180 Proof
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There is absolutely no unambiguous evidence for or against the existence of gods.
— Frank Apisa
Wrong again, Frankie! :sweat: — 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.
To wit (as per tim wood's "magic hippopotami"): Absence of any evidence entailed by a g/G predicates is evidence of the absence of a g/G so predicated.
— 180 Proof
In others words, predicates of X entail search parameters for locating X (i.e. whether or not X exists where & when).
E.g. (A) Elephant sitting on your lap ... (B) YHWH created the world in six days ... (C) In 2020 George Bush lives in the White House ... (D) UFOs take-off & land at JFK Airport ... etc
So: absence of evidence entailed by (A/B/C/D) is evidence - entails - absence of (A/B/C/D): search (A) your lap, (B) the geophysics of the earth, (C) who is currently POTUS, and (D) control tower logs, arrival / departure gates & runways at JFK Airport ... :yawn:
NB: Proof of 'proving a negative'.
Also the main body or your argument is fallacious. Argumentum ad ignorantiam, absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
— SonOfAGun
Strawman. :clap:
My actual "argument", as sketched above, I've applied as a principle - criterion - for evaluating any theistic conception of divinity and thereby I'm committed to anti-theism (which, therefore, excludes 'agnosticism' with respect to theism's truth-value (of its e.g. ontological claims)).
— 180
Insofar as "god" is undefined, the statement "god is false" says nothing but "@^%*# is false" (i.e. nonsense). Otherwise, if 'theism is false' is true, then every theistic-type of g/G is fictional - that's my position. — 180 Proof
Insofar as "god" is undefined, the statement "god is false" says nothing but "@^%*# is false" (i.e. nonsense). Otherwise, if 'theism is false' is true, then every theistic-type of g/G is fictional - that's my position. — 180 Proof
Summarize please.What are your arguments against Jordan Peterson's interpretations of theistic divinity? — SonOfAGun
As my previous post points out: If set T is empty, then members of set T are, at most, fictions. True or not true? If true, then your statement above is a non sequitur. If, by your light, not true, please show why not.I only ask because there is a lot of apologetics you have to get through to claim that "every theistic-type of g/G is fictional" — SonOfAGun
Summarize please. — 180 Proof
As my previous post points out: If set T is empty, then members of set T are, at most, fictions. True or not true? If true, then your statement above is a non sequitur. If, by your light, not true, please show why not.
Again (more precisely): — 180 Proof
↪Frank Apisa Basta! Go troll somewhere else ...
You've offered nothing of any substance or, for that matter, philosophical interest for some time now. Stop embarrassing yourself, Frank. I've no interest in humoring you any longer. Thanks for all the fodder you've left for me to use as examples of how NOT to argue (or philosophize). Buonanotte signore ... — 180 Proof
Insofar as "god" is undefined, the statement "god is false" says nothing but "@^%*# is false" (i.e. nonsense). Otherwise, if 'theism is false' is true, then every theistic-type of g/G is fictional - that's my position. — 180 Proof
The other is that I’m not saying belief is about thing existing vs them not-existing, but rather it is about the topic of whether or not something exists. — Pfhorrest
You where taught how to interpret the data every time your mom shoved a boob in your moth to stop you from crying, when you where hungry, and had no idea what it meant. You also have conducted many experiments concerning how to interpret pain and where guided in this process by your parents, even though you may not remember doing any of this, it did happen. — SonOfAGun
You are moving the goal post again. Now we are talking about your reflexes, which ARE instinctive. This is not related to the current topic because reflexes are not any kind of knowledge. You seem to be drifting in this conversation. Are sure you are not loosing the through line here? — SonOfAGun
I don’t understand the difference between the two here. The topic of whether or not something exists consists of that thing existing, or not. — Pinprick
Pfhorrest
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Thinking or believing is broader than speculating/supposing/guessing. You are trying to pigeonhole every opinion into a blind guess. They aren't, and it isn't necessary for them to be to define the relevant categories. — Pfhorrest
Pfhorrest
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Knowledge is a kind of belief. — Pfhorrest
A guess is also a kind of belief. — Phorrest
Knowledge is a kind of belief. — Pfhorrest
No it isn't. — Frank Apisa
[Why do people] ...almost NEVER use "guess" rather than "believe/belief?" — Frank Apisa
Nah...opinions are opinions. If you express an opinion as "I 'believe' such and such"...you are disguising the fact that it is an opinion. Much better to say, "My opinion is that...such and such."
I know, I know...the old "one trick pony!"
But this is incredibly important in almost every discussion of this sort...and you guys are just not getting it.
Really give it some thought.
And stay safe. — Frank Apisa
Because we're not guessing. We're inferring. Maybe fallibly. We might be wrong. But we generally think we have reasons to believe the things we do. — Pfhorrest
Pfhorrest
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Knowledge is a kind of belief. — Pfhorrest
No it isn't.
— Frank Apisa
You evidently have no knowledge of philosophy whatsoever. "Justified true belief" has been the standard definition of "knowledge" (only recently challenged) for the past 2400 years or so. — Pfhorrest
[Why do people] ...almost NEVER use "guess" rather than "believe/belief?"
— Frank Apisa
Because we're not guessing. We're inferring. Maybe fallibly. We might be wrong. But we generally think we have reasons to believe the things we do. — Pfhorrest
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