This has not been able to be done in a few hundred years, and not from lack of effort. So you have quite a task ahead of you.
— Rank Amateur
If, as you state, you are a believe in reason, this last part should give you pause. — Rank Amateur
you - I/others disagree with the cosmological argument therefor you are unreasonable
me - that fails - i hold to my premise — Rank Amateur
Im made no comment in the reasonableness of the argument, you are simply mis-applying it. It is an argument about a first cause or mover. It is a reasonable, imo, argument for first mover/cuase. Theism, take your pick, does NOT follow from it. — DingoJones
Is the basis of what we hold as true based on science in 2018, any different than what was held as true based on science in 1718, 1818, 1918?
The history of science is a long series of incorrect propositions held as true, until surpassed as a new truth. — Rank Amateur
.”What wouldn’t you take as a brute fact? The “objective existence” of this physical universe? You wouldn’t take that as a brute-fact? Alright then, why is there this physical universe? Because there just is? That’s called a brute-fact.”— Michael Ossipoff
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No, that's not what I meant, and I don't think that asking why there is this physical universe is a sensible or appropriate question. It's a loaded question.
.I meant that I wouldn't consider it to be a brute fact that physicalism is the case, which is to say that everything is physical, or supervenes on the physical
., which I thought was clear from the context where I went into detail about how I'd go about thinking about physicalism: a way which contrasts with the kind of thinking behind brute facts, where things can't be broken down or considered as thoroughly, and you just kind of go, "Everything is physical! Just because!".
.”Then there’s another question; If you claim that this physical universe is “objectively-real” &/or “objectively-existent”, or “actual” in some way that the hypothetical logical system that I described isn’t, then what do you mean by those terms in quotes?” — Michael Ossipoff
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Yes, I do claim that. It is objectively real, existent, and actual, although I'm not sure whether that's in some way that the "hypothetical logical system" that you've described isn't, because, with due respect, I don't really understand much of what you were banging on about for that wordy first part of your reply - experience story, hypothetical this, hypothetical that, wave mechanics - which I haven't addressed because I don't even know where to begin.
.The meaning of those terms - "objective", "real", "existent", "actual" - can be found in dictionaries and understood in contrast with their antonyms, so you should be capable of understanding my meaning without me having to explain it.
Quite an intrepretation! I truly don't have any grudge against atheists, but it seems you just assume that. I really don't know where you got the idea that I think atheists are immoral.You also assume that morals cannot be established by non-religious people, which is a prejudice against any kind of moral system that doesn't rely on religious belief.
This is the usual "atheists are immoral" argument that fails over and over. — Christoffer
Yet are the morals so totally different? The starting point is surely different, that we can agree. Is all religious moral thinking just plagiarized from common sense and earlier philosophy? Because should I point out that some religious thinkers have even been called philosophers. Just asking.However none of these has anything to do with god or religion, which claims moral truths without foundation for those claims. — Christoffer
The cosmological argument does not have any valid conclusion in favour of the existence of god. It's not about disagreement, there's no logical conclusion, case closed. What you write here just points to you ignoring the inconsistencies about the argument in support of a god. Nothing binds the conclusion of the cosmological argument to the conclusion that god exists, that's just a wild connection with no basis in logic — Christoffer
Fundamental constants are finely tuned for life. A remarkable fact about our universe is that physical constants have just the right values needed to allow for complex structures, including living things. Steven Weinberg, Martin Rees, Leonard Susskind and others contend that an exotic multiverse provides a tidy explanation for this apparent coincidence: if all possible values occur in a large enough collection of universes, then viable ones for life will surely be found somewhere.
my knowledge that any deities the existence of which would entail a contradiction do not exist cannot rightly be called speculation about the unknown — S
You can't just assert that it's a choice, because that's begging the question. I don't even think that what we're talking about - obtaining belief - is something which can be chosen, so, for starters, you would need to explain why you think otherwise before moving on to more detailed talk of scientific hypotheses, probability, logic, religion, and so on. — S
Sorry, I'm not following. Can you break that down and explain it? — S
What do you mean by that? How are you using the term "metaphysical"? — S
if you happen to be the kind of person who doesn't want their beliefs exposed to scrutiny — S
And how do Gods fare with practical experience as a limiting factor? — ChatteringMonkey
The real philosopher is the archenemy of priests and theologians. — ChatteringMonkey
And howdo Godsdoes God fare with practical experience as a limiting factor? — ChatteringMonkey
The essential or primary purpose is to provide a system of meaning that can bind a community in common values and purpose, like a kind of glue that holds a tribe together. — praxis
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Translation: It’s a question that S. can’t answer :D
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Though S. believes in the “objective” existence of a physical universe that is the fundamental reality, all of reality, and the metaphysically-prior thing on which all else supervenes—he can’t say why there is that physical universe.
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So, “Let’s not ask why it is. It just is.” That’s called posting a brute-fact. — Michael Ossipoff
No. The real philosopher studies facts in their right relation. There have been good religious philosophers in the past and the basic tenets of the major religions are good philosophical teachings. Right perspective is a philosopher's greatest tool. — BrianW
Those who seek fault find fault. If we judge the law according to miscreant law breakers or religion by the ignorant adherents, all we'll get will be flaws. Let's judge Christianity according to Jesus Christ, Islam according to Prophet Muhammad, Buddhism -> Gautama Buddha, Hinduism -> Lord Krishna, etc. — BrianW
Correct me if I am wrong, but your personal view seems to be reminiscent of a sort of Naturalistic Evolutionary form of religion - at this point I would point you towards Plantinga's Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism, which I find highly compelling. — alsterling
It would seem deviant, by your standards then, to even affirm any form of Spiritualism, Deism, Atheism or Agnosticism, whereby it does not cohere with the group mentality of a certain society (should that be an Atheist in Rome or a Theist in China). — alsterling
This idea of God and deities being an invented answer to things in reality that we don't understand naturally has collided with scientific knowledge later. — ssu
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