For example, reading 'The God Delusion' would be a big mistake if you wanted to find out whether a god exists or not. It is written by someone whose expertise is in biology, not metaphysics. — Bartricks
I suppose you’ll have to trust me when I say that no one needs support in a confrontation with the forum clown. — praxis
A lot of philosophy is systems-thinking and you can make right or wrong moves within systems. — BitconnectCarlos
Experts on whether a god exists or not are metaphysicians, for it is a topic in metaphysics — Bartricks
Experts on whether a god exists or not are metaphysicians, — Bartricks
This feature of the contemporary conception of metaphysics is nicely illustrated by a statement of Sartre's:
I do not think myself any less a metaphysician in denying the existence of God than Leibniz was in affirming it. (1949: 139) — Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
I think your post is generally correct - in that anyone who is an expert on whether God exists is a metaphysician, but must one have taken a course in philosphy to know God exists? — Coben
I suppose in the sense of how to argue for that assertion, yes. On the other hand that might not be the best way to demonstrate the existence of God. The best way might be through encouraging and mentoring practice.Those are not equivalent claims. Someone could know that God exists, yet not be an expert on the question of whether God exists. — Bartricks
True. Though when making the case what their specific self is, that one entity, the person in question often has a tremendous advantage. Many are poor at introspection and communication, but in the specific case of demonstrating what my self is like, I should at least be on the panel.For example, someone can know that they themselves exist, yet not be an expert on what selves are. — Bartricks
So far, yes. But if someone asked me how to find out about God, or how to find out how to come to the belief or how to experience God, I am not going to refer them to a philosophy department at a University or to the people who write academic texts on metaphysics. Of course those I would send them to might ALSO have a background in the subset of philosophy, metaphysics, but in most cases not. IOW I think this is a process that is experiential and based on practices, perhaps community and certainly real interest, not academic interest, in both sense of academic.The point is just that the question of whether God exists is a question in metaphysics, not science. — Bartricks
I suppose in the sense of how to argue for that assertion, yes. On the other hand that might not be the best way to demonstrate the existence of God. The best way might be through encouraging and mentoring practice. — Coben
Many are poor at introspection and communication, but in the specific case of demonstrating what my self is like, I should at least be on the panel. — Coben
But if someone asked me how to find out about God, or how to find out how to come to the belief or how to experience God, I am not going to refer them to a philosophy department at a University or to the people who write academic texts on metaphysics. — Coben
I suppose in the sense of how to argue for that assertion, yes. On the other hand that might not be the best way to demonstrate the existence of God. The best way might be through encouraging and mentoring practice. — Coben
I didn't mean promoting. I meant encouraging in the sense of: Oh, you want to know God or know if God exists, well, here's an approach that has worked for many. I did not mean proselytizing which I find generally distasteful.A true metaphysician is, as a philosopher, interested in what's true, not in promoting belief in God per se. — Bartricks
Sure, but your analogy was from the existence of God to the nature of selves in general. That a person might be fully aware of their existence, but not know how to describe selves is certainly true. But here we are talking about the existence of an entity. To me the analogy is to the existence of one self. If that self in question is me, well, I think I have expertise. Now some people may be better at discussing the issue in the abstract, but put me in the room with the doubters, I have a huge advantage.Again, I disagree. There are plenty of people here who know they exist, but have thoroughly confused ideas about what kind of a thing they are, due to being very stupid. — Bartricks
Yes, but that was not the point I was making. I don't think those arguments are a good way to demonstrate the truth of their conclusions.If someone wanted to find out about the arguments for God's existence then you most certainly should refer them to a philosophy department and it'd be mad not to - for it is in philosophy departments alone that these questions are rigorously explored by experts. — Bartricks
Sure, could happen.Note too that someone who was one justified in believing that God exists might, through encountering arguments against that belief - arguments that they do not know how to counter - come to be unjustified in their belief, and thereby lose their knowledge. — Bartricks
This cuts both ways. One can come across good heady arguments that make you want to deny what you have experienced and correctly interpreted. Obviously the ideal is a combination, but I think demonstrations - even if they must be hard earned over decades - are better than arguments.Knowing that God exists does not, I think, require knowing arguments for God's existence. But knowledge depends on the existence of a justification. You can be default justified in a belief, and that belief can be true, yet something can happen - one can, for instance, encounter what seems to be good evidence that the belief is false - and through that encounter the default justification can disappear. — Bartricks
Thinking that God exists because on paper it makes sense to you seems very fragile to me also. Frankly, even more fragile. And then, I am not sure what difference it makes, since it is not relational.So knowing that God exists today, does not guarantee that you'll know he exists tomorrow. — Bartricks
For example, reading 'The God Delusion' would be a big mistake if you wanted to find out whether a god exists or not. It is written by someone whose expertise is in biology, not metaphysics.
— Bartricks
Only metaphysicians are authoritative on the existence of a God? That doesn’t make sense. — praxis
Yes it does. Who else is an expert on it, then? — Bartricks
I'd say that they do. Philosophers serve on ethics boards. These boards guide what can or cannot happen within, say, medicine. Over time most of the west is moving away from religion and if these atheistic or secular thinkers can lay forth compelling cases for new forms of secular morality then I think we're going to see drastic shifts in, well for one, medical ethics but also many, many other areas.Yes I agree, but do those systems have a direct connection to the real world? My answer is that no they don't.
The wider context is that I don't think God can be demonstrated on paper, or proven to exist. However I do think practices can demonstrate it. So, I am disagreeing with your reactions to others - and I find some of their reactions confused at best - but going off on a tangent. — Coben
A metaphysician can necessarily only make metaphysical claims about the existence of God. — praxis
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