I'd be happy to discuss this as well, it's really interesting. — SethRy
I suppose a god exists. I acknowledge my suppositions can possibly be wrong, but nothing can be so compelling to change my belief. — Seth
I will also have my take on an argument for God, specifically. It will tackle religious pragmatism and the underlying paradoxical characteristics towards the indication of flaws in faith. — Seth
What do you see as the most compelling reason for supposing a god exists? — Frank Apisa
I prayed that my dog would be cured from a form of incurable canine cancer, and he was. — OpinionsMatter
To see what would happen after I was convinced of the existence of God. I thought, "Hey, I don't care if the dog dies, but if I pray will it live?" The answer to the prayer further convinced me, but I don't count prayer as a complete form of evidence. I also use the term 'believe' rather loosely, because I don't believe so much as I am convinced. — OpinionsMatter
Start at 50% / 50% for a unknown boolean proposition — Devans99
So the problems begin there. What would be the epistemological basis for saying it's 50/50 at any point? — Terrapin Station
I'm not sure where else you can start except 50%/50%: — Devans99
Starting at any value would be completely arbitrary, wouldn't it? — Terrapin Station
I guess (Just an educated guess, I could be entirely wrong) what he is saying is the confusion of potentials and the philosophy of Mathematics. You're not picking two stones from a bag, it is two sides that are completely different, principals and beliefs. I mean if that 50/50 analogy to if not a god exists, then I also have 50/50 chance of walking down the street encountering a box of gold, or not at all.
The capacity of the philosophy of Mathematics to calculate possibility is logically capable, but by the rudimentary laws of: Metaphysics, Theology, and Epistemology, it just cant. — SethRy
Starting at any value would be completely arbitrary, wouldn't it? — Terrapin Station
how else would you perform a meta-analysis for proposition X when you have inductive statements A, B and C that each tell you something about the truth of X. — Devans99
Analyse it this way, if it's 50/50 for both suppositions or; extremes, then it is also 50/50 for me to walk down the street, and encounter a case of gold, or I do not. — SethRy
So far as I am concerned you may believe what you like. Why not leave it at that? — tim wood
It just doesn't make any sense anymore. There is no epistemic justification behind the 50/50 argument of God's existence, — SethRy
You simply can't calculate the beginning of the universe by starting at 50/50 with no epistemic justification and having a basis solely because there are two factors — SethRy
I agree with him. Really. More than one person thinks your calculations are flawed; and I know conforming to utilitarian principles is not always right, but this time it might be. — SethRy
Thats not what I'm arguing for. I'm saying 'was the universe created?', that is not the same question as 'Is there a God?'. I think the 2nd is not a 50/50 proposition if you include attributes like omnipotence in your definition of God. — Devans99
Yes there is epistemic justification. If you truly have no evidence either way then you have to assume 50/50. If I were to toss a coin 100 times, what would you assume the outcome would be? The best assumption, in the absence of any other evidence, is 50 heads / 50 tails. I fail to see how you can argue otherwise. — Devans99
For a god/entity's existence, there is not, hence the conclusion; your mathematical statement has no epistemic justification. — SethRy
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