Atheism has not done that either since it has never claimed anything at all, it's just a process. — Christoffer
Atheism does not have a claim, it's a process of reasoning — Christoffer
The premise and conclusion from it are based on your own perspective. It is your interpretation which concludes for you that the existence of those deities would entail a contradiction. — BrianW
From my experience, nobody worships a dead god, which means those who believe in them have a contradicting argument. — BrianW
The claims and statements that you express, which are based on your reason infer a choice. Reason does not just conduct itself arbitrarily. The fact that you are adhering to a particular set of beliefs in accordance with certain points of reference, especially now, when you have the capacity to understand and determine whatever actions to engage in, means you have made a choice. — BrianW
You cannot determine by logic how scientific hypothesis are much greater in probability than religious assertions when both reference points are unknown. That is, we don't know what the origin of everything is and our perspective of reality is insufficient. Also, both religion and science can be logical concerning this discussion. — BrianW
Metaphysical part of religion is the part not determined by practical experience and cannot be explicitly defined logically (primarily involving God). — BrianW
I'm okay with scrutiny if it means a logical unbiased analysis not an attempt to impose personal bias on others. — BrianW
...or they accept it on the grounds that God is above logic. — S
I'm not claiming a God exists, or that any doctrines that arise from that belief need to be believed. However, should a God exist, it seems reasonable and sensible to propose that it is, or may be, above logic. — Jake
Big difference between it being reasonable and sensible that it IS, and that it MAY BE. — DingoJones
But if an atheist simply believes that God does not exist, without trying to make their beliefs seem authoritative or binding on others, I don't see a problem. — Pattern-chaser
I don't see a problem either, but their belief is still based on faith, faith in the ability of human reason to meaningfully analyze the very largest of questions. — Jake
Finally, there are those (not you, Jake?) who seem to think faith is a Bad Thing. It isn't. It's a reasonable, rational, pragmatic and practical response to a world where there is little or no certainty. — Pattern-chaser
When I label atheists as being people of faith I'm not trying to pin a crime on them, I'm reaching for clarity. — Jake
I have faith that if I keep patiently typing day after day after day on these subjects for another twenty years nothing at all will be accomplished... — Jake
As to choice, I think our disagreement is based largely on our definition of choice.
I define choice as idiosyncratic cause or idiosyncratic initiation of an impulse. It is the same definition I give to will. So, for me, to will is to choose. It also encompasses all activities carried out by a human internally and externally. For example, digestion may begin automatically when the presence of food is detected but because we determine when food is consumed, we therefore initiate the mechanism, thus, choice. The same goes for reason, we initiate the process, the mind/brain being the tool we use to carry it out.
Also, belief being a choice is again dependent on the definition we give to it. I define belief as a consequence of knowledge. For me, acquisition of knowledge is a choice. So, belief is the reference point we create to determine the measure of new experiences and a mirror through which we reflect past experiences in order to determine what value to extract from them. — BrianW
P1 - God is, is not a fact
P2 - God is not - is not a fact
P3 - Theism - a claim that God is - is supported by reason
P4 - Chrisoffer is not making any claim about anything
Conclusion - neither God is or whatever Chrisoffer believes is a superior position
Tell me which proposition is false and why , or how the conclusion does not follow. — Rank Amateur
I laughed at this, it was very funny, truly :smile:
But you are mixing together claims and facts. A claim demands facts, the claim itself isn't a fact. — Christoffer
A claim demands facts[...] — Christoffer
I challenge this. One can claim by either reason or faith something to be true and act accordingly with only caveat that it can not be in conflict with fact. — Rank Amateur
you don't have a choice of whether to believe or disbelieve in the existence of any deity or deities. You only have a choice to take steps which might or might not lead to you believing or disbelieving. The one and the other are not the same and so should not be conflated. — S
Hmm, it seems what you meant to say was...
Other people's claims demand justification, otherwise they can rightly be dismissed. — Jake
I think you've just created a paradox. Isn't taking steps towards believing/disbelieving the act of choosing to believe/disbelieve? — BrianW
Anyway, even accepting a sequence of unfolding events is itself a choice. Back to the food analogy: there are many (ill-advised) ways to stop digestion, the fact that you allow it implies a choice, though implicit. And even at an immediate point in a situation, if there's initiation of impulse, then there's choice. — BrianW
However, I think I get your position in the argument. You mean deliberate choice. What I'm saying is that there are choices which are not as deliberate as others, or better yet, are predominantly reactive. — BrianW
How can you accidentally make a choice? — S
Someone walks into their spouse having sex with another person and in a blind rage commits a crime of passion. It would still be choice but the degree of deliberateness would be questionable. I think this explains the point of predominantly reactive choice. Also, our reactions are within our purview of control. — BrianW
As to the relationship between choice and belief, what's your definition of belief? — BrianW
If you want me to justify a claim that I've made then quote the claim and request a justification — S
It would be more interesting to see you challenge one of your own claims. Then you could claim to be a person of reason, instead of just another holy war ideologue waving a flag.
As example, my claim is that nobody knows. But if nobody knows, how could I know that nobody knows??
Imagine that you are an attorney. You might be hired to represent those suing, or you might be hired by those defending against the suit. Can you effectively argue both sides of the case? Or only one side? — Jake
What do you think religion's purpose is & how does one interact with it? — MountainDwarf
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.