So if I make a claim that such a thing as love exists, and i want you to believe as I do that love exists, it is my burden to make an argument that convinces you. If however, you establish a burden of proof that is, by definition, outside any possibility, do to the nature of the claim. Than that person has established an impossible burden. If in the case above, you tell me you will believe in love, it I can bring you a box with a pound of love in it. Without that proof - you tell me i have not made my argument, and you have no reason to believe such a thing as love exists. All your position turns into is I don't believe you, because I don't believe you. — Rank Amateur
And I am fine with all of that, except that the atheist does not want it to end there. As on this board and almost everywhere else the atheist wants to challenge the belief that God is, with the implicit claim God is not, with a semantic excuse they don't have to prove it. I find this disingenuous, and pure tactic. — Rank Amateur
Can you actually make a formal argument that ends in a conclusion that states " therefor theism is unreasonable " - i am unaware of such an argument actually existing. Would be interested to see it. — Rank Amateur
your argument does not work unless theism is shown unsupported /unreasonable - becomes circular. — Rank Amateur
p3 Theism relies on an unsupported belief — Christoffer
No the math is correct. You just have to look on it as consecutive rolls not individual rolls — Thesailor123
i would counter P3 is false, both the cosmological argument, and some design arguments are valid. Valid meaning the premises are true, and the conclusions follow. That does not mean, there are not counter arguments against, but none of them overwhelm the arguments. — Rank Amateur
p3 Cosmological and design arguments require known laws of physics to exist before Big Bang.
p4 There is no data to support known laws of physics to exist before Big Bang. — Christoffer
This is why the cosmological and design argument is failing since it needs to have in their premises exactly what was before Big Bang and that everything there followed the known laws of physics. This is not known yet and scientists don't know what happened before Big Bang, so how can those with the cosmological and design arguments make claims that need truths about pre-Big Bang but still have a valid argument? — Christoffer
P3 is patently false, the entire point of the CA is the creation of the universe is outside physics, that it is supernatural. so then p4 is redundantly false — Rank Amateur
Wow, so the argument that concludes the beginning was supernatural needs a scientific explanation of what it is trying to argue. You realize absolutely none of that paragraph makes any sense at all. — Rank Amateur
And hate to do this, but the rest of the post is worse. That well could be the single worst argument against the CA I have ever seen. — Rank Amateur
How can it prove something outside known physics without assuming the properties of what is outside known physics? That is assuming a lot that hasn't even been proven through theoretical physics and drawing a conclusion on that, is false. — Christoffer
proving what happened before the Big Bang is outside physics is the entire darn point of the argument. You are making no sense at all with this line of logic — Rank Amateur
I am not going to spend any more time arguing the reasonability of an argument that has lasted over 700 years. — Rank Amateur
I am saying it shows such a thing as God, is a resonable possibility. — Rank Amateur
And for your argument to stand you need to show the CA is outside reason. You have not done so, and your counter arguments are not making any headway in doing this. — Rank Amateur
If what counts as being real is having an effect/affect, then of course God is real.
What's the difference however, as a matter of elemental constitution, between belief in God and God?
None as far as I can tell. — creativesoul
Are you making a general statement about belief in things and things in and of themselves or do you want to say that the idea or concept of God, specifically, is set up so that there is no difference between belief in God and God? — Echarmion
you have done a lot of work here, and you deserve a proper, reasonable response, so here goes: — Rank Amateur
Unsupported and supported belief
Informed and uniformed acts
And distorted knowledge. — Rank Amateur
Secondly, independent of your definitions, there is no causality in your premises.
You would have to add, something like :
An unsupported belief, always or usually, etc leads to uninformed acts.
Without such a link, there is no direct cause one to the other. All your premises turn into - people who like vanilla ice cream leads to uniformed acts. — Rank Amateur
Lastly, what are the origins of “ supported beliefs” do such beliefs spring into our collective consciences fully supported?? I would opine, most if not all “supported beliefs” begin their existence as a thought, and idea, an “unsupported belief” that someone works on to validate and if successful turns into a “supported belief” — Rank Amateur
do such beliefs spring into our collective consciences — Rank Amateur
Pending you definitions of the above, I have no real issue at all with this statement
And no clue why you need the premises above to arrive at this. — Rank Amateur
Reasonable and unreasonable acts
And your definition of
Ethical/unethical — Rank Amateur
Also as above, there is no causality in the premises . A does not directly cause B
Cant address any more of this until it is defined and causality is established — Rank Amateur
Define – theism
And as above
You need to establish casualty — Rank Amateur
You agree that " supported" beliefs start as unsupported beliefs. This simple acknowledgement of fact is by definition in conflict with your premise — Rank Amateur
No they often lead to "supported beliefs" after proper evaluation - you can not have one without the other. — Rank Amateur
I am not sure you can bridge this logic flaw in the argument. No idea starts as a supported idea, the support follows. My suggestion is you would need to eliminate the idea of "unsupported" and insert , false or disproved. Which is where I think you are intellectually, IMO you equate "unproven" with false, which they are not. — Rank Amateur
No idea starts as a supported idea, — Rank Amateur
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