Either this ends up as Bateson's infinite regress that forever keeps the territory out of the map, or it ends up trivially as the claim that I experience what I experience as I experience it. — Srap Tasmaner
All we did was allow the possibility that experience was experience of something. — Srap Tasmaner
So the natural conclusion is that if experience is irreducibly subjective, that either says nothing or it says experience cannot be experience of something. — Srap Tasmaner
Perhaps all that matters is that we keep in mind that, having somehow picked out something as an experience, we could make different choices that would be just as valid, or that we recognize that how we circumscribe an experience will depend on our purpose in doing so, rather than on something intrinsic to the experience. — Srap Tasmaner
And perhaps that's where we want to end up. If "experience is the constituent of reality for us," then experience just is, we might say (if we were comfortable saying things like "reality just is"). If experience could be experience of something, then surely those somethings would figure large in reality. — Srap Tasmaner
But how is the word "experience" being used here? Do you know that you had the experience? Do you have a memory of the experience? A memory of having the experience? If you had the same or a similar experience at another time, would you know it was the same or a similar experience? Did you, in the first place, know that the experience you were having was a "territory" experience? If so, how? By trying to conceptualize it and failing? — Srap Tasmaner
Obviously then there's the question of how to characterize the experience, and some people object to some characterizations. That may be a claim that there is a kind of experience you cannot have had, or it may a sort of "whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent." Also, the Christian tradition, for instance, isn't exclusively mystical. On what grounds could you connect an unconceptualizable experience to a thoroughly conceptualized theology? There may be apophatic elements within that theology, but what about the rest? (Mystics have also had to face charges not only of heresy, but worse. How do you know what you experienced was not the Deceiver?) — Srap Tasmaner
None of what I mentioned was in what you said — Sapientia
What?? I don't know why you'd think that [about love and light]. — Sapientia
The first question would be whether there is experience or knowledge that cannot in principle be verbalized. — Srap Tasmaner
I don't think much of self-identified theists who can only vaguely list things which aren't even controversial to a typical atheist and merely stick onto them the label "God". — Sapientia
...they are lacking in linguistic ability in terms of vocabulary and finding the right words to explain things well... — Sapientia
my understanding is roughly that you have spoken of a truth that can be pointed to behind language, and that this can be accessed somehow through certain experiences and by doing stuff. — Sapientia
I've criticised that on account of being too vague and for other reasons, which I don't think that you've properly addressed, so I think that in your next reply you should go back and start from there. And don't forget, this is about atheism, so of course, I expect this to be about things like how one can know whether or not a certain experience is an experience of God and not something else. — Sapientia
Okay but reason can only make do with what you've got. — Agustino
Yes but that's relatively unimportant. More important is the experience itself. — Agustino
So similarly, what Mariner means by God will be what you experience by doing the secret "stuff" he wants you to do. — Agustino
I'm after a specific example that is relevant to the topic which you think illustrates what you were talking about in that part of your original comment that I quoted, and I'd like you to elucidate any vague terms that you've used, like those I've pinpointed. — Sapientia
The problem is that nothing you can tell me about or get me to do will necessarily cause me to reach the conclusion that God exists — Sapientia
There's a big difference between, on the one hand, the difficulty of a young child, or someone with a learning disability, or a poorly educated adult, struggling to explain or put into words something which is sensible and capable of being explained, and, on the other hand, people who just have vague, muddled, nonsensical thoughts and feelings, and cannot explain them properly or put them into words because of the very nature of those thoughts and feelings. It seems clear to me, although I could be wrong, that you have in mind some sort of special and profound truth which is being pointed to, rather than the truth that these people are simply confused and emotional. — Sapientia
Even if I was lacking in linguistic ability, I might nevertheless notice the causal relationship between flicking the light switch and the light coming on, but that's a world apart from having a funny feeling and leaping to the conclusion that God must exist. — Sapientia
Knowing you to be a theist it seems like you want myths to be true. Perhaps to justify your own beliefs?? — TheMadFool
Personally I think there are elements of truth in all myths, religious or otherwise. It only takes a bit of exaggeration to change truth into a myth. So, to devalue myths would be mistake, running the serious risk of losing valuable information. — TheMadFool
What are you talking about in particular? Can you give an example? And if you're talking about God, which, in the context of this discussion, would not be unusual, then why don't you just say so plainly? What do you mean by the phrase "point at" truth? What is that exactly? How does it work? — Sapientia
And obviously, if we were to have any hope of getting to the truth of the matter, then merely saying so wouldn't do. It would have to be put to the test. — Sapientia
In addition, if you say that you can't put something into words or explain it properly, then that is certainly no where near being enough to warrant that this is indicative of some kind of significant truth that's being pointed at. On the contrary, nonsense cannot be true. — Sapientia
You obviously believe that Christianity IS The answer. Not everyone agrees with you. — anonymous66
So, it looks like Christians have this great text... they just can't be sure what it's really saying. — anonymous66
Your original comment was very vague. — Sapientia
The obvious thing to do would be to get the person to tell us of this supposed truth which is "pointed at" by X, and demonstrate how the one does indeed "point to" the other. If they can't, then that's that. — Sapientia
Do you mean that Dawkins could change his views or that Dawkins' comment about deism is irrelevant to his overall stance? — Chany
This seems like an oxymoron. How can ''myths'' ever be true. — TheMadFool
I find it encouraging that even New Atheists as strident as Richard Dawkins have gone on record as saying they don't have an issue with certain concepts of God... Dawkins admits he is just fine with what he calls a deistic God or the God of the physicist. — anonymous66
I wonder what anyone would have against the God of the philosophers. — anonymous66
Wrong arguments are excluded in logical explanations. — some logician
The list of logicians who support the claim that logic is part of science includes: Rudolf Carnap, Hans Reichenbach, Willard Van Orman Quine, and so many others. — some logician
Many logicians support the claim that logic is part of science. — some logician
I just claim that logic is part of science. — some logician
By 'logic' I meant formal logic with natural deduction, such as first-order predicate logic. — some logician