Call me a cynic for subscribing to the old adage "When you talk to g/G it's prayer, but when g/G talks back it's probably schizophrenia" which I'd first heard back in the late '70s in Jesuit high school from a devout priest. :eyes:I was thinking what if someone, say a friend, comes to you and say's "I heard God talk to me yesterday and he/she told me thus and so", would you believe it? Or, "I saw God and he spoke to me and told me not to be afraid about...". Or perhaps even still, along the lines of phenomenology, if someone has an experience where they felt : "it was like a heard a voice that said not to worry, I will take care of you. Then out of nowhere, people came into my life and provided answers to my problem I was having." — 3017amen
Call me a cynic for subscribing to the old adage "When you talk to g/G it's prayer, but when g/G talks back it's probably schizophrenia" which I'd first heard back in the late '70s in Jesuit high school from a devout priest. :eyes: — 180 Proof
I was thinking what if someone, say a friend, comes to you and say's "I heard God talk to me yesterday and he/she told me thus and so", would you believe it? Or, "I saw God and he spoke to me and told me not to be afraid about...". Or perhaps even still, along the lines of phenomenology, if someone has an experience where they felt : "it was like a heard a voice that said not to worry, I will take care of you. Then out of nowhere, people came into my life and provided answers to my problem I was having."
— 3017amen
Call me a cynic for subscribing to the old adage "When you talk to g/G it's prayer, but when g/G talks back it's probably schizophrenia" which I'd first heard back in the late '70s in Jesuit high school from a devout priest. :eyes: — 180 Proof
I've encountered several people who claim to have had a god reveal itself to them...but have never had one of them respond reasonably to the question I ask. Most merely offer, "I know I am not deluding myself"...and then refuse to discuss it further. — Frank Apisa
As I've pointed out elsewhere - Predicates attributed (by scriptures? theology? metaphysics?) to g/G that entail evidence in the world which could not be caused by any other worldly (i.e. natural) entities and, thereby, be used as search parameters (i.e. where is g/G? when is g/G? what g/G has done that differentiates it from not-g/G?)So for the 101 student, what are people looking for to prove God's existence? — 3017amen
(a) Ontology (+ modal logic? actualist rather than possibilist).What domains of Philosophy are appropriate?
Conservation laws (i.e. fundamental physical symmetries) + physics (e.g. thermodynamics, quantum cosmology), chemistry (e.g. nucleogenesis, mass spectronomy + carbon-dating), & biology (e.g. neo-darwinian evolution, population genomics + proteomics, cognitive neuroscience).What domains of Science are appropriate?
Hey Frank!
Well, one possible 'logical' response could be in that scenario, as well as other scenarios or experiences: "Either God exists, or there is a heck of a lot of coincidence. And I choose to believe in the former/latter ." — 3017amen
And that sort of speaks to the concept or so-called logic behind Pascal's Wager (excluding the apologetic's about punishment, etc. etc.). — Amen
Predicates attributed (by scriptures? theology? metaphysics?) to g/G that entail evidence in the world which could not be caused by any other worldly (i.e. natural) entities and, thereby, be used as search parameters — 180 Proof
Defeasible (& abductive, hypothetical-deductive) reasoning suffices. "Proof" obtains only in formal domains such as mathematics. — 180 Proof
a) Ontology (+ modal logic? actualist rather than possibilist).
(b) Epistemology (re: fallibilistic (e.g. Peirce, Dewey, Popper-Feyerabend, Haack) rather than justificatory). — 180 Proof
Conservation laws (i.e. fundamental physical symmetries) + physics (e.g. thermodynamics, quantum cosmology), chemistry (e.g. nucleogenesis, mass spectronomy + carbon-dating), & biology (e.g. neo-darwinian evolution, population genomics + proteomics, cognitive neuroscience). — 180 Proof
an unsolicited phone call from a lending institution(s) for ALOT of money, an unsolicited individual appearing at my doorstep offering me something, an unsolicited employer offering me something, and a few more unsolicited things... . All of which I accepted to my delight. — 3017amen
Ignoring the use of "believe" in that comment, I have no idea of what that means. Do you choose the former or the latter? — Frank Apisa
3017amen
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Ignoring the use of "believe" in that comment, I have no idea of what that means. Do you choose the former or the latter?
— Frank Apisa
Frank!
The former. I'm saying that the concept of a God certainly exists. Why wouldn't it? A concept of Santa exists too. Is there a difference to you? And is that subjective? And is subjectivity wrong, right or incorrect? — 3017amen
How would, in your view, Occam's razor square with theoretical physics and/or common everyday inference?
Yeah, the concept of a god exists...but what does that do for the conversation. The concept of everything for which there is a word...exists. — Frank Apisa
It is a simplistic look at how to do science... — Frank Apisa
So for the 101 student, what are people looking for to prove God's existence? — 3017amen
3017amen
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Yeah, the concept of a god exists...but what does that do for the conversation. The concept of everything for which there is a word...exists.
— Frank Apisa
Frank!
Great comments, thanks. Well, lets parse the meaning of concepts and reality. If it is true that we live primarily in an abstract reality, what would it be to distinguish between what is real and not real? — 3017amen
For instance, other than the physical, it appears that there are more abstract things existing than there are concrete things existing (if you were to include the concept of time) to a value of 3 to 1 (the mental, mathematics, time itself, and the physical--respectively)? In other words there are more abstract things that exist, no? — Amen
It is a simplistic look at how to do science...
— Frank Apisa
I thought that probability theory ( justification of Occam's razor ) was alive and well, no? — Amen
So for the 101 student, what are people looking for to prove God's existence?
— 3017amen
I think the concept of faith has changed dramatically from the way it was presented in ancient texts from the way we consider it now. We consider faith to be that unshakable belief that comes to us without any sort of empirical proof, arising out of a sense of wonder, the impossibility of offering other explanations, and hope, emotion, or whatever. Someone who believes in God because he saw God is not a man of great faith any more than someone who believes in trees because he saw a tree. You can't prove God by reference to empirical evidence because if you did, you would be misunderstanding the epistemological method for believing in God, which is through faith alone.
Kierkegaard wrote that he found Abraham's acceptance of God's request that he sacrifice Isaac to be the ultimate act of faith. Abraham didn't question, but he just went up the mountain to kill his son that he loved so dearly. I found that act not one of faith at all, though, not at least as we currently understand faith to be. The text shows that Abraham spoke directly to God, that God told him that his wife Sarah would bear a child at the age of 90, and then she did. If God told me my 90 year old wife was going to get pregnant and then she did, I would believe in God because of that, not because of any great faith.
My point being that when you say "God," and I think of the God of the Old Testament, I think you prove his existence in ancient times by seeing such things as his speaking the universe into existence, his warning of and then bringing a great flood, his having manna fall from heaven, his splitting of the red sea, and many other miracles. If that all happened back then, you didn't need faith. Today, you just gotta believe. Which means you don't prove God exists now, you try to offer people the advantages of belief, which is why converting someone to a religion is such a different process than convincing someone their house is on fire. — Hanover
I saw God yesterday, therefore, God Exists — 3017amen
We have had this discussion before but what the heck, let's try again. Maybe it will get better.
If you are having conversations with God, what is there to prove? The whole thing about proof, as something that people do, is to make something necessary beyond any doubt. If God starts talking to me in clear language that my tiny mind understands, it will be life changing and incommunicable to others. Other people don't want to hear about the good time I am having with God.
And I don't blame them for their resentment. It is really annoying to have other people claim a relation to stuff that others don't feel, share, or understand.
What could make for a different outcome? — Valentinus
On the contrary. More space should be given to individual experience without the need for explaining why. — Valentinus
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