talking about! — Agent Smith
The problem is that your racket and ball only share the same label and nothing else, plus you keep denying the use of the net and lines.....The point is, I would love to play tennis with you. I have my own racket and balls though. A magic racket and magic balls. You would be tired and ask for mercy... Or blame the arbiter. "The ball was OUT!!!" — Hillary
That is irrelevant...You can only make those evaluations based on the available facts not on facts you don't have or might not exist....lolBut there are more facts than the ones about the material world we live in and even when we limit ourselves to the material world, there are conflicting views on how reality truly looks like. — Hillary
-Read again, I never said it wasn't!!!!! I said its natural but it lacks the physicality we observe in larger scalesAn electron is both natural and energetic. Around a nucleus, depending on the orbital, it has varying angular momenta. though it's energy is well defined. — Hillary
-No it is'nt. You just proved that you are attacking a strawman I never said that electrons are not natural or energetic. I only pointed out that you won't find physical properties in that scale (rigidity,liquidity etc etc etc).Like I said, in investigating nature, the physical, material world, high logical standards and proofs should be applied to our arguments about the material investigated. Your arguments about the electron are nonsensical and unsubstantiated or proven. Nor is there evidence (see what I did here?). — Hillary
No you don't....I do! You can't know the truth because you are an inferior human being! How can that is possible?Indeed, you can! I'm not saying I know the truth for you. — Hillary
-Its natural and energetic. Physicality rises in larger scales.The states of electrons around a nucleus are just as physical as any physical macro system. — Hillary
No the stuff around me and the stuff I am made of...is stuff.It's the stuff around you and the stuff you're made of. — Hillary
-Of course it is...if you want to do philosophy, to produce Wise claims you will need Valid and Sound arguments..not unwarranted assumptions.Again, there is no need to proof, verify, or give evidence. Only in the scientific investigation of the material world this is of importance. — Hillary
-No it isn't...and since you are an "inferior woman" my opinion is the correct one (again see how your reasoning works?).Absurdism is a great philosophy, absurdly as that may sound. If I'm guilty of practising it, then that only is in my advantage. — Hillary
-You assume that existence has a reason...you need to demonstrate that not just assume it. If not then you are proposing an irrational assumption.The reasons are obvious. To give a reason for existence. How rational can one get? — Hillary
Tegmark is a mathematician....what did you expect? Hawking was a "poet, its not fair to accuse him for that.I don't assume that, but scientists like Tegmark or Hawking do. Hawking even thinks God is a mathematician. — Hillary
-Not interested in what you believe...only in what you can demonstrate as sound...Which some of them are, and it can be argued that some of them, being members of the human god species, played a wicked role in creation. — Hillary
No it isn't. We are talking about non natural agents and how you can demonstrate believing in them to be a reasonable act.It is, as we talk about agency, and charge is an agent. — Hillary
- There is this thing call logic......The question is: why does heaven need verification in the first place? For me it doesn't. — Hillary
-That is because in those "energetic" scales "physicality" doesn't emerge. Physical properties emerge in larger scales (molecules and their structures).Consider that in quantum physics, the orbit of electrons have values that can only be defined in terms of integers. That is a fundamental constraint on the nature their existence. Yet the fact that it’s an integer can’t be said to be causal in any direct physical sense. — Wayfarer
-So the manifestation of the energetic footprint of electrons depends on that specific value.It’s not as if integers ‘do’ something, like exert a force. It’s rather that they are indicative of a constraint, which the electron must conform to in order to exist. — Wayfarer
You have a point, but, from what I gather, this is part and parcel of philosophy and science. Philosophy is more deconstruction than construction if you catch my drift à la Socrates who was the wrecking ball of the ideaverse. After him, all that was left were piles of rubble where once majestic belief systems had been erected! He was the Genghis Khan of the world of beliefs. — Agent Smith
-I gave an answer without reading your answer and I am glad that you use the same definitions and standards to explain why concepts do not exist as entities and why they are real.I say no. In my lexicon, these are real, but they don’t exist, precisely because they don’t come into, or go out of, existence — Wayfarer
I am not sure if I would ever use that term "realm of what must be so''. In my opinion those are descriptions of the objective picture of reality.Rather they belong to the realm of what must be so, in order for things to exist. — Wayfarer
-Why are you attacking a strawman? Math is just a tool we have to describe relations, differences, analogies and equations between properties and systems in nature. Why would you ever assume that math have a "real existence" lol.The math that's used in the description of nature has no real existence but the stuff it describes certainly has. — Hillary
-Existence has termporal qualities by necessity. Something can not exist for zero seconds...That statement is a continuation of Tillich’s earlier conclusion that God cannot be conceived as an object, no matter how lofty. We cannot think of God as a being that exists in time and space, because that constrains Him, and makes Him finite — Wayfarer
Yes there have been, thousands of gods. Most of them are claims motivated by that same idealistic concept on an Ultimate agent. Others, like jesus, are attempts to unsuccessfully tie that concept on entities with a known existential status.( that is an indirect existential god claim more of an False equivalence).Do we? There have been a plethora of gods in the past (and some in the present) that are claimed to be real. We don't have to look farther than Christianity which claims god (or some aspect of it) has been real in the person of Christ. So far for idealistic concept. — ArmChairPhilosopher
Agnosticism does exactly that. It questions the epistemology of itself and that of the believers. I'm OK with either convincing evidence for a real god or a consistent framework of an idealistic god. I'd even allow for a construct, given there is consensus. But the believers can't even agree on the category. — ArmChairPhilosopher
- First of all I assume nothing about what god is. I can only address the claims about that concept. I only need to know what those who accept the concept think about.The fault in your logic is that you assume to know what god is. You don't. — ArmChairPhilosopher
-Well what we do know about the god claim is that its an idealistic concept of an ultimate agent/entity. So the only actual nature(conceptual) we are aware of this claim is constantly excluded and ignored.The only thing I can defend is that god is currently not known. — ArmChairPhilosopher
Not both....but can either or depending of the situation.Anything and everything seems to be, well, dual purpose, ethically that is: a bullet can both kill and save a person. — Agent Smith
-Neither Glabarclurchen's List includes ethics. My point is that you first need to demonstrate the existence of a god, then demonstrate that he has a legitimate interest in putting up lists and then show that ethics isn't in it.Is it then reasonable to conclude that ethics wasn't top on the list of God's priorities — Agent Smith