That quote was part of an argument against ruling out via deduction. So, you took a sentence out of that argument and put and treated it, precisely as I said, as part of another argument. I needed to explain potential areas where the argument was ruling things out it couldn't and also the metaphysical assumptions of that argument.Perhaps 'souls' or other 'things' are on a spectrum within what will be considered physical. — Coben
... so I was just responding to that. It's monumentally unlikely, that's all. I think, in all fairness, if I said "perhaps God will turn out to be a toad called Keith" people would certainly not take such a supposition seriously on a theology forum despite it being technically a possibility. — Isaac
And here you continue, in exactly the same vein, acting like I had said 'There's quantum foam, so ghosts are possible' When in fact it was part of an argument saying that the ontological qualities of 'the physical' have been shifting, so the deduction....the one I was arguing against, are problematic.It is technically a possibility that souls might turn out to be real but such a possibility does not have its chances affected in any meaningful way by the discovery of things like quantum foam. — Isaac
You're taking my argument as an argument (and not a good one) supporting the existence of those things. — Coben
Yes, that's what I meant. That is what I meant I was not doing. It was not a positive argument in favor of their existence, it was an argument critical of a 'ruling out' via deduction [not induction].I intended to treat it as an argument supporting the reasonableness of positing their existence. — Isaac
Compliment?You know how to completely mess things up, don't you. — god must be atheist
Are you saying that my body is not a collection of processes?You are denying this, and you are making actual material blobs into processes, which is outright false — god must be atheist
It sure looks like one at the atomic level. And then if we go deeper to the quantum level the whole thing is made up of probable and shifting locations of stuff that is sort of wave, sort or particles.It's like calling a brick a process. — god must be atheist
Who said anything about religion?Why, oh why do people put their religion before their reason? — god must be atheist
Well, actually, I don't think what matter is and what 'physical' means are obvious. The idea of 'physical' has gone way beyond bricks, to include massless particles, fields, 'things' in superpostion....Religion can co-exist with reason, you don't have to deny the obvious in order to believe in a god. — god must be atheist
There is very little that is both true and obvious about matter, certainly not when it comes to bodies or when comes to considering issues of processes vs. things.Religion can co-exist with reason, you don't have to deny the obvious in order to believe in a god. — god must be atheist
A body is a set of processes, but it is also a blob. Or at least, calling it a blob, certainly for certain middle-aged overweight men, is not misleading.I think this may be true of adolescents, but I don't think an adult will have a problem understanding, for instance, that the Law involves processes as opposed to being a blob of Stuff. — frank
A body is processes or activities and so 'body' is a reification. At the same time I think is fair to call them separate entitites, each one. Perhaps minds are like this. The might not be physical entities - or perhaps the word physical is really rather misleading, since many things considered real and physical in science are not blobs - but they might be entities."As far as the words “life” and “mind” are concerned, they merely refer to reifications of activities and have no separate existence as entities. — frank
Are you sure you have anxiety? Are you sure it's about that?I have anxiety over the fact I might not exist — Kranky
I'll throw out a third options. Other minds are both other minds and also part of the same mind. A bit like a subpersonality in one of us.Consider now the options that are available to us: either other minds exist or other minds don't exist. — TheMadFool
I am sure he assumed other minds existed most of the time, just not while trying to find a foundation for knowledge in that exercise he's famous for.Perhaps, unlike radical skeptics like Descartes — TheMadFool
Some solipsists are saying there are not other minds, period. Not merely that the evidence is compatible with this but it is also the case. Not saying that's a strong position or not, just mentioning there is a third here.Now, if the solipsist claims that it's doubtful that other minds exist, he must mean either that our senses and minds are unreliable or that the evidence for the existence of other minds is compatible with their non-existence. — TheMadFool
Sort of...could be facets of the one beings dream. IOW we don't need organisms that have all the qualities of life we do but no consciousness, but phantoms. These solipsists would then, I think, not be physicalists or even dualists, but idealists or something similar.The second possibility is slightly different for it claims that all the behavior that we exhibit which we consider to be indications of thinking is also compatible with the non-thinking beings, beings that only appear to be thinking but are actually not thinking at all: P-zombies? — TheMadFool
Right but we don't know if it is true or false. When we say something could be falsified. We mean, if if it were false. What it refers to has qualities that allow for counter-evidence. It's a different type of 'can' or 'could'. And it is subjunctive. There is a subjunctive implicit in the sentence. If it were the case that is is false (and right now we do not know if it is) we will be able to falsify it. Some things that are false need nto have this aspect. I get your point, and perhaps it should be made more explicit in a description of falsifiability, but I think it also rests on an equivocation.In order for a claim to be falsifiable it must already be false... or it's a prediction... which is neither true or false at the time it's first spoken/uttered. — creativesoul
My interpretation of what you are saying is that since true hypotheses cannot be falsified, since the evidence will end up supporting them, then they don't pass Popper's criterion. But this is confusing some kind of final knowledge with what we experience.Either all pairs of particles produced by sub-atomic decay are entangled or they are not. If they are not then the statement is false. It would take observation of particles produced by sub atomic decay that did not subsequently 'exhibit' identical properties to falsify the statement, but that situation cannot even occur if the statement is true. — creativesoul
But it can't be. It can only confirm, it if can, that one mind. I think therefore I am relates to 'I'.How is solipsism, specifically the part where you deny the existence of other minds, tenable when cogito ergo sum can be used to confirm the existence of all thinking beings? — TheMadFool
That other mind can be uncertain about me, if it exists, but I can't. We are priviledged in relation to our own consciousness. We understand how they might doubt our existence as we can more easily doubt theirs than our own.If I can say the mind of an other is uncertain then that other may say the same thing of my mind, and so on, making every mind of uncertain existence and yet anyone, everyone can say, truthfully, "cogito ergo sum". — TheMadFool
But those experts were basing their opinion on other proofs than the one in question. Either their proofs were faulty or these should have convinced other experts that the proof had been found. Of course this leaves room for other proofs to be the case, but it doesn't apply to my needing to believe one modern expert in regard to his or her proof.Coben
I could follow your expert opinion that today's experts are not the right ones, but then other experts will have a different take on that.
— Coben
But I don't think any expert in metaphysics would deny that, historically, most expert metaphysicians - including most of the undisputed best - have thought that God's existence could either be proved or shown to be overall more reasonable than not. — Bartricks
The point, though, is that for non-experts the fact that the majority of great metaphysicians have judged God's existence either to be rationally demonstrable, or to be more reasonable than not, provides them with good reason to suppose that this is in fact the case, — Bartricks
As I said in the other response, I don't think these kinds of experts dealing with concrete objects with real work direct consequences are in the same kind of expertise type. Further the closer parallel would be if one expert in the room says, I have come up with a new test for authenticity. I am the only one who has this test. It takes a while for others to evaluate it. Me, I am wondering why it doesn't have a coalition in favor of it. OK, the expert finished that diamond test protocol yesterday. Fine, I'll check in in a while. First I have no need to take it seriously now. If I was on a plane that is going to crash and there is one parachute expert and he is telling me how to put on, for example, the last remaining chute, which like his, is broken, so that it will work. Well, absolutely. I will take that expert deathly seriously. I have no other option. And his skill set makes it more likely than mine, for sure. But a metaphysical expert telling me he as a proof and thinks I should take it seriously, whatever that means, makes me wonder why he himself is not interested to see how other experts react. Individuals have tremendous motivation to view their creations as right. Hence peer revies type processes in most fields. I don't really need to do anything.Say you are in some kind of a diamond hall and the diamond experts are sat at their tables sifting through piles of diamonds and paste fakes, putting diamonds in one pile on their respective desks and paste fakes in the other.
You go up to one of these tables. There is a pile on the left marked 'diamonds' and a pile on the right marked 'paste'. Stones have been put in these respective piles by one expert - the expert sat at this particular desk. So no other expert apart from this one has inspected these stones. And it is also well known that diamond experts do sometimes - though far more rarely than any non-expert would - mistake a paste diamond for the real deal. Nevertheless, as a non-expert yourself you surely have very good reason to think that a stone taken from the pile marked 'diamonds' will be a diamonds and not paste? And that's the case no matter whose table you go to. — Bartricks
I would wonder why there wasn't a crowd about that proof.Do you have reason to think that the piece of paper in the pile marked 'proof of God' in the tray on that one metaphysician's table is a proof of God? — Bartricks
Perhaps a better approach for concision is via the negative. If a non-falsifiable hypothesis is false, no one will ever know.How else would you summarise falsifiability in ten words or less? — Banno
I don't think you do. It is surely sufficient for a non-expert to have reason to believe there is a proof of the existence of a god that an expert has said so, especially when the proof in question has not yet been assessed by other experts. — Bartricks
If it's wrong, I might notice.How else would you summarise falsifiability in ten words or less? — Banno
An hypothesis is falsifiable if counterevidence relevent to such an hypothesis could be observed.An hypothesis is falsifiable if some observation might show it to be false.
Well, you likely have yourself, consciously or unconsciously or both, set up a bunch of heuristics. And your solution might or might not work fairly well for you but not be right for your neighbor. Intuition has to play a strong role in those heuristics. When you decide to ask for second opinions? When you choose to doubt consensus amongst experts and do some reseach? how to choose between opposing experts - and there are almost always opposing experts, from mainstreat to fringe? how much you decide other factors - monetary compensation, paradigmatic biases, tradition, etc. - are affecting or may be affecting expert positions? And what you do when you have doubt. These all end up being approaches to a no answer is perfect and certainly not everyone approach to dealing with fallibility. And different people have different optimal solutions, since they differ in intelligence, lay knowledge of different fields, vocabulary (reading justifications and evidence), confidence, available time and more.Now what? — creativesoul
I am not saying one should accept ad homs. And my point wasn't that it was personal and about opinions. I wasn't justifying the ad hom, but arguing against the conclusion that people who use them cannot mont a good argument. Those people exist, yes. But other exist who occasionally or often use ad homs but are also capable or rational argument. It's a fussy point. I mentioned it because it's a claim to know things about the other person that even involve a kind of mind reading claim. You did that and you did it because you can't do X. IOW that person is covering up their weakness intentionally. Here this is a fussy point. If the other person used an ad hom they can't expect the response is simply logical and rational. But it's a kind of conclusion jumping I see a lot on the net. You believe X so you are Y. You believe X because you are or experienced or can't face or......Well, you do have a point. Philosophy is all about opinions and as such is personal. But this doers not mean that the ideas presented cannot be evaluated entirely on their own merit and, particularly on a forum such as this, the integrity of the poster be respected. — A Seagull
But if it's on the issue of there being a God, I still have to choose which expert. I could follow your expert opinion that today's experts are not the right ones, but then other experts will have a different take on that. Suddenly I need to be an expert in experts in metaphysics. Now your argument that current metaphysics experts are to be ruled out to a great degree is an argument I an understand, without being an expertin metaphysics, but I can imagine that other current metaphysics experts would mount other arguments against the experts you consider the real experts who coincidentally or not have the same postion you do, if not because of the same argument. And many of those experts concluded there was a God based on proofs that have not held up or at least are not the one you think is the proof. Which raises more questions about their expertise. On the sidelines of all this, for me, the choice to go with practice and experience wins hands down. Mine, not necessarily for everyone. I am not sure what one does once one has accepted this proof. One still, it seems to me, in most forms of deity, still need to enter into practice and experience anyway. But that's even more of a tangent.Expert philosophers make mistakes, but not as many as non-experts, and so other things being equal it is wise to trust the expert over the non-expert. — Bartricks
Take seriously leaves open a huge range of responses. And they don't have to rely, for their beliefs, on arguments (alone or at all).But in this hypothetical situation, if one expert says that X is a proof of God, and what this expert is saying is not positively contradicted by a consensus of experts (because the other experts simply haven't scrutinized the argument yet), then a non-expert should take seriously that X is a proof of God. — Bartricks
Sure, but there's no hurry. And it's not like a situation with a dentist where one can already have experience, as a layperson, with credentials and dentists who are licenced and perhaps even check what others have said. With a metaphysics expert, it would almost take an expert to know if the other is an expert. You could check their education, sure. But then to know that their dissertation was actually in metaphysics or a relevant area. And perhaps they are every strong at certain kinds of explication but not necessarily proofs. Perhaps they are strong on evaluation other people's ideas, but not their own. Perhaps they have a bias related to their own desires, either way. It's not like experts in a number of other fields with more concrete results that can be looked at.I mean, why shouldn't they? If the expert really is an expert, then they know their beans. They've spent years and years thinking about these matters - far more than a non-expert. — Bartricks
Non-experts do that kind of thing all the time. — Bartricks
Good arguments, not necessarily correct conclusions. They can have their office across the hall from someone who is also skilled with arguments and who has at the same time completely different opinions, sometimes over things where more direct empirical evidence plays a role in the issue.And they're used to being cautious and to checking and rechecking their arguments - for their career depends on them doing so. — Bartricks
Take is seriously, I guess. I would likely respect it as the product of skilled thought. In my experience people overestimate what deductive arguments that are quite abstract but are not symbolic, for example, are capable of. So, I'd have a healthy dose of skepticism.So, given all that, even if one solitary expert says that X is a proof of God, then even if that supposed poof has not been verified by other experts, a non-expert should still take seriously that X may be a proof of God. — Bartricks
It's a transitive process. You have to demonstrate it to someone and in this case, at least most experts. They nod their heads when you're done. I don't think this is going to happen. I could be wrong, it's an intuitive position. I haven't seen it happen (seen in the broad sense, but that is hardly proof). I wouldn't rule out the possibility, but I doubt it.You expressed in an earlier post your conviction that God's existence could not be demonstrated rationally. — Bartricks
Most of those metaphysicians were living in times where your profession, life, family were all in jeopardy if one openly believed there was no God. They were likely trained and evaluated by believers whose lives, families and professional lives were similarly dependent on that.But there have been expert metaphysicians for millennia. And most have thought God's existence can rationally be demonstrated. — Bartricks
It certainly doesn't rule it out. At all. But here we are, without expert consensus or majority in favor of it. I am focused what the in situ situation for most people is. I am not saying the proof you consider a proof is wrong (I read it quickly and the only conclusion I can draw so far is that one person has no idea what a God of the gaps argument is and is not). I am focused on position most people are in. But as I expressed earlier, I don't really see this as a problem. I think experience is a great way to learn.As such lack of widespread current acceptance doesn't really tell you anything important about the credibility of the argument. — Bartricks
I have had this experience in a wide variety of fields. Medicine might provide a good example, let's see.Say an expert in a field thinks he/she has made a discovery in that field. You - a non-expert - think that X is the case. But this expert in the field is very confident that X is not the case. His evidence has yet to become widely known in the field and so it has not yet been widely scrutinized. — Bartricks
I think it works better if it is a consensus of experts, and I tend to take it seriously. But they've been wrong. I have the unpleasant but highly educational experience of a child where the supposed experts on the mind/body treated a member of my family for their emotional (and practical) troubles. The police and the courts were involved so there were experts from other fields confirming that the experts making decisions about my family members were the relevant and best experts. My gut feeling was it was wrong. My family member's gut feeling was that it was wrong. I investigated, during differnet periods and filled out my critique of consensus with more knowledge and also found fringe experts who supported my position. I became very confident that there was a systematic/paradigmatic problem. Now I took the experts opinions seriously. In fact, I and we had to. But beyond that I don't find it easy, in some new situation, to dismiss experts, unless I have already dismissed them over a longer period of time.What should you, as a reasonable person, now think? You know that this person knows a lot, lot more about this matter than you. And you know as well that this person is very confident that X is not the case (which is unusual, because normally experts are more circumspect).
Well, I think you should take very seriously that X is not the case. — Bartricks
Well, to be fussy, no, I don't think that's the case. I have seen people mount excellent arguments and use ad homs. It might be a tactic used by someone who cannot put forward a rational argument or it might not.BTW I hope you realise that ad hominems are a disappointing tactic used by people who cannot put forward any rational argument. — A Seagull
My prof laughed at metaphysics. — jgill
Sure, I don't think everyday speech needs to use PTSD. Trauma is a peachy word meaning....Carlin’s claim was certainly counterfactual and thus cannot be proven to be the case, but I think his general point about how the jargon buries any humanity behind sterility is valuable. — NOS4A2
This, your statement, is mostly correct but as the adage goes, for evil to grow all good people need do is nothing. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Of course. But I am not saying you should make the obtuse happy or treat them with kid gloves. My point was that those who are not obtuse will probably be better served by more nuances, less binary, approaches. The obtuse deserve that kind of approach, but we both seem to agree they will not be changed by that either. My point was precisely NOT for you to come up with an approach that is better for the obtuse.I am trying to be good and even if my interlocutor is brain dead, my hope is that lurkers will get it.
I get more converts, so to speak, from the lurkers than the, usually obtuse and belligerent poster — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I didn't mean promoting. I meant encouraging in the sense of: Oh, you want to know God or know if God exists, well, here's an approach that has worked for many. I did not mean proselytizing which I find generally distasteful.A true metaphysician is, as a philosopher, interested in what's true, not in promoting belief in God per se. — Bartricks
Sure, but your analogy was from the existence of God to the nature of selves in general. That a person might be fully aware of their existence, but not know how to describe selves is certainly true. But here we are talking about the existence of an entity. To me the analogy is to the existence of one self. If that self in question is me, well, I think I have expertise. Now some people may be better at discussing the issue in the abstract, but put me in the room with the doubters, I have a huge advantage.Again, I disagree. There are plenty of people here who know they exist, but have thoroughly confused ideas about what kind of a thing they are, due to being very stupid. — Bartricks
Yes, but that was not the point I was making. I don't think those arguments are a good way to demonstrate the truth of their conclusions.If someone wanted to find out about the arguments for God's existence then you most certainly should refer them to a philosophy department and it'd be mad not to - for it is in philosophy departments alone that these questions are rigorously explored by experts. — Bartricks
Sure, could happen.Note too that someone who was one justified in believing that God exists might, through encountering arguments against that belief - arguments that they do not know how to counter - come to be unjustified in their belief, and thereby lose their knowledge. — Bartricks
This cuts both ways. One can come across good heady arguments that make you want to deny what you have experienced and correctly interpreted. Obviously the ideal is a combination, but I think demonstrations - even if they must be hard earned over decades - are better than arguments.Knowing that God exists does not, I think, require knowing arguments for God's existence. But knowledge depends on the existence of a justification. You can be default justified in a belief, and that belief can be true, yet something can happen - one can, for instance, encounter what seems to be good evidence that the belief is false - and through that encounter the default justification can disappear. — Bartricks
Thinking that God exists because on paper it makes sense to you seems very fragile to me also. Frankly, even more fragile. And then, I am not sure what difference it makes, since it is not relational.So knowing that God exists today, does not guarantee that you'll know he exists tomorrow. — Bartricks
I suppose in the sense of how to argue for that assertion, yes. On the other hand that might not be the best way to demonstrate the existence of God. The best way might be through encouraging and mentoring practice.Those are not equivalent claims. Someone could know that God exists, yet not be an expert on the question of whether God exists. — Bartricks
True. Though when making the case what their specific self is, that one entity, the person in question often has a tremendous advantage. Many are poor at introspection and communication, but in the specific case of demonstrating what my self is like, I should at least be on the panel.For example, someone can know that they themselves exist, yet not be an expert on what selves are. — Bartricks
So far, yes. But if someone asked me how to find out about God, or how to find out how to come to the belief or how to experience God, I am not going to refer them to a philosophy department at a University or to the people who write academic texts on metaphysics. Of course those I would send them to might ALSO have a background in the subset of philosophy, metaphysics, but in most cases not. IOW I think this is a process that is experiential and based on practices, perhaps community and certainly real interest, not academic interest, in both sense of academic.The point is just that the question of whether God exists is a question in metaphysics, not science. — Bartricks
Sure. One can blame people for what they do, even if others do bad things. And especially since the process simply made them a gathered target. It wasn't even a good choice for their own interests. Treating the already present Palestinians as equals would have saved them untold grief.I’m not saying that the Israelis are entitled to that land. But then again, could you blame them? — Noah Te Stroete
There is general history of arab and Muslim nations dealing much better with Jews than Christian nations have. And note the assumption in your sentence. Of course they should all get to come there. Perhaps this would have caused tensions, but ousting the Palestinians didn't help the safefy of Jews. What gave the newcomers more rights than people already there? (Well, the British did, but that's another story and doesn't make it moral). Of course I have sympathy for the situation the Jews were in, but I don't think their approach there has been good for them, it was certainly not good for the Palestinians and it has continued to create tensions that could lead to world wars. I sometimes wonder if that was not someone's intent. Hey, let's create a permanent tension there where everyone is unsafe cause this is going to piss everyone off forever. This is not meant as a argument, but rather as a reaction to what has really been such a terrible set of ideasPalestinians are likewise as a group prone to prejudice against Jews and may or may not have welcomed such a large influx of a despised people. — Noah Te Stroete