…are nothing more than blind guesses.
Any thoughts on this from the group? — Frank Apisa
We can establish whether or not a god, or gods exist empirically through science. Empirically, whatever is not part of the current best explanation doesn't exist. So unicorns, invisible teapots and gods all do not exist, except as purely mental concepts. — Echarmion
This, of course, doesn't tell us anything about whether or not a god or gods exist outside of empirical reality. As a metaphysical question, the existence of god can indeed not be established by either logic or maths, which includes probability theory.
Whether or not reason compels us to believe in a god is a tricky question and depends on your understanding of what reason is.
I'm thinking we cannot establish whether unicorns exist or not...using logic, reason, science, or math. Big universe. An equine with a single horn sticking out of a forehead is not that unreasonable. — Frank Apisa
It also depends on one's understanding of what "belief" is.
In the area of religion...as in "I believe God exists" or "I believe no gods exist"...
...the words "I believe" seems to be used in place of "It is my blind guess."
Nothing wrong with guessing. — Frank Apisa
, performed at a time when there were no other means of accounting for the damnable facts of existence: "How and why the hell did we get here?" — Bitter Crank
Most people in the world (what, maybe 80%?) believe in some system of divinity. Obviously, belief in the divine (however conceived) is useful and compelling. Religion is compelling because the stories (narratives) are pretty good fiction, and a lot of behavior codes are comfortable vested in religious doctrine--like, "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you." — Bitter Crank
Fair enough, I should have specified "on earth, currently". But the point is that the scientific method does provide a "closed system". It always has a clear answer on whether or not something exists. It's either part of our predictions or it isn't. — Echarmion
What I was getting at is that there is an argument that belief in God is reasonable, even if it's just a blind guess. Bitter Crank hinted at that argument: Perhaps God is a necessary concept in human civilization. — Echarmion
We can establish whether or not a god, or gods exist empirically through science. Empirically, whatever is not part of the current best explanation doesn't exist. So unicorns, invisible teapots and gods all do not exist, except as purely mental concepts. — Echarmion
It always has a clear answer on whether or not something exists. It's either part of our predictions or it isn't. — Echarmion
I am left to conclude that any AND ALL assertions that “at least one god exists”; “no gods exist”; “it is more likely that at least one god exists than that no gods exist; or “it is more likely that no gods exist than that at least one god exists”…
…are nothing more than blind guesses.
Any thoughts on this from the group? — Frank Apisa
Okay...but we have to allow for an inability to do something via the "scientific method" at the current time. Right now...it is not possible for us to determine how existence came to be...or if in fact, it always has been. Our limited abilities in this regard to not require that we have a default of "then it cannot be" because we cannot determine that it does. — Frank Apisa
There is a very very big logic fault in equating the no seeum arguments for teapots and unicorns to god. Here is the flaw, all no seeum arguments say the same thing, we looked around, in all the places where we know how to look, and we haven't seen ( fill in the blank), and we would know it if we saw it. So it does not exist.
We know a lot about tea pots, and horses, and flying, and horns on foreheads. We have the ability to look in most all the likely places teapots and unicorns might be. We have no basis at all to know anything at all about what such a thing as God is, nor any reason to think we could even understand how to apply such a thing to a specific time space model we could even investigate. — Rank Amateur
The entire wonderful history of science is finding stuff it didn't believe existed- until it did. Every generation believes its science has the answers, and looks with bemusement at what science believed just a few generations earlier. Pretty sure some future generations will be bemused at us. Science is just science. Science just does science, and it is wonderful, but be careful not to make a religion out of it. — Rank Amateur
Okay...my position is that I do not know if the REALITY is that at least one god exists...or if the REALITY is that no gods exist.
Are you saying that you do know one way or the other?
If you are not...
...we are in agreement that neither of us knows.
I have no problem with you making a blind guess that no gods exist...just as I have no problem with Devans making a blind guess that at least one (creator) does...nor do I mind that Devans says his blind guess is based on logic or reason or probability analysis...or that you say yours is a function of logic and reason.
I often make guesses myself. It has cost me at times...at the track or at the tables. — Echarmion
I am left to conclude that any AND ALL assertions that “at least one god exists”; “no gods exist”; “it is more likely that at least one god exists than that no gods exist; or “it is more likely that no gods exist than that at least one god exists”…
…are nothing more than blind guesses. — Frank Apisa
I am not a follower of any specific religion nor believer in any particular god. On the other hand, I recognize that the experience of god is a common human experience. It's something I've felt and I know many others have. Intellectually, I won't say the concept of god is indispensable to an understanding of how the world works, but it seems to me that our prime example of a godless understanding of the nature of reality - science - often misses a lot of the story. — T Clark
What you call a "no seeum" argument is induction based on absence of evidence, which is permissible. It does not depend on us "looking in most all the likely places". We don't assume a god exists for the same reason we don't assume an arbitrary amount of hitherto unknown forces and particles exist - because they don't feature in our predictions. So we assumed the Higgs Boson existed, even before we could detect it, because it was part of a prediction. But the invisible teapot isn't, and so we don't assume it exists. — Echarmion
I didn't make up the term no seeum, that is the name of the argument you are describing. And, you may find this hard to believe, but at something as short as 125 -150 years ago there was nothing in physics that predicted the Higgs boson. — Rank Amateur
All science says, about anything that there is no empirical evidence for, is that there is no empirical evidence. That is all. — Rank Amateur
It is non-scientists who treat science as religion, who turn that into if science does not know it, it does not exist. And they believe this by faith, despite thousands of years of empirical evidence to the contrary. — Rank Amateur
Not sure if you read my post above about Karl Rahner, this is very much in line with his view of what he called "pre apprehension ". — Rank Amateur
I am left to conclude that any AND ALL assertions that “at least one god exists”; “no gods exist”; “it is more likely that at least one god exists than that no gods exist; or “it is more likely that no gods exist than that at least one god exists”…
…are nothing more than blind guesses. — Frank Apisa
Your conclusion is not correct.
I am not a follower of any specific religion nor believer in any particular god. On the other hand, I recognize that the experience of god is a common human experience. It's something I've felt and I know many others have. Intellectually, I won't say the concept of god is indispensable to an understanding of how the world works, but it seems to me that our prime example of a godless understanding of the nature of reality - science - often misses a lot of the story. — T Clark
As it is...you are telling me that MANY PEOPLE guess at least one god exists...but that they are not guessing. — Frank Apisa
No, it is only correct to say that the illusion of god is a common human experience, or to say that it is a common human experience in the same sense that we might say that we experience unicorns through pictures and stories, which is trivial because it lacks controversy. Your funny feeling is just a funny feeling, not evidence of the existence of god. — S
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