This is actually not true. A lower-level movement can create a higher-level movement, and there need not be, there is no, actualization process.
— god must be atheist
Then no potential ever becomes actualized and there is no change, — Dfpolis
Since you came to be, you need to have been actualized by something already operational. — Dfpolis
In fact, your entire line of thought seems self-contradictory. On the one hand, you claim we can prove nothing about reality, and, on the other hand, you seem to claim to have proven that we can prove nothing about reality -- which is proving something about reality. — Dfpolis
I have not said that God is unexplained, but self-explaining. — Dfpolis
If, by this, you mean that higher levels of organization can be predicted from the laws of lower levels, Anderson and I disagree. — T Clark
Premise 6: A finite being cannot explain its own existence.
— Dfpolis
This is where you should have started and ended. Positing an unexplained God as an explanation of what cannot be explained is conjuring. — Fooloso4
I do not deny, but affirm, that humans exist when they exist. I went even further, saying that once they begin to exist, it is necessary that they exist then. So, I have no idea what point you're trying to make. — Dfpolis
But, being human does not imply that I exist. — Dfpolis
The behavior of a complex, dynamic physical system will be consistent with so called laws of physics. That does not mean that the behavior of the system is predictable, even in theory, by those laws. It works top down, but it doesn't work bottom up. — T Clark
↪Dfpolis Your main argument is:
1. A finite entity can't explain itself
So,
2. There exists an infinite entity (God) that explains all finite entities — TheMadFool
Because whatever can be explained by a being, viz. whatever a being can do, results from its essence, the specification of its acts. — Dfpolis
Premise 6: A finite being cannot explain its own existence.
Why? Because whatever can be explained by a being, viz. whatever a being can do, results from its essence, the specification of its acts. For a finite being, existence, the unspecified power to act, is logically distinct from its specification. I am human and I exist. Being human explains my ability to think, because that is part of what it is to be human. But, being human does not imply that I exist. If it did, no human could cease existing. — Dfpolis
Since finite beings have a history of coming into and going out of existence, — Dfpolis
Have you ever tried to get a religionist involved in a moral discursion?
They run like beaten dogs.
— Gnostic Christian Bishop
Actually, I’ve found them to argue as heatedly as you do. — Brett
Which ones?
— god must be atheist
Nagel, Quine, Pinker, Chomsky just off the top of my head. — Wallows
Which ones?It's my understanding that most philosophers nowadays are some cognitivists or neo-empiricists. — Wallows
On the CI and Kant's teaching.I wonder what CI and Kant have to do with ethics. Kant and his CI has to do with making everyone happy, and making nobody unhappy.That's not ethics. That is mere Utopianism.
— god must be atheist
And what, exactly, do you base this statement on?
6 hours ago — Echarmion
Nothing at all. — I like sushi
Without so-called ‘imperfection’ what is there left to behold? — I like sushi
↪Wallows Doesn’t make sense to me because I don’t understand what you’re saying. — I like sushi
↪Wallows From the first word to the last. I cannot make head nor tail of what your point is, if there is a point, or why I should care? — I like sushi
You appear to be saying obvious, and some dubious, things. What I am/(was?) missing is the question embedded in the OP. — I like sushi
The cumulative combination of imperfect images of a Form will not eliminate the imperfections of those images. — Fooloso4
The cumulative combination of imperfect images of a Form will not eliminate the imperfections of those images. — Fooloso4
Is belief in the supernatural an intelligent person’s game?
Wallows
8.3k
Are you including reason in your emotionalism? Or, where does reason come in?
— tim wood
Well, yes. Reason under Hume's dictum is secondary to the emotions. It only serves as an instrumental faculty of our desires or wishes or passions. — Wallows
Wallows — Wallows
WORK out a model for 'life' and ignore the terms 'good' and 'bad' and demonstrate that for debate — RW Standing