If Reason is irrelevant to God questions, what would you suggest : Intuition? Or is it a waste of time to philosophize about such abstract concepts as First Cause? I suspect that the majority of those who believe in God, or gods, do so on the basis of tradition and intuition. Only a few philosophers, driven by reasonable curiosity, actually try to reason out the "Whys" of existence. I'm retired, so these forum speculations beyond reality are an affordable hobby for me. :smile:Or by imagining that our reasoning powers are relevant to everything everywhere. — Hippyhead
No Hippy, you have to demonstrate how your argument applies to my argument. — Philosophim
But you are not coming into the conversation as I have asked you to
Are you actually a nice person who got a little carried away, and appreciates the reminder and starts their own thread? — Philosophim
"There's no way, we can even talk about anything". — Philosophim
If Reason is irrelevant to God questions, what would you suggest — Gnomon
I'm retired, so these forum speculations beyond reality are an affordable hobby for me. — Gnomon
Your argument is based upon the assumption that human reason is qualified to generate meaningful useful statements about gods. But you offer no proof. You're essentially making a "because it's in the Bible" type argument — Hippyhead
As such, my job is to present inconvenient reasoning where I am able — Hippyhead
And I'm talking specifically to the topic highlighted in the thread title "Probability of God". You're asserting that we are in a position to make that calculation. I'm counter asserting that we are not. It's called debate. Philosophers do that sometimes. — Hippyhead
The "God questions" I was referring to were philosophical queries, not religious statements of Faith. Intuitive Faith is typically impervious to Logical Reason. Most of the God questioners on this forum are either open to the notion of some kind of supernatural deity, or closed to such non-empirical beliefs. So, they use rational methods, not to prove or disprove the existence of a ghostly god, but to rationalize their own position on the question.If you should conclude and publicly state that you sincerely feel that reason is irrelevant to God questions, I would be happy to present alternatives. — Hippyhead
See Hippy, I never make a biblical argument even once. — Philosophim
My proof that we can reason about a God is in points 1 - 12. — Philosophim
1. Either all things have a prior cause for their existence, or there is at least one first cause of existence from which all others follow.
I will state publicly, that Reason is relevant to philosophical god-questions — Gnomon
The specific nature of that unseen implicit Creator is debatable though, so on this forum we discuss the various logical alternatives. — Gnomon
This is a logical statement, right? Logic is an invention of human beings, right? Human beings are indescribably small in comparison to the reality which is being discussed, right? Can you present any proof that something as small and half insane as human beings can generate useful logical statements about the most fundamental nature of everything everywhere (scope of god claims), a realm we can't define in even the most basic manner? — Hippyhead
Yes. That is what the points continue to show. Each point follows, and eventually does define what a God is within the framework of logical understanding. — Philosophim
Lets start with point one. Is there anything in point one that you disagree with? — Philosophim
What if frameworks of logical understanding are not capable of commenting usefully on such large topics? — Hippyhead
Yes. It's based upon an unproven assumption. — Hippyhead
If my points are unable to comment usefully on that, simply point out why my statements are wrong. — Philosophim
I asked what alternative "X" you would propose. I may or may not be in the market for "X", but you haven't explicitly said what it is. Except to denigrate Reason as a tool for Cosmology. Is Faith in Science or Revelation your "X"?Ok then, so you have a methodology which you believe to be qualified, and therefore aren't in the market for an alternative. — Hippyhead
I assume that, by "this process", you mean Philosophy. If so, you may think that Empirical Science has made old-fashioned philosophy obsolete. Some prominent scientists would disagree.At what point do you feel it would be reasonable to question the usefulness of this process? Another thousand years perhaps? Something else? — Hippyhead
I asked what alternative "X" you would propose. I may or may not be in the market for "X", but you haven't explicitly said what it is. — Gnomon
Except to denigrate Reason as a tool for Cosmology. — Gnomon
I assume that, by "this process", you mean Philosophy. — Gnomon
What's your problem with rational dialogue on unsettled questions? — Gnomon
"Hey everybody, look at me! I'm a laser smart reason expert, and I ignore any and all evidence I find inconvenient!!"
↪Philosophim I respectfully decline to engage the rightness or wrongness of your points until you demonstrate that making logical points is relevant to subjects the scale of gods. — Hippyhead
Since it declined into name-calling at the end, I resurrect this thread with trepidation, simply to add my two-cents-worth on the question of gambling odds for God. Apparently, you are placing your bet, based on your calculation of "infinite to one" odds in favor of a Prime Cause. I previously linked to an article reviewing the book by Steven Unwin -- The Probability of God : A Simple Calculation That Proves the Ultimate Truth. The author calculated somewhat more modest 67% odds that our world was created by The Christian God. I must congratulate him on a good try, presented with reason and humor. FWIW, here's my review of the book, posted some time after this faded into infinity. Enjoy! :smile:16. But, if we are to gamble and wonder whether our universe formed without a God as a primary cause, versus a God as a primary cause, it is infinite to 1 that our universe was formed by a God instead of simply forming on its own. — Philosophim
I don't accept the Bible as the "word of God". That's why I was interested in an argument that uses Mathematics, instead of Scripture, as evidence for belief in God. It didn't convince me. But it might work for those who accept the authority of both Scripture and Mathematics. :smile:Consider the theist who takes it to be an obvious given that the Bible is the word of God. — Hippyhead
The author of the referenced book seems to agree with you. The existence of anything invisible & intangible must be inferred from circumstantial evidence : Dark Matter, for example. That's why some religious believers reluctantly admit that Faith comes down to an act of will, or of personal experience, not logical or mathematical reasoning. :nerd:It seems to me that given the nature of what Christians and other monotheists call 'God' there just can't be a way to prove or disprove his, her or their existence - or otherwise. — Horace
Yes. But then, the "God" question is the ultimate philosophical game. Science asks relatively soft "how" questions that are amenable to hard evidence. But the hard questions are always, not "what" or "how, but the childish "why, why, why." Questions about verifiable facts can be proven to the satisfaction of reasonable people. But questions about "Meaning" are always subjective, and debatable.Either way, that still begs my main question, whether effort by philosophers to prove or disprove the existing of god or gods is and endless quest with not hope of a generally agreed proof? — Horace
Philosophy is indeed a mind-game or personal pastime. And some scientists call philosophers "feckless", because their introverted activities typically make no physical difference in the material world. But philosophical investigations are intended to get us "closer to Truth" about the world --- to change minds, not to change material reality. Philosophy refines Beliefs about the world, and those Beliefs and Intentions have Political and Physical consequences in the world. That's why the philosophical game goes on long after the ninth inning. :smile:So it really is simply a game or pastime. . . . That still leaves me wondering whether (and if so why) it's a priority for my taxes to be spent on professional philosophers and pilosophy teachers continuing to debate the existence or otherwise of a god or gods? This certainly is, as you say, debatable. — Horace
A God would be a being that has the power and knowledge to create a specific universe. — Philosophim
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