Clear enough: you apparently define "God" in way that serves your argument. Now it's up to you to offer some rigorous definition. In particular, I believe in God, and it (my belief) is well supported by both evidence and rational deduction; beyond that, my belief is unassailable by either doubt or rational argument. To be sure, though, there are lots of people who prefer the supernatural God supported by irrational beliefs. Do you begin to see your problem? — tim wood
To be sure, though, there are lots of people who prefer the supernatural God supported by irrational beliefs. — tim wood
You see what I mean here? The argument is about irrational belief which distorts reality for the self and others, intentionally or unintentionally since personal belief is an illusion of keeping belief to yourself. Your writing now is an example of this, in which you point to a personal belief and in writing it out you are projecting this personal belief into the mind of others. If someone reads what you write and this influence their concept of reality you have unintentionally pushed a belief that has no support in evidence or rational arguments (a personal concept of evidence or rationality is not valid in proving God).
This is in no way critique against you, just to be clear. I'm just making an example. — Christoffer
This is a little out of control - maybe more than a little. — tim wood
1) a premise in an argument is or should be a simple statement of the form all/some/no P is/is not Q. It may take work to get it into this form, but good arguments are work - any other kind of argument is a waste of time. — tim wood
2) "personal belief is an illusion of keeping belief to yourself": apparently you have a problem with personal belief. Um, your problem, that's a personal belief, yes? — tim wood
I made a claim about my idea of God. Without having even a remote idea of what I mean, you projected your own critical notions on it. — tim wood
And this is a great problem with discussions about God: that people do not know what they themselves are thinking when they talk about God , but they suppose they do, and they add to that, that they suppose they know what someone else is talking about or thinking when that other is talking about God. Both make the same set of mistakes. The only outcome of a discussion between two such people is nonsense. — tim wood
The only outcome of a discussion between two such people is nonsense. — tim wood
So far, to my way of thinking, you're expressing some opinions and trying to make an argument from them - but it cannot be a good argument until you can write your first good premise. — tim wood
Do you agree that personal belief is unable to be contained as it influences both how you communicate and how you behave?
Do you agree that eventually, your personal belief will influence others around you and/or even be communicated as an idea to others?
Do you agree that it doesn't matter if a belief is rational or irrational, it still follows the above two points? — Christoffer
I would categorize a belief in God to be irrational, type A, since it does not have rational or evidential support, i.e unsupported belief. Since God hasn't been able to be proven, no one can claim it to be proven. If personal belief is that God is proven through a personal logic that cannot be applied outside your subjective reasoning, it is not supported belief, it is an irrational belief. — Christoffer
An unestablished assumption. And because it was of something I was writing about, that I qualified, your dismissal of it, and any remarks you made, are out of court.God hasn't been proven to exist, personal belief in God and any personal reasoning about it is strictly subjective and therefore is personal belief unsupported by external rationality and evidence. — Christoffer
According to whom? I said I have a clear and unassailable understanding of God, which just might be of interest to some people, but you just blew right by it.neither of these but a sentient entity that is responsible for creating the universe, the world, and man. — Christoffer
Really? However I define God?However you define "God" it is still based on an unsupported, irrational personal belief about something not proven to exist. — Christoffer
You have already decided. I'm being resistant here because you're representing your presentation as a variety of sound argument, and it hasn't even made the first step as an argument. It's as if you have persuaded yourself of your conclusion - and that's it.I think the problem with the premise is that it rubs religious people the wrong way and forming all sorts of defense mechanisms against the God-premises. — Christoffer
An exercise for you. What could God be, that in it's being is unassailable as being. That is, my claim counters yours. Either I'm a complete wackdoodle, or you have some thinking to do.How do you define God? — Christoffer
No, no, and no. Before you object, consider the form of your questions. — tim wood
"I would characterize." Indeed you would, and you did. Without finding out what it was you were characterizing. — tim wood
According to whom? I said I have a clear and unassailable understanding of God, which just might be of interest to some people, but you just blew right by it. — tim wood
Really? However I define God? — tim wood
An exercise for you. What could God be, that in it's being is unassailable as being. That is, my claim counters yours. Either I'm a complete wackdoodle, or you have some thinking to do. — tim wood
Inductive arguments can take very wide-ranging forms. Some have the form of making a claim about a population or set based only on information from a sample of that population, a subset. Other inductive arguments draw conclusions by appeal to evidence, or authority, or causal relationships. There are other forms.
They were categorical questions asked in the context of a piece of argumentation.I don't think those questions are asked in any problematic way, those were questions to you, not an argument. — Christoffer
Psychology our measure of truth? That's a whole other discussion. But you're missing my point - consistently. Argumentation is an exercise in both content and form, and there are rules. You're breaking them in a consistent manner in support of your conclusion. The kindest term for that is sophistry. As to any psychological insight that might be in your questions, sure. But that wasn't what you're asking. In short, I answered the questions you asked. If you want to ask different questions, fire away.By saying "no", you are actually disagreeing with psychology, — Christoffer
In this topic, a care with language is preferred to a lack of care. As it happens - as you would know if you looked - there are a variety of definitions of God. If you have any evidence that supports any one of them over any other, please refer to it. What I did notice in my brief survey is that none use the word "responsible." So then instead of your "which is responsible for the creation," I would substitute, "who is worshiped as the creator of the universe." Really the important word is "as." This concept of God is God "as." And the as-clause is just what is attributed as accident to the concept God. Inasmuch as the substance, or essence, of God is unthinkable, God accumulates accidents. But no being, real or otherwise is equal to, the same as, a partial listing of its accidents. If "God" could be considered as you consider him, then your argument might itself have more bite, more substance, but He can't be, and thus yours can't either."God" as defined in common language, refers to a sentient entity, spiritual or similar, which is responsible for the creation of the universe. — Christoffer
They were categorical questions asked in the context of a piece of argumentation. — tim wood
Psychology our measure of truth? That's a whole other discussion. — tim wood
But you're missing my point - consistently. Argumentation is an exercise in both content and form, and there are rules. You're breaking them in a consistent manner in support of your conclusion. The kindest term for that is sophistry. As to any psychological insight that might be in your questions, sure. But that wasn't what you're asking. In short, I answered the questions you asked. If you want to ask different questions, fire away. — tim wood
In this topic, a care with language is preferred to a lack of care. As it happens - as you would know if you looked - there are a variety of definitions of God. — tim wood
If you have any evidence that supports any one of them over any other, please refer to it. What I did notice in my brief survey is that none use the word "responsible." So then instead of your "which is responsible for the creation," I would substitute, "who is worshiped as the creator of the universe." Really the important word is "as." This concept of God is God "as." And the as-clause is just what is attributed as accident to the concept God. Inasmuch as the substance, or essence, of God is unthinkable, God accumulates accidents. But no being, real or otherwise is equal to, the same as, a partial listing of its accidents. If "God" could be considered as you consider him, then your argument might itself have more bite, more substance, but He can't be, and thus yours can't either. — tim wood
What that might leave is a concept of God that works - is at the least self-consistent. I have that, and nothing in the least bit supernatural about it. And because there is no touchstone for the concept of God, mine, being functional - if not as satisfying; I never claimed it was globally satisfying - has fair claim to being correct, or no less correct than others. — tim wood
You're making categorical statements and arguments. And one problem with categorical statements is that they're either all right or all wrong, no "neither-nor." So while if you tempered your arguments to the probable or the existential or the "some" or the "sometimes" and worked with that, your arguments would merit consideration. But expressed in universal terms, the argument does not merit consideration because the premises are false. — tim wood
As to inductive argument, you might care to read the definition you provided. Inductive arguments are suggestive, deductive conclusive. I read you as arguing for conclusive conclusions. If you want to make a good substantive argument, then you have no choice but to do the work. If a problematic argument, then you have to change your language. — tim wood
Therefore, religious or other types of belief that are of type A, should be considered unethical and criticized. The moral obligation should be to always uphold epistemic responsibility (Premise 7) and prioritize belief type B and C as ethical while condemn type A as unethical. This applies to all people for any belief of type A; religious, personal and in institutions, research and politics. — Christoffer
You do indeed have an appetite for this stuff! I had thought I was reasonably clear, but what I think isn't always the case. Yes, I have been exactly focusing on the semantics over content. I think I more than once acknowledged sense in your arguments, but complained about the arguments as argument themselves, as to their form. It's as if you painted your ordinary five-year-old car with racing colours, inflated your ordinary half-worn-out tires to the correct pressure, and figured you were good to go racing, But you aren't and you can't, because just those things do not a racer make. And speeding around on the wrong equipment just gets you a crash.It feels like you focus too much on the semantics here and don't look linguistic pragmatic of the text. But let's rephrase them as an actual argument: — Christoffer
1) No argument or evidence has ever been able to prove the existence of a God or Gods, regardless of definitions for what God is, 2) since God as a concept always refers to a concept outside of conclusions or the evidence at hand. 3) Religious belief is therefore based on pure belief in something that is unsupported by evidence or rational deduction. — Christoffer
This, quick copy from Wikipedia:Russel's Teapot analogy points out the importance of burden of proof. If you make a claim or believe in something, you have the responsibility to prove it first. You must do this before claiming it to be true or demand others to disprove your belief or claim. If not, you could possibly invent any belief you want, like teapots in space and conclude it to be true since no one has the means to prove against it. — Christoffer
There's a wall here that your reasoning apparently does not recognize. In order to prove a belief, you have to first have it. But how can you have a belief if you have to prove it first, and, if you prove it, then it's not just a belief, is it? Just what is it, then, exactly, that you believe that a belief is?This opens the door for people with dark and twisted thoughts and ideas to make up any type of belief they want, which could consist of harmful ideas such as murder, rape, torture and other kinds of harm to other people and themselves. — Christoffer
Bad things happen. But the system is not purely mechanistic. There is in play self-regulating processes. To be sure, these too can go wrong too; the last century provides ample evidence. But this is also life, the way it works.If there’s a possibility that hateful and dangerous belief-systems will be created, it has a high probability of happening over a long enough timeline. — Christoffer
This all falls apart when we notice that all 'rational' beliefs can be traced back to unprovable axioms that we take on faith, such as the Principle of Induction.Belief can be categorized into three parts:
A) Belief without rational cause, a belief that is without evidence, accepted as truth and acted upon by the believer.
B) Belief with rational cause, a belief that has rational reasoning and logic and which has gone through falsifiable reasoning as much as possible, acted upon with caution because it is never considered to be true.
C) Scientific belief, i.e Hypothesis, educated guess based on observations, previous evidence, careful induction, partly researched, but never accepted or acted upon as true before proven into a scientific theory — Christoffer
In the 20th century it was explicitly atheist regimes that led the mass murder assault upon humanity. — Jake
No, they were based on irrational beliefs and a form of similar religious followings of their leaders that you can see within religious groups, there was nothing atheistic about any of it. — Christoffer
beliefs , even irrational beliefs, are not inherently bad or good, the just are. Even specific ideological beliefs such as Christianity or communism are not inherently bad or good. — Rank Amateur
Specific actions taken by individuals or groups can be evil, and often ideological beliefs are used as justification for such acts. Rarely on review are these justifications the unique, major or even the real motivation, they are just the best excuse. — Rank Amateur
Without even going into a premise by premise argument, it fails because
If a group of people jointly share a belief, And some of those people do good, and some do bad, it is illogical to assign the bad to the belief.
You point turns into many murderers like chocolate ice cream, therefore chocolate ice cream causes murder. — Rank Amateur
Such statements always disqualify any commentator in my eyes. If Stalin and Mao had been ardent Catholics leading explicitly Catholic regimes (or Islamic regimes) I'm guessing you'd be more than happy to offer this as evidence of the evils of religion. Which you will now deny of course, further discrediting your analysis. Seen all such dodging a billion times, bored to tears by it. — Jake
This all falls apart when we notice that all 'rational' beliefs can be traced back to unprovable axioms that we take on faith, such as the Principle of Induction.
Religious beliefs can be as rational as non-religious ones. They just use a slightly different set of axioms.
If one insists on ranking beliefs in order of 'worthiness', one will have to do it by looking at the axioms. One way to do that is to observe that some axioms are accepted by all people. The Principle of Induction is one. We might then claim that the only reasonable beliefs are those that are derived from the minimal set of axioms that is believed by all humans. That would rule out religious belief, but it would also rule out many other beliefs that most people are very attached to - such as the belief that there are other consciousnesses (anti-solipsism).
That's why I think it's a doomed and unhelpful exercise to try to categorise beliefs based on 'rationality'.
There are other and better ways to oppose beliefs that one finds harmful (and only a minority of religious beliefs are harmful anyway). — andrewk
Atheism is the faith based belief that human reason is a tool of sufficient power to credibly analyze the very largest of questions about the most fundamental nature of everything everywhere (scope of most God claims). — Jake
If there are no doctrines or teachings within atheism, what in the world are you posting about?
The horrors of the atheist regimes were built upon the faith based belief that there is no higher power that we are accountable to, that is, we are free to make up our own rules. And so they made up a rule that it's ok to slaughter millions if we can claim some greater good down the line. — Jake
Like most of the atheists I've met online, you have no idea what atheism really is, a faith based belief system. That is, an immature faith based belief system which typically doesn't even know it is a faith based belief system. — Jake
To dispute this, please provide the proof that human reason, the poorly implemented ability of a half insane semi-suicidal species only recently living in caves on one little planet in one of billions of galaxies, is capable of credibly claiming what doesn't exist in all of reality, a realm which we can't currently define in even the most basic manner such as size and shape etc. — Jake
This is the same kind of request for proof we would reasonably ask from those quoting Bible verses etc. That is, please prove the qualifications of your chosen authority for the task at hand. Anyone who can't provide proof of the qualifications of their chosen authority is a person of faith. — Jake
Atheism is just not a belief in God or any supernatural things. — Christoffer
What is this lack of belief based on? What is it's source? How does the atheist arrive at this lack of belief? It didn't just magically pop in to existence out of nowhere, right? — Jake
Not a threat, a fair warning. I'm alerting you to what is coming so you can avoid it if you wish. Should you choose to avoid the dismemberment of your atheist belief system, feel free to do so, with no complaint from here. It's possible that I'm three times your age and have been doing this since before you were born. If so, I don't wish to be a bully. Anyway, enough about that, you will continue or you won't, and I'm agreeable either way. — Jake
This is why it seems so hard for theists to grasp the concept of atheism. There's no source, there's just no belief in God or the supernatural. — Christoffer
Ah, so your lack of belief in a God just magically sprang into existence out of nothing. It's a miracle!! — Jake
It's not a threat. It's a fact which I am reporting. If you are a person of reason you will dismember your atheism yourself. — Jake
Yes, really. Anybody who claims atheism is "merely a lack of belief" doesn't understand atheism. I didn't say stupid, but would say immature, lacking experience, typically lacking a real interest in the subject. — Jake
Why are you an atheist? — Jake
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