(1) Human beings and other animals are conscious and self-aware.
(2) Human beings and other conscious animals are made of matter.
(3) Matter collected and organized itself somehow in order to become conscious.
(4) Either matter collected and organized itself into conscious beings purely by accident or by design.
(5) It seems highly unlikely to me that inanimate matter could spontaneously collect and organize itself into conscious beings all on its own without some kind of guidance.
(6) Thus, it is highly likely that matter was guided by some conscious being to form into conscious animals.
(7) I call this guiding consciousness "God". — Noah Te Stroete
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
Because theists ask for evidence against gods, when clearly there is none. And on and on it goes, because it's impossible to prove or disprove that something that doesn't exist either exists or doesn't. — whollyrolling
Therefore, that it doesn't exist seems the obvious conclusion, or does it? — whollyrolling
Assuming that perception is relative to the individual, to effectively engage in conversation we would need common sense. Common sense can be characterised as the ability to mentally unite the information conveyed by the five physical senses. Then, to be able to talk about the information gathered, we labelled and named the things (common language) that are associated with it. — akourios
I mean, who would say something like that? — Terrapin Station
I just told you that "real intellect" is an exercise in unbiased thought, and you retort that I'm biased — whollyrolling
Yet that desire to be critical about the present shouldn't make us blind to the improvements that have happened. — ssu
does your taking illegal drugs do your community any harm? Answer: of course it does. — tim wood
So in this case the mind would be connected to the motions of electrons and molecules, which leads to panpsychism. — leo
It doesn't exclude the interconnections between the parts if it includes relations and processes. — Terrapin Station
Nevertheless, immediate existence is naturally appropriated into understanding through creative reasoning, and it is only by superimposing rational concepts upon existence that it takes on a logical aspect. But that logical aspect is confined to the realm of the ideal, it has no concrete reality — Merkwurdichliebe
Why did evolution select for it if it offers zero survival advantage? — leo
Reductionists can say that relations and processes are parts that have to be accounted for. — Terrapin Station
You are right in saying, that if the brain dies, it is the the communication between the cells that has ended,the cells are still alive by themselves.Which implies that maybe your consciousness is merely an illusion created by a mass of cells,and nothing significant. — Anirudh Sharma
I sometimes meditate on the similarities between 'gist' and 'geist'. — Wayfarer
I've been mulling this topic over, even though it's quietened down. I think I use "spirit" and "mind" as sort-of synonyms, but for different purposes. They're both perspectives on the same thing, even though they're quite different.
When I'm thinking about intellectual, fact-based stuff, I think of "mind". When I think along the lines of wisdom, understanding and feeling - including religion - I think of "spirit".
Two different words to refer to the same thing, but in very different contexts. Does this resonate with anyone else, I wonder? :chin: — Pattern-chaser
hi PC,
Please pardon the cut & paste, Dr. Dennis says it better, and I'm open for discussion. — Daniel Cox
This is why no one actually tries to change capitalism. It becomes a binary choice of socialism or capitalism... — Christoffer
if you are sincere and honest with yourself (can I get a show of hands on who are actually like that?) then what are you trying to accomplish here? — Wallows
Why? Because they are comfortable in their life and they expect the rich and powerful to fix whatever problems we have. The same rich and powerful that people want and ask to fix things are the same they despise as being the 1%. — Christoffer
The control to which the 99% are subjected is far, far more pervasive than daytime TV. — Bitter Crank
Can you guarantee to control your drug use and it's effects on you and others? — tim wood
wouldn’t a better healthcare system and legalizing drugs help assuage these issues? — Noah Te Stroete
I'm on a mission, I help people with knowledge and science. — Daniel Cox
I believe that the Big Bang is empirical evidence... — Devans99
I'm only saying that I use the term "verify" consistent with its common scientific usage. — Bryon Ehlmann
I think we are in agreement on the substance — Bryon Ehlmann
"there are no black swans" can be legitimately called a scientific theory — Bryon Ehlmann
Maybe it is classed as philosophically rigorous when the certainty level reaches a certain threshold? — Devans99
It's not possible to know everything deductively. — Devans99
Even with deduction, we rely on axioms that are themselves inductive. Science often uses the five-nines (99.999% certainty of a finding) as a standard for judging inductive knowledge for example. — Devans99
Inductively, everyday experience says cause and effect hold. — Devans99
I cannot see any other way for the universe to get started apart from a timeless first cause? — Devans99
The term "verified" is widely used in connection with scientific theories. To illustrate its wide usage, the first sentence given for the definition of "scientific theory" in Wikipedia reads:
"A scientific theory is an explanation of an aspect of the natural world that can be repeatedly tested and verified [my emphasis] in accordance with the scientific method, using accepted protocols of observation, measurement, and evaluation of results."
"Verified" does not mean "proven once and for all." Rather, it means, as given in dictionary.com: "confirmed as to accuracy or truth by acceptable evidence, action, etc." The action here being testing. An acceptable test is performed and the theory is either verified or falsified by the test. — Bryon Ehlmann
things in time all need a cause — Devans99
it contrasts Aristotelian intentional logic with modern analytic philosophy — Daniel Cox
Demonstrate how anything in time can exist without a first cause please — Devans99
I'm not sure an idea has independent existence as in Plato's theory of forms — Devans99
I went from moderate religious...to zealous religious...to agnostic. Moderate up to age 17 - 18...zealous while in military service (peacetime)...and became agnostic about at age 21 - 25. Been that way ever since. — Frank Apisa
The theory itself must be able to be empiricallyverified orfalsified. — Bryon Ehlmann
What does your response mean, PC?
Are you saying you "believe" in the "supernatural?"
If so...are you saying that you are inferring knowledge...or is it just a general feeling or guess...that something other than what is a part of nature...exists? — Frank Apisa