…or could it be that maybe they’re tired of people who presume to speak for them? — Michael Ossipoff
…while claiming that positions, beliefs or faith that you don’t know, must be undefined — Michael Ossipoff
Fine. Draw conclusions about the beliefs of the people who have told you their beliefs. Limit your conclusions to them. — Michael Ossipoff
Yes, and it’s common. It’s called bigotry. — Michael Ossipoff
Drawing conclusions about the beliefs of people other than the ones whose beliefs you’ve heard about.
.
Well, but what other Atheist activity is there? — Michael Ossipoff
It’s easy to make a sloppy irrelevant analogy. — Michael Ossipoff
This is all based on a complete misunderstanding of what science is and does. Science doesn't impose extra assumptions on the evidence. It simply explains phenomenon in the most basic, simplest way. It doesn't complicate things by creating explanations of the supernatural and god. If we ever get around to finding evidence of god, science would gladly change it's mind. Science is open to the idea of god, just as it is open to any other hypothesis, but we need evidence before we can even start down that fork in the road of proving it.I was responding to a different argument by you and arguing that alternative causal explanations would count as evidence against gods.
Every time you discovered a parent had taken a tooth from under a pillow that would be evidence that a tooth fairy was not involved there.
However white swans were not evidence against black swans but they were taken to be..... It was a misinterpretation of evidence. It is actually easier to find evidence against a notion of God (ironically?). I think philosophers who invoke science against God are using a smoke screen as if everything counts as evidence for their perspective but without an explicit argument so that it is more liking using white swans as counter evidence..
Gods could become causally unnecessary but still exist. The disputed claim is whether they are really causally dispensable. By causally here I am referring to the deist conception of gods which translates more as a cause, an intelligence, a motive, a reason, law giver and so on.
Personally I don'think the scientific paradigm is adequate to answer every question. It is this rather than the god issue, I am attacking. I also want a world that is more based on uncertainty rather than dogmatism and where uncertainty is acknowledged. — Andrew4Handel
This is all based on a complete misunderstanding of what science is and does. Science doesn't impose extra assumptions on the evidence. — Harry Hindu
What would another explanatory framework look like if reason and logic aren't the only one's to get at the truth?I am not making a commitment about the method of science I am attacking the notion that it is the only explanatory framework and that problems will all eventually be solved.I don't agree with your characterisation of science. It may attempt to explain things but it doesn't have to be committed to simplicity or causal closure. — Andrew4Handel
Then you don't know philosophy. Philosophy tends to especially question our deepest held solutions.Philosophy is not asking questions about things that have already been solved. Again you seem to be basing your paradigm around the successes of science which is like only focusing on white swans to draw conclusions about black swans.
I feel you are just ignoring or misrepresenting a lot of what I said. I have been explicit that the problems which may invoke gods are explanatory gaps and unsolved problems. — Andrew4Handel
That is what science does, but you just said that it doesn't have to be committed to simplicity.I think science definitely imposes assumptions on evidence because that is unavoidable. We would not need science if the evidence spoke for it self. — Andrew4Handel
.…or could it be that maybe they’re tired of people who presume to speak for them?
.I didn't speculate on their motives, only reported their actions.
.…while claiming that positions, beliefs or faith that you don’t know, must be undefined
.. I claimed that it is a reasonable conclusion (among other equally reasonable conclusions) that to believe in something that is undefined is not sensible.
.I've made no claims at all about whether each and every theist's belief is or is not undefined.
.Fine. Draw conclusions about the beliefs of the people who have told you their beliefs. Limit your conclusions to them.
.Show me where I have not admitted that my conclusions are drawn from a limited source.
.No, bigotry is defined as "intolerance towards those who hold different opinions from oneself." it has nothing to do with drawing conclusions based on a person's experience so far.
.Well, but what other Atheist activity is there?
.Unbelievable. Literally in the same couplet you criticise the conflation of 'all theists' and then immediately make a presumption about 'all atheists' do you even know what hypocrisy means?
.It’s easy to make a sloppy irrelevant analogy.
.It's easy to simply state an analogy is sloppy and irrelevant without actually presenting an argument as to why... apparently.
This is all based on a complete misunderstanding of what science is and does. Science doesn't impose extra assumptions on the evidence. It simply explains phenomenon in the most basic, simplest way. It doesn't complicate things by creating explanations of the supernatural and god. — Harry Hindu
If we ever get around to finding evidence of god, science would gladly change it's mind.
Science is open to the idea of god, just as it is open to any other hypothesis
, but we need evidence before we can even start down that fork in the road of proving it.
What would evidence of god look like?
What would another explanatory framework look like if reason and logic aren't the only one's to get at the truth? — Harry Hindu
Science doesn't impose extra assumptions on the evidence. — Harry Hindu
Then you don't know philosophy. Philosophy tends to especially question our deepest held solutions. — Harry Hindu
Again, what would evidence of god look like? Stop avoiding the questions. — Harry Hindu
Science-Worship isn't science. It's pseudoscience. — Michael Ossipoff
Genuine science says nothing about God — Michael Ossipoff
Incorrect. You offered a theory to explain their objections. — Michael Ossipoff
So it’s a reasonable conclusion that all that is “sensible” is definable — Michael Ossipoff
But when drawing a conclusion from a limited source, one mustn’t apply it to a larger group of people. — Michael Ossipoff
Drawing conclusions about a larger group of people, based on your experience “so far” with a smaller group, is bigotry. — Michael Ossipoff
it’s really common for Atheists to be on the offensive, in organizational activities, and in forums. That isn’t an unfair assessment. It’s common knowledge. — Michael Ossipoff
without a necessity like that which justifies avoidance of tigers. — Michael Ossipoff
Nonsense. What form does your reason and logic take? How do you know that you're being reasonable and logical? Science isn't only about being empirical. It is a blend of empiricism and rationalism. I don't understand why there would be two camps of empiricists and rationalists because they both work together and are necessary for the acquisition of knowledge.I don't know how we have gone from discussing science to the topic of reason and logic. Reason and logic do not rely on an external object. Science intends on explaining the nature of existing empirical phenomena. — Andrew4Handel
No, I'm trying to get at what alternatives there are to science that lead us to truth as well as science has. You seem to think there is a better way, but haven't said what that way was, or explained how it might look.You seem to be diluting and expanding the meaning of science which is a common tactic so that people can claim things are part of science and give science credit for them when that assumption is questionable. — Andrew4Handel
This is like saying that the design found in the weather or diseases is indirect evidence of god, when we already have better explanations that don't impose more than what the data informs us of. We have the theory of natural selection which is a better explanation than "God did it." It doesn't impose anything more on the data other than assembling it into a logical, consistent manner to produce information about how we came to be. Why would science be just as good an explanation as religion if they both don't seek truth in the same way? Is "god" a scientist? Is "god" an alien? How does god create, and why? By imposing the God answer on everything, you still have to answer how god has a causal effect on the rest of nature, and by doing so, so you'd be providing a scientific explanation.I have already answered this. I said things like sentience, intelligence, creation and design as found in humans are possible indirect evidence for the god hypothesis. — Andrew4Handel
Science isn't only about being empirical — Harry Hindu
I'm trying to get at what alternatives there are to science that lead us to truth as well as science has. — Harry Hindu
It`s a straight forward question, so the only answer with any hope of genuine headway must be equally as straight forward. No more than two to three lines of prose are required in achieving the perfect answer. — celebritydiscodave
.Incorrect. You offered a theory to explain their objections.
.Show me. Either quote me the passage from my posts that offered an explanation for their actions…
.As usual with theist apologists that I've experienced, one gets even close to their fragile construct of the world and they fly off the handle.
So it’s a reasonable conclusion that all that is “sensible” is definable
.If you read my sentence with any honesty you will see it clearly states that it is reasonable to argue that believing in something un-defined is not sensible.
.I have made no claims whatsoever about the set 'all that is sensible'.
.The set I'm making claims about is 'all that is believed'. You really need to learn how to parse object-subject distinctions in normal sentences.
.But when drawing a conclusion from a limited source, one mustn’t apply it to a larger group of people.
.So when stepping out in front of a moving train, you wouldn't get out of the way because your conclusion about what will happen next is only drawn from a limited source, after all, the proportion of the trains you've seen is tiny compared to the group of 'all trains'?
.Drawing conclusions about a larger group of people, based on your experience “so far” with a smaller group, is bigotry.
.No it is not. That's why I provided you with a dictionary definition of 'Bigotry', so that you can stop misusing the word.
.it’s really common for Atheists to be on the offensive, in organizational activities, and in forums. That isn’t an unfair assessment. It’s common knowledge.
.And again, it's OK for you to make generalisations about atheists based on the ones you've experienced
., but not for me to draw conclusions about theists based on exactly the same metric.
.without a necessity like that which justifies avoidance of tigers.
.No, they think there is a necessity, you just don't agree with them. Most atheists that I have heard the arguments of think Theism is harmful because of the rejection of critical thinking that goes along with it.
.You may not agree, but it's disingenuous suggest they don't have a reason.
.I have no objection to theistic metaphysics
.…, it is an entirely reasonable option. What I do object to is the deception that the possibility of such metaphysics somehow justifies a particular religion
., and the suggestion that atheists have no right to act on their sincere feelings that certain theistic beliefs could cause harm.
.You're consistently repeating the same nonsense over and again;
.1. Atheists are not allowed to draw any conclusions about theists
.…because they have not met them all, nor listened to the exposition of every single one of them
.…, whereas you are allowed to draw conclusions about atheists, psuedo-scientists, any group you don't like, based solely on your prejudice. 'Common' is still an unwarranted conclusion, by a long way.
.There are an estimated 500,000,000 atheists, at a standard 95% confidence, you would have to have experienced 9604 of them just to get a statistically significant sample. You have definitely not met enough atheists do define what is 'common', not even statistically, let alone accurately.
.2. You keep insisting that drawing conclusions based on a small sample is unnecessary because there is no harm in holding theistic beliefs of the type that I have encountered (my sample). This is subjective, if you want to argue about the potential harms from the theistic beliefs I have so far encountered, then lay out that argument.
.Just presuming that your conclusion on that matter must be right and so defeats my right to draw conclusions in [is?] unjustified as yet.
.3. I'm not sure why you keep insisting on using the word 'bigot'.
.It doesn't matter how you define it it never covers any of my behaviour.
.I am only obstinate in your opinion, because you think I should be adopting your views
.I'm not going to indulge you any further.
Anyone who wants to evaluate or criticize a position needs to specify it. — Michael Ossipoff
.Anyone who wants to evaluate or criticize a position needs to specify it.
.Theism - "Belief in the existence of a god or gods, specifically of a creator who intervenes in the universe." (OED).
.Theists must either have no definition for this 'God' or 'Gods', in which case they are believing in something simply by name, which I find to be ludicrous
.; or they claim some knowledge about the properties of this 'God' or 'Gods', in which case they are making knowledge claims. In this second case they have either postulated the existence of an entity which cannot be falsified where no such entity is required to explain the phenomenon we experience;
.All three of these exhaustive options require the suspension of efficient critical thinking.
.The absence of [what Pseudo calls] effective critical thinking allows all sorts of false and harmful political messages to gain popularity.
.So yes, it is perfectly possible to criticise all theists, be cause all theists share some common features
.otherwise they would not be classifiable as a group.
.You may well disagree with these criticisms, but it's ridiculous to suggest that I should enquire as to the nature of every single theistic belief in order to make any judgements about them
.with sufficient certainty to post on a philosophy forum. I can reach perfectly logical conclusions, with sufficient certainty to talk confidently about them simply from the fact that all theists believe in a god or gods. If they don't, they're not theists.
Your definition of ”Theist” leaves out some self-declared Theists. — Michael Ossipoff
…because you devoutly believe that all of Reality is definable, verbally describable. — Michael Ossipoff
.Your definition of ”Theist” leaves out some self-declared Theists.
.People can't just declare themselves something and insist that the world changes its definitions to suit them.
.If you do not believe God 'exists' in the normal sense of the word, you are an atheist
.Either way, you do not believe 'god' exists. That is the definition of an atheist. You can't just change it because you'd prefer to be called a theist.
.…because you devoutly believe that all of Reality is definable, verbally describable.
.No, it's because I consider it a logical nonsense to say you believe in something but be unable to define what it is. It simply doesn't make sense.
.If you cannot define what it is
., what you have is a feeling or a sensation, not a belief.
.You are misusing the words 'theist' and 'belief' simply to dodge having to admit that you don't really believe in God. A 'theist' is someone who believes in the existence of god, a 'belief' is a propositional statement or functional attitude. If we can't stick to normal English how do you expect to maintain a discussion?
.By your definition of 'Theism', I'm a theist too because I definitely don't think we've discovered every form of existence (there are probably at least seven more dimensions for a start)
.By your definition of 'belief', I have beliefs that I can't define because I definitely have feelings and sensations that are not the result of logical thought
I call myself a Theist because, in a meaningful sense, in comparison to Atheists, I have a lot more in common with some Theists who talk about God, even if some (but not all) of them use “exist” differently from how I do. — Michael Ossipoff
.I call myself a Theist because, in a meaningful sense, in comparison to Atheists, I have a lot more in common with some Theists who talk about God, even if some (but not all) of them use “exist” differently from how I do.
.So what do you have in common then?
.…but whilst it has given me a clearer understanding of your beliefs, it has not explained why you think they're closer to biblical-literalists than atheists.
.It seems a bizarre, and incredibly arbitrary use of the word 'theist' to say that the common feature is that you all use the word 'God' to define the non-material force/entity/experience of widely differing properties.
.Scientists could just as easily have decided that the Higgs-Boson was what they call 'God' (in fact I think it was even called the god particle for a while), making all scientists theists as well.
.I'm unaware of any other proper noun where normal use is for the speaker to simply apply it to whatever they wish to fall into that definition, rather than have it define some collection of things already found in human discourse.
.We don't decide whatever we think falls into the category 'tree' and get to talk with others expecting that definition to mean something to them. 'God' is already a word that defines certain propositions, it's quite a wide definition, and certainly takes in some non-material aspects, as well as the very anthropomorphic version, but that doesn't mean we can just apply the word to any metaphysical proposition and expect to be understood.
You said
.
"No, you’re talking about physics. Of course it’s widely-agreed that there’s a lot of unknown physics. That doesn’t make you a Theist. Physics has nothing to do with Theism, by anyone’s definition.".
.So how come you're able to apply the word 'god' to whatever metaphysical (or meta-metaphysical, if you like) position you see fit
., but say with absolute certainty that I can't apply it to unknown forces in physics?
.What aspect of the definition of 'god' are you invoking to make such claims?
.This whole thread is about dishonest philosophy and I find this kind of language game to be an example of this. As you said, quite rightly, it's all too easy for disagreements to arise simply out of poor definition of terms - 'god', 'belief', 'theist', but the way to avoid that is not only to define your terms first, it is to make some attempt to stick to previously agreed definitions, to not deliberately stray too far from the fuzzy boundaries that previous language use has defined for a word.
that end [the sleep at the end of lives] is arguably the more normal and natural state of affairs for us, in comparison to our temporary life in the world of time and events.
.
You replied:
.
.
But how can it be more "natural" for us when we are not, or are no longer? I mean, death is when we cease being the entities that we are. We cease being an entity altogether. We are no longer.
.And "Natural" surely only applies to living entities that are. Entities that are not, are no longer part of the natural world. Therefore death cannot be "more natural" for us since in death we are not entities.
.Moreover, sleep is only ever something we do, or something that happens to us, when we are.
.So I think it is misleading to use it as a metaphor for death. It could lead to unclarity.
.But can you show that a person’s world and its events aren’t hypothetical?
Sorry I think you have the burden of proof here, not me.
The reason is that it is highly implausible that we experience life hypothetically and/or factually. Myself, and the people within my shared culture, experience the world in terms of familiarity and significance.
When I'm running for the train, for example, I do not think of a hypothetical or a fact. To do so I would first need to abstract from and reflect on the situation. There is never an experience like this. Instead I am completely caught up in the situation and this is grounded in my familiarity with catching trains. I know how to catch trains and know how to catch a train that I'm running late for. I am fully involved. I am the situation. In a sense there is no I, there is only the situation, when I am so fully involved.
..
Again, this is not how we experience our world. Why? because the way you have expressed this, the roundabout is meaningless and abstracted from everyday experience. It has no significance. For example, someone who is lost and following directions does not go to 34th & Vine to encounter a roundabout, they go there only in order to get onto the road they need to get on to. It is significant to them for that reason. Or, someone who is familiar with the roundabout probably more readily experiences the frustrations of driving in traffic with idiots, or thinking about the discussion they had that morning with their partner, than their surroundings (including the roundabout) as such. Perhaps they are so utterly familiar with the roundabout and their drive to work that they don't even consciously notice it. This happens all the time for me in the flow of life. Notice that in this latter example the person went to 34th & Vine but didn't encounter a roundabout. At least not in a consciously aware factual manner (present-at-hand in Heidegger speak), which is what I take you to mean here by "encounter".
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