And they strongly suggest that you think that you see the world as it really is, and that this vision includes God. — S
There are plenty of people who understand the arguments, yet are not convinced by them. Try again, or retract your claim. — EnPassant
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
Bare assertions that truth comes from God are no such evidence. — S
The bottom line is, if you're doing philosophy, then you can't get away with bare assertions. — S
For instance, there is a position in the metaphysics of physics where the observation of particles is truly spontaneous, there is no mechanism of any kind but truly pure random occurrence manifesting with any particular observation; conforming to statistical rules but with absolutely "nothing happening in between" that determines if a particle is observed right or left, spin up or spin down. Although this seems difficult to accept, it seems equally difficult (to me at least) how to reject this view without a infinite regress of mechanism for the mechanism for the mechanism. — boethius
That is, it's very very likely that there are aspects of reality which we will NEVER understand, just as your dog will never understand the Internet no matter how hard or how long he might try to. — Jake
I can accept theists having their personal ideas of the universe but will question them if they put that conviction into the world as "truths" without any rational reasoning or evidence provided that survive the scrutiny all other truth claims in the world needs. — Christoffer
You would first need to provide supporting arguments for your bare assertions, which you haven't done, and also, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, so they'd have to be damn good arguments. Given that you've failed to meet this burden in spite of repeated requests — S
There you have it. You decide, purely on the grounds of materialistic ideology, that I am wrong without ever asking what my arguments are. I do acknowledge 'I do not know' if by 'know' you mean knowledge by intellectual means. I don't have an intellectual proof of God. I have already said this.Obviously you are one of those people who will never acknowledge "I do not know"...and would prefer to kid yourself with "alternate reality." — Frank Apisa
You're persistently pushing this self-serving exceptionalism, that the existence or non-existence of God cannot be determined by mundane rules of logic — TheSageOfMainStreet
If you can't do any better than being slippery and evasive, — TheSageOfMainStreet
What cult are you talking about?primitive superstitious cult. — TheSageOfMainStreet
We are talking about whether gods exist or not. — Frank Apisa
We are not discussing what an orange tastes like...or what it feels like to bang some movie star. — Frank Apisa
Which you haven't done. You've just produced a number of wildly controversial bare assertions. No reasonable person would find that compelling. — S
Hitchen's razor. — S
Exactly what I think. I doubt that there are many atheists who are without some doubt about their atheism.Then the reasonable conclusion would be agnosticism. — S
What do you see as wrong or inappropriate about simply acknowledging that we do not know if gods exist or not? — Frank Apisa
One cannot arrive at any of these four things (to follow) using logic, reason, science or math:
1) There is at least one GOD.
2) There are no gods.
3) It is more likely that there is at least one GOD than that there are no gods.
4) It is more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one. — Frank Apisa
Once again, I wonder why you're here if that's what you think. If we don't know enough, then we should just accept that we don't know enough, not invent fantastical stories to fill the gaps in our knowledge. — S
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?That just looks like preaching now. You can't just assume things like that. Maybe this is the wrong forum for you. — S
.I am speaking what I suppose to be the truth.
I mean you no disrespect. But I will speak what I see to be the truth. — Frank Apisa
Is it a blind guess...pretending to be something more? — Frank Apisa
And since it is dependent entirely on a blind guess that there is a "god"...why should it be given any more consideration than one would any other blind guess? — Frank Apisa
And yet, in the context of debate, this looks a lot like an ad hominem, a personal attack. Such approaches have a long and wholly unsuccessful history within debating circles. When applied to humans, they are counter-productive, in terms of the debate. No point. — Pattern-chaser
People are willing to have a meaningful discussion with you, EnPassant, but you are averse to it — Frank Apisa
This is what humans with a functioning brain call "bullshit." — Frank Apisa
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
True, but the kinds of evidence that can be tested and shared are simple or primitive truths. Science is primitive. Matter is primitive. The atheists are making a mistake in trying to force ontological matters into the primitive framework of matter and explain them in material terms. It is this kind of thing that leads to absurd attempts to explain everything - including ontological matters - in terms of 'survival advantage'.Once you have evidence that can be tested by others and others test it and get the same results, then it becomes a theory, or more than a belief. It becomes knowledge. — Harry Hindu
A belief would be more akin to a hypothesis. — Harry Hindu
Neuroscience has been trying to work out the intricate mechanism of thinking, but we haven't quite grasped it, not to say that it won't be explained in the next few decades. — Anirudh Sharma
Not all things that are true can be proved. If I had a thought yesterday I cannot prove it. But it is true that I had that thought.If Christians actually knew that their God exists, then they could easily provide irrefutable evidence and there would not constantly be disputes by atheists asking for said evidence. — Maureen
But that's very obviously false. There are plenty of people who understand the arguments, yet are not convinced by them. Try again, or retract your claim. — S
Convincing to who? :brow: — S
No problem with making a guess about whether gods exist or not...but that is all it is...A GUESS.
We do not know which is more likely.
No problem with making a guess on which is more likely...but that is all it is...A GUESS. — Frank Apisa
I may be wrong, but it sounds like you are effectively saying that it is not possible to prove that God(s) exist, so in essence all anyone can do is provide a convincing argument. — Maureen
No. What accrues is a burden of proof.
That is why anyone with a functioning brain would not assert, "There are no gods" or "There is at least one god."
Do not make the assertion...but if you do, don't pretend there is no burden of proof to meet. — Frank Apisa
Those were not my words...they were someone else's that I was quoting.
We do not know if gods exist or not.
We do not have a reasonable likelihood estimate in either direction. — Frank Apisa
By the way...what exactly is your position on the question? — Frank Apisa
Just as you realize there is no "proof" one way or the other...you should realize there is no "more likely" one way or the other. — Frank Apisa
But the burden does accrue. — Frank Apisa
The core blind guesses in the spiritual reality of the world can be coherently argued for. — Frank Apisa
The flaws, such as they are, are only secondary items that arise when ontological realities are translated into intellectual/philosophical/theological terms. The core belief in the spiritual reality of the world can be coherently argued for.No, theism is held under the same scrutiny as everything else, so when theists provide flawed or illogical arguments, it's pointed out. — Christoffer
...if someone wants to assert "they are not unknown" or that "they know GOD"...
...they bear the burden of proof. — Frank Apisa
Personally I don't think study or intellect has anything to do with belief in God. It has to do with consciousness. The intellect is not the only way to knowledge. Knowledge (of God and the world) can come directly through consciousness. That is what the atheist cannot accept and dismisses as delusion.To be 100% confident in making a decision whether to believe in god’s existence or not, you need to study all the related topics (e.g. biology, physiology, psychology, evolution, all religion, etc). Then you would need critical thinking skills to evaluate truth from falsehood and any connections between the subjects. You would also need a lot of time, money and will to do that and this is the reason why so many people cannot speak about the subject meaningfully — akourios
Some would say they are Napoleon. — Frank Apisa
"Beliefs" or "guesses" are fine. But the guess "There are no gods" and the guess "There is at least one GOD"...are essentially identical. Both are nothing more than blind guesses about the unknown. — Frank Apisa
Let's see if this holds up. I don't know what the person beside me at work is going to do next. He could commit the changes he's making to a file, he could scrap it, he could yank out the power cable in frustration, etc. I assign actions to each of these and other possible acts he may perform next. But of course, I don't know which he will do, it's unknown to me. So clearly whatever I do next is indeterministic because I lack that knowledge. — MindForged
Again, you seem to miss the obvious. The decision is determined and thus whether or not the digits are known beforehand has absolutely nothing to do with determinism. That's epistemology, not metaphysics. — MindForged
The value of the digit is irrelevant because what course of action is done because of the digit in question is the result of the physical states which caused you to put assign each action to each respective number.
This has no challenge to determinism at all. "Mathematical reality" isn't determining anything at all here for if it did, the action itself would follow from pure mathematics.
Why does number 1 correspond to " Go to the library"? The answer is because that's what you "chose" to make, and your choice is not arbitrarily outside of determinism.
See last answer; the sequence itself is not decided upon or chosen. The sequence of actions is determined by how that digits are arranged and that sequence is neither known nor decided upon in advance. Nor is it physically determined.The value doesn't determine the choice, the choice determines what the value entails you to do.
The choice from the list is determined by which action you "chose" to assign to the digit. How this escapes determinism is beyond me. — MindForged
I think I am because many determinists - materialists - believe the universe is a physically deterministic machine that is predictable in terms of the physical laws of matter.Thats fine, but then you arent really saying much at all here. — DingoJones
Restricting Determinism to direct physical objects is a straw man. — DingoJones
So basically irrationality or what the number would be used here wasn't important. "Known in advance" is quite vague definition here. By whom? — ssu
This is a bit confusing. How do you define these two to being "physical", yet then something being "mathematical" as opposition to the first? — ssu
Those are still determinate events since you could say it was your neurological (clasical) state which chose the irrational number. — JupiterJess
No, because as I said reality does have a mathematical structure to it. To call that "not reality" is just incoherent, the structure of reality is obviously part of reality. — MindForged