Obviously you cannot answer, “I don’t know…and like other atheists who hide behind the descriptor “ignostic”…you pretend your position is logical. — Frank Apisa
yes, but when a person talks about George Washington in the U.S. they probably are talking about the person who was the first U.S. president. — substantivalism
It is what it is when they have actually defined it and aren't talking about the concept of god but about god itself. . . after having defined it. — substantivalism
You are aware of something you call the self. We call this experience awareness. Is it false that I call it awareness, is that subjective? — substantivalism
Are ineffable 'religious' experiences consistent with experiences of waking experiences and are not merely our imagined caricatures of existence. Can you support that a person is having said experience and that such an experience is not the same as a mirage of water in the distance but the experience of concretely water in the distance. Can you not assume unexplained is equivalent to "you know the answer" or that we just suppose it exists without reduction/deeper ontological relations to other entities. We've both admitted partially that part of what makes up conscious awareness, experiences, don't come from within us and we have no knowledge of making ourselves so clearly the reality that either makes us up or gives rise to our experiences must allow for said conscious awareness. — substantivalism
Yes, a historian would know the difference between the human character of Jesus and the mythological character of Jesus who was created by ____insert well defined answer____. Was this historian ever born. . . then he interacted with people in a way distinct from fictional characters. . . then he wasn't fictional. Or if you are not assuming this but merely questioning my outward speculation as to whether he is or isn't fictional. . . well that is unfalsifiable by definition as he has never interacted with anyone so it's indeterminate whether he ever existed at all, to me or anyone else it would be "I don't know" as the final answer to that. — substantivalism
You have to prove that Jesus is part god not repeat what the bible says he was perhaps even as proof (that's circular). Also define god. — substantivalism
Given all your philosophical questions or issues why hold onto christianity at all and not go towards another religion or not possess any religion at all to be central to your philosophy? Why dogmatically assume christianity to be central around which your philosophy is built? — substantivalism
Great. So you take no exceptions that Jesus existed. Or did I misinterpret that? — 3017amen
Okay.. So, how did they define it? — 3017amen
It could be. But it's more than likely due to your inability to explain the nature of your own existence. — 3017amen
I'm not following that at all really. You may want to study William James and Maslow and others from cognitive science. They did some pretty intense studies of patients having such experiences that include ineffable phenomena. There are also studies on NDE's but that's a different subject matter all together. — 3017amen
Okay, so I think from what you're saying there you agree that history is pretty accurate and Historians pretty much do a good job no? — 3017amen
As I said earlier, if you can prove to me the nature of your own existence, then much more of your questions/concerns can be answered. — 3017amen
Discussion of Christianity on philosophy forums seems hopelessly inept. To read a philosophy forum, one would get the impression that Jesus never mentioned love. All this male ego chest thumping and intricate logic calculation etc, seems pointless. — Hippyhead
human being who may have deserved the label of Jesus may have existed. Most of the story regarding said individual is polluted by tall tales so it's hard to tell where the real Jesus may be and where he isn't. . . start with the Jefferson Bible. — substantivalism
You'll have to give a link to their definition of god or get them on the forum personally to elaborate on their position. — substantivalism
No one can know what these thoughts are or what gives rise to them fully and without the danger of skepticism only through an acceptance that they are just the way they are (and a pragmatic/epistemological methodology) on our relationship to them can we then begin constructing abstract relationships or developing deeper concepts. — substantivalism
So wait despite all our talk about not understanding ourselves or reality as we know it you appeal to cognitive science? So you do actually follow scientific practice or do you just throw it out? I thought you were anti-materialism or anti-objectivism now were talking about whether these brains have anything to do with consciousness (as they starkly do) but you haven't exactly made this clear before. — substantivalism
Did he actually perform miracles or was he made by this god of yours but rather come about by conception as we all know it. . . rather unlikely if not perhaps impossible. Also not warranted by the evidence. — substantivalism
I cannot tell you the nature of existence in the same sense that you cannot tell me the nature of yours at best the only philosophy you should hold to here is not a metaphysical but an epistemological pragmatic idealism. We cannot know what the thoughts in themselves (or what give rise to them) are truly only what they can do, what they've done, and our relationship to them (taken all rather vaguely). — substantivalism
If you want to discuss Christianity divorced from 3017amen and the metaphysical baggage that pollutes its message that sounds rather like a nice thread to start tugging at. — substantivalism
Nice! — 3017amen
We would have to defer to text books or otherwise written communication/information which I'm not sure you're convinced represents any type of authority. — 3017amen
Is that supposed to explain the nature of your own existence? — 3017amen
Sure I appeal to science for many things, including empirical data. As such, science has concluded that more or less you don't know the nature of your own existence which is what we're talking about. So until you can prove to me how you exist (the nature of your existence), then we can have a cogent discussion about someone else's existence. Otherwise we're back to learning about people from history books. Make sense? — 3017amen
That's an important distinction that goes back to your own illogical existence. For example how does the conscious and subconscious mind work together? The infamous example of driving a car while daydreaming and crashing and killing yourself, lends itself to violation of formal rules of logic (LEM) perception of two things at once. And so using our sense of logic, basically means that consciousness is an impossibility. Or said another way, consciousness itself is logically impossible. — 3017amen
I go back to you explaining the nature of your own existence. Did it emerge from a warm pool of soup or a piece of wood or some other means or method? Until you can do that, what's the point in trying to understand someone else's existence? It seems to be like blind leading the blind, no? Otherwise you can talk about the creation of physical matter, but how would that explain the nature of your existence? — 3017amen
I think you've answered the, (and your own) question. Your existence is a mystery. — 3017amen
Ok, maybe we'll do that. Could be a plan. Until then, you might keep in mind that nobody is forcing you to focus on "metaphysical baggage" that you don't find credible. If you think it would be fun to transcend the metaphysical claims, you can start transcending when ever you're ready. — Hippyhead
Through a glass darkly ...1. Ethics: Christian ethics
2. Metaphysics: Descartes Metaphysics (to name just only one)
3. Epistemology: George Berkeley
4. Contemporary Philosophy: Soren Kierkegaard
5. Logic: Immanuel Kant (synthetic a priori knowledge)
6. Political Philosophy: separation of church and state/In God we Trust — 3017amen
Given that (your) "agnosticism" is A TRUTH-CLAIM, tell me/us what makes (your) "agnosticism" TRUE. — 180 Proof
You aren't daydreaming and not daydreaming as that would be contradictory but here you are one, not the other, and this negligence lends itself to having the hunk of metal you're within glide uninhibited towards something. — substantivalism
Given that (your) "agnosticism" is A TRUTH-CLAIM, tell me/us what makes (your) "agnosticism" TRUE. — 180 Proof
EricH - You're telling me something God supposedly did. That is not a definition
3017amen - God is that which designed a conscious being known as Jesus. — EricH
EricH - You have not yet mentioned - in any of your attempts at definitions - who or what this specific person or thing is. — EricH
The ball is still in your court. You have not yet provided any coherent definition of the words "God", "exists", or what the phrase "God exists" means.
10h — EricH
substantivalism
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Obviously you cannot answer, “I don’t know…and like other atheists who hide behind the descriptor “ignostic”…you pretend your position is logical.
— Frank Apisa
Obviously I can par your prescription that I sum it up rather than be worrisome about specifics. — substantivalism
Strange you gave an example where even intuitively or in relation to known scientific definitions allows me to actually regard taking a position regarding the application of truth/false values to the question with it making sense to do so but merely that were unsure which to apply. — substantivalism
If I could play devils advocate... — substantivalism
...it's agnosticism about the god discussion or the god question not an admittance that it will always mean something or that it will never mean something. — substantivalism
180 Proof
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1. Ethics: Christian ethics
2. Metaphysics: Descartes Metaphysics (to name just only one)
3. Epistemology: George Berkeley
4. Contemporary Philosophy: Soren Kierkegaard
5. Logic: Immanuel Kant (synthetic a priori knowledge)
6. Political Philosophy: separation of church and state/In God we Trust
— 3017amen
Through a glass darkly ...
1. Ethics: Benedict Spinoza, Philippa Foot
2. Metaphysics: Ray Brassier
3. Epistemology: David Deutsch, Nassim Nicholas Taleb
4. Contemporary Philosophy: Clément Rosset
5. Logic: Ludwig Wittgenstein, Nelson Goodman
6. Political Philosophy: David Schweickart
Given that (your) "agnosticism" is A TRUTH-CLAIM, tell me/us what makes (your) "agnosticism" TRUE.
— 180 Proof
↪Frank Apisa — 180 Proof
EricH
204
↪180 Proof ↪substantivalism ↪Hippyhead ↪jorndoe ↪Frank Apisa
A Small Secular Prayer
I hope & pray that everyone involved in this discussion engages in productive and fulfilling activities in the real world. I hope and pray that you do not obsess about these conversations. I hope there is some joy and happiness in your lives. Have a good weekend. Tell your loved ones that you love them.
See you Monday?
Amen — EricH
Think of it this way, you're driving and not driving because whichever mind was involuntary causing you to daydream took over and caused you to crash and kill yourself. In other words, you're driving and not driving at the same time because a mysterious part of you took over.
Otherwise, think about how that consciousness phenomena is logically possible? — 3017amen
That abomination of a sentence coming from someone who told me to be careful of my wording?
Oh, the humanity! — Frank Apisa
Of course you "could." You are doing so. Why waste so many words? — Frank Apisa
Try that with a bit of meaning. It at least has the sound of something interesting. I'd love to know what you were unsuccessfully attempting to convey, — Frank Apisa
substantivalism
115
That abomination of a sentence coming from someone who told me to be careful of my wording?
Oh, the humanity!
— Frank Apisa
More insults and I fixed it. . . your what. . . 70 or so years old (I recall you saying this) and yet you seem to act more childish than me in my young age. Not so much define or clarify your terms better than it was a grammar mistake which isn't exactly what I was getting at with "be careful with the words used". — substantivalism
Of course you "could." You are doing so. Why waste so many words?
— Frank Apisa
I have to be specific with my intentions or the sub-context. — substantivalism
Try that with a bit of meaning. It at least has the sound of something interesting. I'd love to know what you were unsuccessfully attempting to convey,
— Frank Apisa
— substantivalism
Can agnosticism be equivalent to "I don't know what a god is?" or is it only applicable to answering the question "I don't know if a god exists?" which, again, assumes we've defined what that collection of three letter words is to then, potentially, make perfect sense to apply a false/true truth value. — substantivism
I'd recommend not being petty on your future replies. — substantivalism
You are either actively participating in the act of driving or you are not if you are day dreaming then you are not driving. Merely the inertia of the vehicle propels the hunk of metal forward and that then impacts something. — substantivalism
Belated happy birthday, Frank.I turned 84 on the 9th of this month. — Frank Apisa
Maybe, maybe not. :sweat: It's not cool to pick on "childish" folks (except here on TPF), but ... drop that babytalk, put on your big boy's pants, sir, and finally answer like a thinking adult :point:I am not childish.
Given that (your) "agnosticism" is A TRUTH-CLAIM, tell me/us what makes (your) "agnosticism" TRUE. — 180 Proof
180 Proof
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I turned 84 on the 9th of this month.
— Frank Apisa
Belated happy birthday, Frank. — 180 Proof
I am not childish.
Maybe, maybe not. — 180
Drop the babytalk and finally answer this question like a thinking adult, sir
Given that (your) "agnosticism" is A TRUTH-CLAIM, tell me/us what makes (your) "agnosticism" TRUE.
— 180 Proof
I do not claim, or imply, that "you not knowing something" is true or false; rather I'm asking HOW DO YOU KNOW THAT YOUR CLAIMS - about what you say you "do not know" - ARE TRUE?How can you claim that my claim that I do not know something can be anything but true? — Frank Apisa
I do not see enough unambiguous evidence
This reminds me of that Batman villain Two-Face ... Anton Chigurh from No Country For Old Men (book & film) ... or even the main conceit of The Dice Man novel by George Cockcroft. Like a lunatic or stoic fideist (e.g. Tertullian? Pascal?) :smirk:I always use the same coin to assist me in my guess. A Sacagawea $1 coin that Nancy and I use to decide picks (when we disagree) in our NFL pools. The coin is called Mr. Coin...
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