I disagree. Given a scientific understanding of the universe - there's sufficient reason to form a God hypothesis. Logically, there's first cause, and physically, there's the fine tuning argument - neither of which constitute proof, but are certainly sufficient to support a God hypothesis. If you would entertain ideas like multiple universes, or the universe as a computer simulation - ruling out the idea of an intelligent, intentional cause is a double standard. — karl stone
The fact is we don't know. No-one knows if God exists or not. Admitting what we do and do not know is important, because the really interesting thing that follows from such an admission is that, if there is a God - then science is effectively the word of God made manifest in Creation, and through discovering and being responsible to scientific truth, we can secure a sustainable future, and survive in the universe - maybe long enough to find out. — karl stone
Adhering to the faith that there is a God, the human species is doomed - for faith undermines reason, denies a scientific conception of reality its rightful authority, and sets one faith group against another. As a tool of pre-scientific, religious and political ideology, science gives us the power to destroy the world, but denies us the reason to save it. — karl stone
yes more useful is subjective base on the goal. — hachit
We have to remember it was not science that gave us gunpowder and the printing press that was alchemy. It was also not modern science that gave us modern medicine that was christianity — hachit
If the goal of science is to find the truth, how can it without excepting all the parts. — hachit
Secondly we don't know if magic is good or not because as science became more popular it led to more discoverys wich made it more popular leading to more research in it wich made it more discoverys. It then became a run away sinario. It became popular because of the cristians than people cut its ties to christianity. Again it is not using all the parts. — hachit
I think some constructivism, or at least fallibalism is warranted with things like perceptions/knowledge of the experiential world. I'm not sure it makes as much sense when we talk about basic math or logic. A =/= ~A is a pretty straightforward truth. — NKBJ
but that is circular reasoning resoning. It is true that science is useful but if you going to say it's the more useful without a comparison it creates a feed back loop. — hachit
But it's all about value judgements, or that's what it boils down to anyway, however you look at it, whether we talk about mine or theirs or in relation to this or that. There's no way around that. I could only try my best to get them to see things my way. And I'm sure I could do much better than how you've envisioned the exchange! — S
But liberalism has its limits, wouldn't you agree? I'm very socially liberal, but you ought to have some red lines. Don't shout "Fire!" in a crowded theatre. Don't have unprotected sex if you're not willing to accept the possible consequences or if you have an uncaring or blasé attitude about abortion. The former is immoral and against the law. The latter is immoral, but not against the law. That seems right to me. — S
The scientifically correct position on the God hypothesis is agnosticism, not atheism. — karl stone
how if i may ask. — hachit
So science is just as logically valid as magic. It just has more approval. — hachit
What is science? — bogdan9310
But what questions does science answer? — bogdan9310
Science only analyzes existing concepts, and there is no scientific research before a concept is created. — bogdan9310
Does science rely on philosophy to exist? — bogdan9310
Science is nothing more than the gradual progress and discoveries based on previous work, and we can describe the source of our current understanding of science as the product of a collective mind of scientists working together, but in different timelines. Albert Einstein did not come up with relativity from scratch, the concept of time was already there. Isaac Newton based his absolute space and time theory on top of Johannes Kepler’s work, and so on.
My point is that we mostly make up knowledge, then build it up, rather than discovering it. — bogdan9310
What if you start from the wrong idea? You would be just building a structure, and it will make sense to you because that how structures function. How would you know if you are wrong? — bogdan9310
Science is generally good, but people treat it as a religion nowadays — bogdan9310
But science isn't "just built up." Science proceeds by tearing down what's proven wrong, to rebuild what's right. It's a method of doubt, as opposed - I suspect, to your method of faith — karl stone
An example is the idea, the presupposition, that every event has a cause (which apparently was Kant's presupposition, and was not held by Newton or by modern science). — tim wood
The biggest obstacle to libertarian free will, it seems to me, is not physicalism, but the metaphysics behind causation. An intuitive belief about causation is that for every event that occurs, there is a cause for that event's existence; thus, if there is a lightning strike, one expects that there is a cause for that lightning strike. However, if that metaphysical intuition is true, then whenever we have a thought, there must have been a cause to bring that thought about and this seems to deny libertarian free will. — Walter Pound
Is it necessary for uncaused causes to be possible for libertarian free will to be possible? — Walter Pound
Can anyone here present a theory of causation that allows for libertarian free will? — Walter Pound
According to hard determinism, the universe as it is, down to its most minute and trivial events (like my decision to drink tea rather than coffee) is the result - and the ONLY possible result - of an inevitable chain of a causational event originating at the Big Bang. To my thinking, that implies that somehow the shape of our universe with all its incredible complexity was inherent in the structure of the infinitesimal small sized primaeval atom. — Jacob-B
That, in turn, implies some sort of DNA- like plan. That, in turn, makes hard determinism uncomfortably resembles ‘creationism’. If the shape of our universe was indeed inherent in the primaeval atom, the determinists need to provide a physics theory of supporting that assumption. — Jacob-B
I tend to think that the causal chain of the primaeval atom did break down at a certain level of complexity and was replaced by a not strictly causal evolutionary process that doesn't rule out Free Will. — Jacob-B
Sure, responsibility is only an issue if there is value in the first place. But I find it almost incomprehensible to see either no value or such little value in the foetus to warrant little-to-no responsibility when it comes to terminating it, which means killing it, ending its life. It's human, it's alive, it has the potential of becoming a baby, infant, child, teenager, and adult. In fact, on that point, it's common to refer to a foetus as a baby, or by a gender specific pronoun, or by its given name, or by an endearing term. The terms being used in this discussion are technical and impersonal. Each and every one of us was a foetus at one point. It resembles us and shares features with us, such as eyes, arms, legs, and a beating heart. — S
People can judge value differently, but I find some of those judgements repulsive and abhorrent, such as judging it to be acceptable to drown kittens in a river or at an even more extreme end, exterminating Jews. There's a scale, and for me at least, irresponsible abortion is on there somewhere. — S
The issue is if one can say that x caused y in eternalism and it seems like one must argue that x and y eternally coexist, but are not the cause of each other. Supposed one looked at two locations of space, that eternally exist, it wouldn't make much sense to say that one location caused the other. — Walter Pound
If the metaphysics behind the b theory of time is correct, then any thought that exists eternally and never came into being or goes out of being. This is why it is so hard to see how one could argue that free will exists. I don't even think one can use the word determinism to describe such a state of affairs. — Walter Pound
When it's more dissimilar or not understood is when you get the "bad reasoning" judgment. — Terrapin Station
Re validity, there are different species of logic and different definitions of validity. For example, validity is different in relevance logics than in traditional logic. (And quirks with the traditional definition of validity was really the whole initial motivation for relevance logics.) — Terrapin Station
Statement two: Science has shown remarkable capability of verification, prediction and use.
How is is this possible if it is only the appearance of external reality (phenomena), not the external reality itself (noumena)? — Arthur Rupel
People compare it to how they reason, what makes sense to them. — Terrapin Station
Can you explain what you mean? — Walter Pound
How does that affect the possibility of either determinism, indeterminacy, libertarian free will and compatiblism if all events exist senselessly? — Walter Pound
Definitely people do that all the time, because people judge good and bad reasoning very frequently where they're not even familiar with a concept of logical validity. — Terrapin Station
I've always questioned why the cat isn't dead or alive just because we don't know if it is. Just because we don't know a true/false value doesn't mean one doesn't exist. We have no evidence that the universe doesn't exist without an observer. I think that in our mind the variable is unknown, but there is a correct answer, us knowing it or not doesn't change that. — TogetherTurtle
I think since probability exists hard determinism is incorrect. Current physics uses the Schrodinger cat experiment to make this apparent. The cat is either alive or dead, there is no certainty, no hard determinism, no omnipresent observer making all things certain and predetermined. This of course is just theory too. — Josh Alfred
Oh god no. Parents can be extremely irresponsible. They shouldn't get free rein in every case. — S
I understood your point to be that a couple shouldn't be held anywhere near as morally responsible for creating a pregnancy if they took the right the precautions, like the guy wearing a condom. I agree with that. But in response to that, my point is that they're still very much morally responsible for what they do regarding the pregnancy going forward. — S
Well, your poking doesn't seem to have done much, at least not in relation to my position on the relevance of responsibility. There are some clearcut cases where they're very much morally responsible for the results of their actions, and there are some clearcut cases - as you've pointed out - where they're not anywhere near as morally responsible for the results of their actions, and either way, they're very much responsible for what they do going forward, which is what ultimately matters. — S
Suppose that the metaphysics behind the b theory of time is true, and all events exist tenselessly, then what does that mean for causation? — Walter Pound
What does that mean for the debate over determinism, compatibilism, libertarian free will, and indeterminacy? — Walter Pound
That's not succinctly summarizable, because it relates to feelings in so many ways, but the important thing is that reason isn't objective. Reason is a mental function. — Terrapin Station
Yes, but that would change if it resulted in pregnancy. — S
And I don't really get why you'd switch the focus to protected sex. Isn't the point to consider the arguable counterexamples, and to focus on those which seem the strongest? A stronger counterexample against someone who is either rejecting or trying to underplay the responsibility involved would be a couple who don't really care that much about protection or the possible consequences of having unprotected sex. If that ends up resulting in an abortion, then I'd say that they're sure as hell responsible. — S
Excuse me for jumping in here, but you aren't actually suggesting that the possible consequences of unprotected sex are a big mystery, are you? — S
Practical rules that are objective in their intention of the well-being of all humans (and maybe beyond). — Christoffer
This means you can create a foundation of morals that are based on a moral method of thinking, not specific acts to do in certain situations that are contextual. — Christoffer
For example, maybe you enjoy stealing things, but you think it's morally wrong in general for people to steal, It would be an equivocation in that case to say that you don't personally dislike stealing, but you think it's morally wrong for people in general to steal, because maybe you think the economy wouldn't be workable in that case, or whatever. That's an equivocation because you'd not be thinking that exactly the same thing, in the same respect, for the same reasons, etc. is something that both you don't dislike and that you think is morally wrong. — Terrapin Station
I don't quite understand this response. What, exactly, are you saying you don't dislike but feel is morally wrong? — Terrapin Station
So you think it would make sense for someone to say, "I don't dislike rape representations in pornography, but I feel that rape representations in pornography are morally wrong"? — Terrapin Station
This is really hard to continue with — Rank Amateur
So we are NOT responsible for the direct and predictable results of our act of free will because a butterfly flapped it wings in Argentina? — Rank Amateur
and you just say
No. — Rank Amateur
I understand that is your belief, and that is 100 pct fine. But that is not argument.
I think we have been back and forth enough on this - — Rank Amateur
So we are NOT responsible for the direct and predictable results of our act of free will because a butterfly flapped it wings in Argentina? — Rank Amateur
and you just say
No.
it is like "who's on first " ( hope you get the reference ) — Rank Amateur
I understand that is your belief, and that is 100 pct fine. But that is not argument. — Rank Amateur
So, are we relieved of the responsibility of our acts of free will, simply by them not being intended? I didn't want to hit that car as I ran the red light, my intention was only to save a few minutes. — Rank Amateur
Yet, you have agreed already that the father has to pay child support, after he has said he had no intention of having the child. Can you bridge that for me? — Rank Amateur
You realize that is a blatant contradiction in terms — Rank Amateur
So we are responsible for the direct and predictable results of our act of free will because a butterfly flapped it wings in Argentina? — Rank Amateur
I would agree, for sure that their is a continuum of responsibility of degree with not having sex at one end, and unprotected sex, during ovulation at the other end.
And in a practical sense, if an effective method of contraception is used effectively, well over 95 or more percent of this issue is moot. And, while effectively trying to limit the possible results of your actions is the right thing to do, I still would argue the mere change in the probability of the result does not relieve you of the responsibility — Rank Amateur
