Not talking about human concept of integers, but the integers themselves, whether they have ontological existence of their own or not.I beg to differ – integers are a man-made invention – they do not exist in time and space – only in the mind of man. Show me another example of something that is orderly without causation? — Thinker
I would ask you to prove the antithesis, but I know in the end that thesis is speculation too. I have already been there – done that. The difference is that NO-God is really much less satisfying speculation. That is why I prefer the opposite. Plus, I do not feel the need to ridicule you for your speculation – that is also very satisfying. — Thinker
Like any other speculation about a negative. I guess the choice would be between filling the position with a placeholder or leaving it vacant. It seems to me you chose the 1st, so I ask you what are the benefits of doing so? You said satisfaction but satisfaction derived from what?The difference is that NO-God is really much less satisfying speculation. — Thinker
Pooh-pooh.Are you trolling or...? — Sapientia
context for this:I don't care if speculation is good enough for you. It's not good enough for any reasonable person. And you seem to have pulled the notion of absolute certainty from the same place you pulled the notion of coincidence — Sapientia
?Are you trolling or...? — Sapientia
I apparently hold multiple sets of mutually conflicting beliefs. One is a rational belief set that is effectively along monist-realist lines, and which strangely leads to the same sort of comfort that others find with their religion. The other set is more part of my core programming, and is not particularly open to correction. It seems I am a product of a process that produced fit things over things aware of truth. Belief in certain lies makes one more fit. So comfort seems not to be the base goal since I personally get it more from the realist set of beliefs. But making choices for the benefit of that carrot on a stick in front of me seems to be unavoidable. So I believe in the damn thing on an irrational level despite the rational part of me knowing that the carrot is just bait. Truth seems to serve nobody's purpose here.Not if you value reason as much as me. — Sapientia
Yes, I think anybody part of an organized religion has been brainwashed. It is not hard to do. Goes on in politics all the time. People by nature want a story that provides comfort, however obviously fictional and inevitably accompanied by a plaid suited salesman who finds a way to sell it to you. Hence my approval for the reason for the belief. But such logic has no place in a forum like this where preferences hold no weight. I have a preference for vanilla, but I don't offer that as any evidence that vanilla is the true answer to the flavor debate.Besides, it's not even a choice. I'd have to be brainwashed.
Magnets create much more orderly order than conscious beings — mcdoodle
Okay, well, pretending to not know what watches and similar artifacts are and how they are made, I'd make no assumptions about where it must have come from, especially not with respect to assuming that something sentient made it. That wouldn't be justified, because I'd have no experience base for concluding that. — Terrapin Station
A bunch of pelicans just flew by in an orderly pattern. I'm off the coast. :) — Mongrel
That someone is experimenting on test subjects.What inference do you draw from a clean room? — TheMadFool
That someone is experimenting on test subjects. — Noblosh
Simple and loaded — Sapientia
In other words, no one is reaching the conclusion that people were involved simply because the room, the furniture, etc. are there. We're reaching the conclusion because we know something about how rooms, furniture and so on are made.
With the Earth, trees, etc. there's zero evidence that anyone makes them. The evidence rather suggests that they're made entirely by natural/not-person-made phenomena. — Terrapin Station
Exactly. Just because some things are designed does not make all things designed. — darthbarracuda
I haven't said anything that isn't common knowledge. — TheMadFool
How's it loaded? — TheMadFool
Yes someone. It's a natural inference shaped by experience and knowledge. However when we apply the same to the universe (inferring a God), atheists have a problem. Why? — TheMadFool
Isn't it quite similar to the design argument? I chose the argument from design because its refutation goes against a generally accepted rationalization. In a nutshell people think ''person'' when they see a tidy room but this isn't allowed in the context of the universe. I want to know why. — TheMadFool
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