Those attributes which coincide with/are perceptible by, our bodies. Natural philosophy and science have described them quite well.Well but this just begs the question: what attributes of good do we "see", in whatever way you propose we can, in reality?
looks like you're putting words in my mouth. I'm not saying God exists, but rather we can't answer the question using philosophy.Yet your response goes ahead and presupposes "Him" anyway. :confused:
I am referring to the intellect in the way it is used to answer unanswerable questions. Regarding the evidence, how does one distinguish evidence from that which is not evidence? As I said to Enai De A Lucil, the fact that I exist is evidence of the existence of God. How could I possibly exist without God bringing me into existence?Using intellect? † Let's also go by evidence.
it is a general feature of mathematics that whatever we find things in reality to be doing, we can always invent a mathematical structure that behaves exactly, indistinguishably like that, and so say that the things in reality are identical to that mathematical structure. — Pfhorrest
But a perfectly detailed, perfectly accurate map of any territory at 1:1 scale is just an exact replica of that territory, and so is itself a territory in its own right, — Pfhorrest
But whatever model it is that would perfectly map reality in every detail, that would be identical to reality itself. — Pfhorrest
Your need for invisible friends is a piece of personal psychology, and not philosophy. — Banno
Regarding the evidence, how does one distinguish evidence from that which is not evidence? — Punshhh
As I said to Enai De A Lucil, the fact that I exist is evidence of the existence of God. — Punshhh
How could I possibly exist without God bringing me into existence? — Punshhh
Evidence could be anything. You show, we take a look. — jorndoe
"Evidence for" is subjective. It is how we interpret the evidence. — EnPassant
If you cannot differentiate whether, say, Shiva or Yahweh are fictional or real, then why insist (and preach indoctrinate proselytize) that they're real in the first place? (If pressed, I might take this a step further, and say that some such activities converge on fraud or deception.)
It is the ability to bring me and/or the world in which I live, into existence.How is that an attribute?
I gave you my evidence in my last reply to you.Evidence could be anything. You show, we take a look.
You may have noticed by now, I am saying that we as human minds can't determine what exactly, with any philosophical rigour.Evidence of ... what exactly?
This was a question, not an assertion, or an assumption. Care to answer it?How could I possibly exist without God bringing me into existence?
— Punshhh
It is the ability to bring me and/or the world in which I live, into existence. — Punshhh
This was a question, not an assertion, or an assumption. Care to answer it? — Punshhh
Here are some more word tricks, FYI:
• Have you stopped beating your spouse? (either way suggests you've been beating them)
• Is the king of France bald or not? (either way suggests there is a king of France)
Implicit presuppositional failure. ⚡
how might we differentiate whether (fictional) characters, (imaginary) beings, (hallucinatory) claims are real or not?
Not entirely. God can be known as a person. That is not total knowledge of God, it is an aspect of God that God wants the individual to understand. — EnPassant
... like most other acquaintance. (Also check here and here.)how might we differentiate whether (fictional) characters, (imaginary) beings, (hallucinatory) claims are real or not?
Even in a computer you can't have abstraction only. You have to go the the shop and buy a substantial computer if you want to compute. — EnPassant
That begs the question; you can grow cabbages on the real territory but not on the map, so there's a difference. — EnPassant
this God of yours is entirely independent of any/all of us and our beliefs, interpretations, daily lives, etc, right? — jorndoe
I know a few persons, presumably you do as well. You also claim to know a person you label God. Would this be Knowing by Acquaintance? — jorndoe
how might we differentiate whether (fictional) characters, (imaginary) beings, (hallucinatory) claims are real or not?
If you can’t do something with the “perfect” map that you can do with the territory, then its not really a perfect map. — Pfhorrest
Can you give me your reasoning that God can't be both the creator and some other player in the world? It isn't an assumption I have made.Ok, but there is an implicit assumption here: That "God" is the creator, and not some other player in the world. That's not something you got from observing the world. That's you defining a term.
This is a possible weakness in my position, but actually my position is quite different to what one might expect here. My position is, as I stated initially, that anything a human mind, or a number of human minds in discussion may say, or conclude on this issue is irrelevant to the reality of our situation. The reality is unknown, when I say God I am referring to any real God which was/is involved.You miss a relevant point — it's not about whatever I don't know, it's about the claims of those that pretend they do, without which a good lot such discussions wouldn't have come about in the first place.
But I'm not adopting those positions, I'm saying that were there evidence of a God, myself, or "the world" I inhabit is an excellent piece of evidence of that reality.Theism = the position/belief that God exists. So, yeah, that's what you said. And that wasn't the part that was a problem, obviously.
The short answer is that numbers aren't the basic elements of math; sets are. Numbers are made of them, as are all other mathematical objects. — Pfhorrest
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