When we say that someone is biased (about something), we also mean that they are wrong, right? Or can a biased person somehow be right? — Pussycat
Thing is that there is no real criterion for bias, neither one can know whether they are biased — Pussycat
You cannot seriously compare theism to flat earthism. Some of the best minds in history have presented very reasonably arguments for theism. It is a reasonable viewpoint.
no substantial amount of empirical evidence for the existence of God — Enai De A Lukal
what would empirical evidence for a transcendent being comprise? — Wayfarer
The point is, the absence of empirical evidence for a transcendent being says precisely nothing beyond the obvious statement that empiricism itself has certain criteria which purported transcendent beings will invariably fail to meet. — Wayfarer
The reasons employed by holy men to prove things that are of faith, are not demonstrations; they are either persuasive arguments showing that what is proposed to our faith is not impossible, or else they are proofs drawn from the principles of faith, i.e. from the authority of Holy Writ... Whatever is based on these principles is as well proved in the eyes of the faithful, as a conclusion drawn from self-evident principles is in the eyes of all.
(Summa, Secunda Secundæ Partis, Q1 A5)
It is necessary for man to accept by faith not only things which are above reason, but also those which can be known by reason... For human reason is very deficient in things concerning God... And consequently, in order that men might have knowledge of God, free of doubt and uncertainty, it was necessary for Divine matters to be delivered to them by way of faith, being told to them, as it were, by God Himself Who cannot lie.(Q2 A4)
What would evidence for invisible garden fairies look like? Sagan's garage dragon? Fictional characters? Perhaps more pertinently, how would you differentiate? — jorndoe
But you do make a good point here (although it may not have been intentional)- — Enai De A Lukal
Thomas himself- he of the celebrated arguments for the existence of God- — Enai De A Lukal
Worth noting that none of the medieval 'proofs' were remotely considered as anything like a proof in the modern or scientific sense. There was a long-gone blog post which showed that these were mainly understood as exercises in intellectual edification for the faithful, never as rhetorical or polemical devices for unbelievers.
Who are you quoting here? I never defined faith as "'clinging to nonsensical propositions in the face of evidence to the contrary". Faith in the relevant sense is believing something in the absence of sufficient evidence/warrant. This quote here doesn't even make sense- how can you have evidence to the contrary of a nonsensical proposition? If its genuine nonsense, how could you tell what would count as evidence for or against?I should also protest, on behalf of those who profess a faith, even if I'm not necessarily amongst them, that 'faith' is not 'clinging to nonsensical propositions in the face of evidence to the contrary'. For those with a religious faith, when asked for what constitutes 'evidence', they will simply gesture towards the fact of existence.
As I always do I'll just put it out there that I know next to nothing. But this strikes me as absurd.William Lane Craig, Edward Feser, Alvin Plantinga and so on- who somehow believe that these invalid or question-begging arguments are sound or persuasive, despite purportedly being professionals (or at least trained) philosophers! — Enai De A Lukal
The reasons employed by holy men to prove things that are of faith, are not demonstrations; they are either persuasive arguments showing that what is proposed to our faith is not impossible, or else they are proofs drawn from the principles of faith, i.e. from the authority of Holy Writ... Whatever is based on these principles is as well proved in the eyes of the faithful, as a conclusion drawn from self-evident principles is in the eyes of all.
(Summa, Secunda Secundæ Partis, Q1 A5) — Enai De A Lukal
you gave the impression that the bit about transcendent deities lacking evidence as a matter of definition/necessity was intended as an objection or counter-argument to what I said.. — Enai De A Lukal
William Lane Craig, Edward Feser, Alvin Plantinga and so on- who somehow believe that these invalid or question-begging arguments are sound or persuasive, despite purportedly being professionals (or at least trained) philosophers! — Enai De A Lukal
Either way its a maneuver the theist is welcome to, though I expect few have the stomach for it if knowing what it entails- it basically amounts to sawing off the branch they're sitting on. — Enai De A Lukal
It was.
I'm not at all inclined towards Craig, I don't his personality or argumentative style. Plantinga and Feser I read. I find them quite competent philosophers, but then, I'm not a convinced atheist; I don't share their religious convictions, but I think their philosophical arguments against naturalism and materialism are quite sound, on the whole.
That's something I often say about Daniel Dennett.
As I always do I'll just put it out there that I know next to nothing. But this strikes me as absurd. What do you mean "purportedly"? I would personally call my own rationale into question rather than call trained philosophers out for failing to make their arguments valid.
We are quite explicitly talking about arguments for the existence of God, not arguments against naturalism or materialism or anything else. Not sure why you brought this up. — Enai De A Lukal
Like I said, I'm happy to grant this because its perfectly consistent with what I've said; if transcendent entities cannot have evidence for their existence, by their very definition, then by their very definition belief in their existence can never be rationally warranted. — Enai De A Lukal
Even if we grant (if only for the sake of argument) that all of e.g. Feser's arguments against naturalism or materialism are sound and persuasive, it would not follow that his or anyone else's arguments for the existence of God are not invalid or question-begging (and so utterly unpersuasive). — Enai De A Lukal
And I'm not exactly going out on much of a limb here, I doubt there are many arguments that have been more thoroughly or frequently refuted than these arguments for the existence of God. Heck, in many instances, they still fail for the same reasons documented literally centuries ago by the likes of e.g. Hume. And certainly there are more modern (and rigorous) treatments, not least of which being Sobel's excellent Logic and Theism which gives full formal/symbolic step-by-step breakdowns of these arguments so that one can see precisely where they go wrong — Enai De A Lukal
(in the cases where they are simply deductively invalid, as in the case of the ontological argument). Moreover, its a pretty predictable result, given just a basic appreciation for how deductive arguments work: you can only get out what you put in, they can't establish any new facts, but merely bring out what was logically contained in the premises. That's ultimately all a deductive inference is. So its almost trivial to say that any/all valid arguments for the existence of God must be question-begging at some level... else the conclusion could not logically follow from that particular set of premises. — Enai De A Lukal
Indeed they have. My point a while ago. But theirs is based in faith, not existence, not knowledge. — tim wood
'Rational warrant' and 'empirical evidence' are different things. Empirical evidence, as construed by modern naturalism, starts, as a matter of principle, by excluding consideration of anything beyond the natural domain, and then demands evidence to the contrary, having already made the in-principle commitment not to consider it. — Wayfarer
Sometimes, and that's (imo) too bad. but then there are people who are indiscriminate in their use of language - and their thinking.As for claims to personal awareness of God. These are brushed aside with baseless accusations of 'Delusion'. That is not an argument. — EnPassant
Intelligently designed how or for what?The argument that the universe seems intelligently designed because it is intelligently designed is not easy to refute — EnPassant
what would empirical evidence for a transcendent being comprise? — Wayfarer
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