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"What can be asserted without evidence can also be dismissed without evidence." ~Christopher Hitchens
When discussing the question of "Does at least one god exist...or are there no gods that exist"...the words, "I believe..." ...is nothing more than a disguise for, "I blindly guess... ."
— Frank Apisa
Another "blind guess" (i.e. assertion without corroborating evidence or sound argument), Frankie? :roll: — 180 Proof
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You have evidence for the nonexistence of god! I got to see this.
— SonOfAGun
But will you understand? (Frankie surely doesn't.) :sweat: — 180 Proof
I wouldn't call all such rationalizations "bullshit". Ordinarily I reserve that term to characterize discourse in which a speaker does not seem to give a damn about the truth or falsity or reasonableness of their claims. This usage may be in keeping with Frankfurt's flirtatious little essay on the subject.I recognize that they provide bullshit rationalizations for their blind guesses that either "at least one god exists" or "no gods exist."
Some people have an allergy to "I do not know." — Frank Apisa
It is impossible for someone to lie unless he thinks he knows the truth. Producing bullshit requires no such conviction. A person who lies is thereby responding to the truth, and he is to that extent respectful of it. When an honest man speaks, he says only what he believes to be true; and for the liar, it is correspondingly indispensable that he considers his statements to be false. For the bullshitter, however, all these bets are off: he is neither on the side of the true nor on the side of the false. His eye is not on the facts at all, as the eyes of the honest man and of the liar are, except insofar as they may be pertinent to his interest in getting away with what he says. He does not care whether the things he says describe reality correctly. He just picks them out, or makes them up, to suit his purpose. — Harry G. Frankfurt
I aim to follow this admirable terminological convention in my use of the term "bullshit".
I like to reserve the term "horseshit" as an upgrade: For instance to characterize the desperate flailing of a narcissistic bullshit artist who has been cornered by reasonable discourse, and proceeds to kick up a cloud of horseshit in an attempt to avoid accountability for the bullshit he has already released in conversation. — Cabbage Farmer
Let me put it another way then. None of these things you have listed here require Belief. Their existence is fact. — SonOfAGun
If facts are not believed to be true are they still facts? Seems to me facts require belief in order to be facts. Facts can obviously be not believed in (i.e. flat Earth society), do doesn’t that mean they at least can be believed in too? — Pinprick
Why do you say that we do not "believe" matters of fact? It seems to me these are paradigm cases of belief, and paradigm cases of how epistemologists and ordinary speakers use the word "belief" and its cognates.Let me put it another way then. None of these things you have listed here require Belief. Their existence is fact. They are objectively real. They are practically demonstrable. Yes you can believe in these things, but in our current highly technological environment, I don't know why you would need to. I have personally confirmed the existence of every item you have on your list there, including personally operated telescopes to confirm planets and stars, as well as, personally being able to comprehend the physics involved with telescopes. — SonOfAGun
Human beings cannot, do not, and do not "need" to consider every possible conception of things that don't exist. But on some occasions it turns out to be, or at least initially to seem, useful to consider one or more specific conceptions of things that don't exist. Most often, to claim or to suggest that a prior claim -- one's own or someone else's -- that some conceivable thing exists was false.Again, we will try another approach. While you are technically correct, and can believe in everything you have listed there, this is not how the human brain works. If the human brain were forced to consider all of these things every time it looked at a table, or anything else for that mater, it would quickly overload and become nonfunctional. It would not be the proper tool we require to navigate the universe. — SonOfAGun
Why do you say that we do not "believe" matters of fact? It seems to me these are paradigm cases of belief, and paradigm cases of how epistemologists and ordinary speakers use the word "belief" and its cognates. — Cabbage Farmer
This conversation you are having with several people stems from the corruption of that word "believe" that I have talked about.
Some of these people think it would be absurd for me to say:
I know I am sitting at my desk typing on my keyboard...and I do not "believe" I am sitting at my desk typing on my keyboard.
But that is absolutely the truth.
I KNOW I am here...sitting at my desk...typing on my keyboard.
There is NO "believing" involved in the essence of that statement...which is merely to identify the fact that I (Frank) am sitting on a chair pulled up to the well of a desk in my den typing a response to an Internet forum.
But the use of the word "believe" has gotten so corrupted...the people you are debating think it must be used to identify that situation. They see that bolded comment above to be a contradiction of some sort.
It is not. — Frank Apisa
How then would you define knowledge? — Pinprick
Scroll up or flip back to previous pages and read my "evidence". — 180 Proof
Cite one example of 'divine' intervention in the world (i.e. miracle) ascribed uniquely (i.e. which cannot also be ascribed to natural forces or agents) to any g/G in any religious or philosophical tradition for which there is any corroborable evidence. Insofar as you can't - that there isn't any - THAT is "unambiguous evidence against the existence of gods" BECAUSE such evidence is entailed by 'divine predicates' attributed to it. — 180 Proof
Also the main body or your argument is fallacious. Argumentum ad ignorantiam, absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
I'm still looking for other "proofs" I'll let you know If I find any. — SonOfAGun
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Argumentum ad ignorantiam, absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
— SonOfAGun
True - in the abstract. But that's not my argument. If you're genuinely interested - not just in trolling (like Frankie) or scoring points against strawmen, keep looking, Son. — 180 Proof
True - in the abstract. But that's not my argument. If you're genuinely interested - not just in trolling (like Frankie) or scoring points against strawmen, keep looking, Son. — 180 Proof
Knowledge is defined as justified true belief. — Pinprick
There are different types of knowledge, but only science produces anything of tangible/measurable/actual value. — SonOfAGun
Why do you say that we do not "believe" matters of fact? — Cabbage Farmer
and paradigm cases of how epistemologists and ordinary speakers use the word "belief" and its cognates. — Cabbage Farmer
How could we perform ordinary actions if we did not have ordinary beliefs about ordinary matters of fact? — Cabbage Farmer
How will I get from here to the grocery, if I do not believe I know the route, and if I do not expect the grocery is in the same place it was last time I went shopping? — Cabbage Farmer
How will I answer a child who asks, "What color is the sky", if I don't believe the sky is blue? — Cabbage Farmer
The fact that I don't need to engage in sophisticated discourses and investigations in order to persuade myself that these beliefs are true is no reason to claim that I don't believe them. To the contrary, the fact that I am already persuaded shows the firmness of my belief in such cases. — Cabbage Farmer
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↪Frank Apisa
Or perhaps this?
https://www.lexico.com/en/definition/knowledge — Pinprick
You don’t believe you are Frank?
Then who do you believe you are?
The fact that I don't need to engage in sophisticated discourses and investigations in order to persuade myself that these beliefs are true is no reason to claim that I don't believe them. To the contrary, the fact that I am already persuaded shows the firmness of my belief in such cases. — Cabbage Farmer
Human beings cannot, do not, and do not "need" to consider every possible conception of things that don't exist. But on some occasions it turns out to be, or at least initially to seem, useful to consider one or more specific conceptions of things that don't exist. Most often, to claim or to suggest that a prior claim -- one's own or someone else's -- that some conceivable thing exists was false. — Cabbage Farmer
I would state that knowledge of things like your emotions, desires, needs, etc. have actual value and aren’t known through science. — Pinprick
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