Yes, I know God exists. But I am 'deluded' right? — EnPassant
The stories are not 'invented'. They are, by the implicit argument of theism, given by revelation. Instead of insisting they are invented you should be debating whether religion is inspired by revelation. — EnPassant
But that is just it. People begin throwing out neurobiological explanations for the source of morality, and then we proceed to discuss it. And it isn't going well for those who put all their eggs in that basket. — Merkwurdichliebe
Yes, but Terrapin and S have no argument after I introduced that article (Intentionality and “free-will” from a neurodevelopmental perspective), in which it is asserted that morality cannot be adequately explained from a neuro developmental perspective. So, now they are scrambling to save their wet paper bag full of irrattional opinions by vomitting out a bunch of confused rhetorical nonsense.
Lol. But, I would never ignore S. I have too much fun watching him get dizzy when I'm running philosophical circles around him. — Merkwurdichliebe
Yes, so long as one feels one has "The Answer", whether theist or atheist, there is really no need for an investigation, so the process degrades in to a competitive ideological shouting match. — Jake
Like I said I was answering a question that was put to me. It was an aside from the subject of the thread but people kept asking questions and I answered them but only because I was asked. I did not offer assertions as arguments for God's existence but as responses to questions. — EnPassant
There are plenty of people who understand the arguments, yet are not convinced by them. Try again, or retract your claim.
— S
Do they understand them? Understanding must be informed by consciousness. Spiritual truth is not an intellectual construction, it is a vision of the world as it really is. That vision includes God. — EnPassant
And I hate vague religious-sounding talk with little or no clear meaning. The way I see it, it's your responsibility to be clear, not my responsibility to keep asking what the heck you're talking about.
— S
The intellect cannot discern spiritual truth. Truth must come to us from God. The world is filled with human patterns. These patterns are not ultimately real, they are ephemeral. The true pattern of the world is spiritual. Truth is a vision of the world as it really is. This vision comes from God. This is what, in some religions, is called enlightenment.
Intellectual debates are an attempt to translate spiritual truth into the atheist's terms because that seems to be the only way atheists will see things. — EnPassant
As method, then, reliance on ordinary language is wrong. — tim wood
Look, I made those statements simply by way of paraphrasing what theists say. Namely, that there is direct knowledge. The thread is not about trying to prove God's existence it is about how people discuss this issue and why discussion is problematic. That is what I'm discussing. You keep trying to draw me into secondary discussions about God's existence which is a distraction. You should also be aware that I was asked where I stand on the issue of God's existence* and I answered that so I was answering a question not making an assertion for discussion.
*Post 568 "By the way...what exactly is your position on the question?" — EnPassant
I wouldn’t say “nonscientific disciplines,” whatever that is. I used the term “soft sciences.”
The source of morals must include culture. Neurobiology is an incomplete or ‘inadequate’ source. — praxis
I read yesterday that someone wrote a plugin that can help you ignore such people. I predict that it will be wildly popular. — praxis
The subject of the thread is not whether God exists, it is about the discourse between theists and atheists and I have answered that; they cannot agree on the definition of reasonable argument. — EnPassant
Granted, I have made assertions but I have made them purely as suggestions. Namely, that knowledge can be attained through non intellectual means. If this, in principle, is true - which it is - why should atheists scoff when theists assert that they have knowledge through non intellectual means? Art, music, carnal knowledge, sensory knowledge etc are non intellectual means to knowledge about the world. — EnPassant
You may also consider the difference between pure knowledge and images of knowledge because this has a lot to do with the way humans know things. For example, consider x^2 for x over a given range. That is an abstract, mathematical concept. Now consider a graph, on paper, of x^2. The graph is a physical image of the mathematical concept. So, consider this carefully because much human knowledge is by way of image rather than direct knowledge; metaphor as opposed to pure knowledge. This is what art and myth are and much science makes use of this kind of imagery (in science it is called a model). — EnPassant
Humanity has been in existential crisis for maybe 4,000-15,000 years of recorded history, and we don't understand much more than we did when we began to record ourselves trying to understand ourselves and our environment. A territory is a human concept. A map is a human concept. It all seems sort of like painting a moustache on a painting of a unicorn and saying "I finally figured it out". — whollyrolling
No, I'm just saying that there is an enormously undefined grey area in which ordinary language operates, and it is a sort of cop-out, philosophically speaking. — Merkwurdichliebe
If the process eventually leads us to the understanding that we have no idea what we're talking about, that could be useful information that could be acted on in a productive manner. — Jake
The question we are considering is whether or not neurobiology can adequately explain the source of morality without supplemental explanations from nonscientific disciplines. — Merkwurdichliebe
I think that was your point. The evidence, here, is a bunch of shit done by neuro-biologists.
In the article, some academically active neurobiologists basically admit that neuro-biology cannot adequately explain morality without supplemental explanations from nonscientific disciplines.
On one hand, if their evidence (which they thoroughly reference in their article) is sufficient for the claim to be correct, then neurobiology cannot adequately explain morality, like they claim. On the other hand, if we say that the evidence provided by these scientists is insufficient, then it doesn't matter what neurobiology says about anything, since any evidence a neurobiologist provides (e.g. a reference to a clinical study) to support any claim is inherently insufficient; and in this case, neurobiology cannot adequately explain morality.
Either way, neurobiology cannot adequately explain morality. — Merkwurdichliebe
How about:
You want herpes.
Or
The empire state building does not exist on the moon. — Merkwurdichliebe
Does 'wildly controversial' mean they won't fit into the primitive rationale of materialism? That is too bad. — EnPassant
Why are controversial ideas not compelling to a 'reasonable person'? — EnPassant
As I keep saying, a large part of the problem is that materialists often think they have a monopoly on what is rational; scientism. If these people can't accept that rationality extends beyond science there is no talking to them.
That is the answer to the first post in this thread: there is no agreement on what is rational because the materialists insist on an abbreviated definition of rationality and anything outside it is 'nonsense'. — EnPassant
Precisely. I am missing the point.
While you are still looking for it and you'll never find it, because it is like trying to look at your eyes or reach the horizon. All you will accomplish is tiring yourself out.
Whereas if you were aware, it would come in to place all on its own. — Shamshir
Not in the least, but you are by indicating that we are talking about those who would lie about love. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Herein lies the difference.
I say, I can draw a circle and I can draw a circle because a circle exists. If a circle does not exist, I cannot draw it. I cannot think of it and I cannot make any concepts of it, because it does not exist.
What you say is that you can think of pink elephants, you can even draw one - but you do not see any pink elephants. They are nowhere to be found! Hence they are not evident.
I agree, it is not evident. Neither is the sculpture, before it is sculpted. — Shamshir
I asked a question. You did not answer. — Shamshir
Maybe. Maybe not. — Shamshir
Then conceptualize over what you cannot imagine and what doesn't exist, if you may. — Shamshir
The object is the filling. The concept of the object is its outline. I explained that, didn't I? — Shamshir
But since there is no proof I would say there is only a burden to provide a compelling argument. — EnPassant
I play no tricks. I merely asked a question. — Shamshir
What I have done is removed the separation. — Shamshir
The concept of sound is sound itself. — Shamshir
Even if I should separate, as you do - the concept of the object exists mutually with the object — Shamshir
How did your love one know you loved him or her?
How do you know you are loved by the other?
Someone had to do something to indicate it.
If you do not see that something as a work or deed then — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I'm here to address the question of the thread which is why the argument cannot be decided using an intellect that is earthbound and limited by all kinds of tautologies. The answer is that the intellect is not up to the task. — EnPassant
The stories are not 'invented'. They are, by the implicit argument of theism, given by revelation. — EnPassant
Instead of insisting they are invented you should be debating whether religion is inspired by revelation. — EnPassant
Yes, there are extreme examples that are obvious, but I'm talking about the more subtle examples that aren't so clearly weird. On the other hand, attributing ordinary language to a matter of common sense puts too much emphasis on subjectivity. I am asking what criterion we can use, which will account for the subtle examples that lie in the grey area between ordinary and weird, yet, while reigning in the arbitrary subjective determinations. — Merkwurdichliebe
Ok, but what other means do we have to find truth? The intellect has failed. If the intellect could discern truth it would have done so a long time ago. No matter what philosophers say it can be dismantled by clever arguments. Philosophy is like a bunch of viruses constantly mutating and devouring each other. Philosophies change like fashions on the catwalk. If our puny intellects cannot discern truth - and they have failed miserably* - what should we do?
* Except when it comes to the primitive truths of materialism and science. But these truths are too basic to resolve ontological questions. — EnPassant
Pascal's argument, according to Anselm's separation of necessity and contingency, would not be applicable to the Timeless Flying Spaghetti Monster for the reason that this deity has no strong ground to justify its necessity - I suppose we can agree to that? maybe? — SethRy
I just thought that was sarcasm. — SethRy
The possibility of something, refers to something.
If it does not exist, it would be nothing.
How do you refer to nothing? — Shamshir
The first cause is timeless; beyond causality, needs no creating. The tenses past, present and future do not apply; the first cause just IS. — Devans99
So in summary, I am sticking to my guns about a first cause, a start of time etc. — Devans99
...and I have a good justification for doing so. — Devans99
Before the discovery of gold, gold existed, though it was not evident.
Now by the same characteristics, I say God exists - because it is possible. — Shamshir
French Philosopher Blaise Pascal argued that evidence for God is clear to the people who are willing to believe, not because it is mutually exclusive, but because your perspective is changed when you are absorbed into tradition and belief. Whereas the evidence is also vague enough for the people who do not believe, will not understand.
— SethRy
Interesting. Considered and thoughtful. :up: :smile: — Pattern-chaser
Truth must come to us from God. — EnPassant
Yes, and without them, the one you love would not know it. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
If I could, I would not have asked for examples. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
So you would not show someone you loved that was hungry your love with some food. Ok.
Or if your child was shivering in bed, you would not show your love by putting a blanket on him. Ok. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
So love can be real love even to those who reject yours.
Tell us how that would work, let's say with one you love and who does not love you back.
How would you show that love in a way that was not stalking like? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
They're fictional characters,
— S
Yes I know.
What do you think of the ideology that those who are too indoctrinated to recognize that truth follow?
Is it a moral ideology or an immoral one? — Gnostic Christian Bishop