• Frank Apisa
    2.1k
    To the people who assert “there are no gods” or “it is far more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one”…

    …I call, “BULLSHIT.”

    You people are doing the same thing as the folks are doing who assert, “There is a GOD” or “It is far more likely that there IS a GOD than that there are none." You are just guessing in the opposite direction.

    Both groups are operating from “faith” in a guess about what does or does not exist in the REALITY of existence. Both are "beliefs."

    ME?

    I have no idea if “no gods exist” or if at least one does. I prefer not to guess on the issue, because all such guesses would be nothing but blind guesses—nothing more than a coin toss.

    If I did, however, make such a guess, I would have the ethical wherewithal to call the guess…A GUESS.
  • Gregory
    4.7k
    I know the Thomistic God doesn't exist because since he sustains the world he would also have to sustain child rape in act, which would contradict his holiness. So that's one god down
  • 3017amen
    3.1k


    Frank!

    Wow, this is quite a purging of sorts, eh!? Remember Pascal's Wager? That could be an analogious or a possible thesis to work from there... .

    To that end, I would like to start with your definition of Belief? In your view, philosophically, what does it mean to hold or have a Belief (I'm just putting it in caps for emphasis)?

    Second, as a Christian Existentialist, my 'belief' is that there is much more supporting evidence from history (the Christian Bible), nature, and existence itself for (to support) the existence of God than not. I can succincty enumerate them if you like...then we can go through each one.

    (In fact--as you suggest--I will argue that the Atheist belief system is based more on ignorance than not.)
  • Frank Apisa
    2.1k
    Gregory
    1.3k
    I know the Thomistic God doesn't exist because since he sustains the world he would also have to sustain child rape in act, which would contradict his holiness. So that's one god down
    Gregory

    Yeah...if the god has to accept YOUR definition of what is holy and what isn't.
  • whollyrolling
    551
    Hey man, do you know what 'faith' is?
  • Hippyhead
    1.1k
    To the people who assert “there are no gods” or “it is far more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one”…

    …I call, “BULLSHIT.”
    Frank Apisa

    I believe I've read this before somewhere, just can't remember where though.....
  • Frank Apisa
    2.1k
    3017amen
    2.3k
    ↪Frank Apisa

    Frank!
    3017amen

    Amen.

    Wow, this is quite a purging of sorts, eh!? Remember Pascal's Wager? That could be an analogious or a possible thesis to work from there... . — Amen

    The two most worthless philosophical protocols are Pascal's Wager and Occam's Razor. I do not use them.

    To that end, I would like to start with your definition of Belief? In your view, philosophically, what does it mean to hold or have a Belief (I'm just putting it in caps for emphasis)? — Amen

    In a philosophical discussion (or a religious discussion) the use of "belief" is a way of disguising a guess.

    Second, as a Christian Existentialist, my 'belief' is that there is much more supporting evidence from history (the Christian Bible), nature, and existence itself for (to support) the existence of God than not. I can succincty enumerate them if you like...then we can go through each one. — Amen

    I am sure the people who "believe" there are no gods or who "believe" it is much more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one...can also enumerate them.

    None hold any water.

    But give me your best one if you want and we can discuss it.

    (In fact, I will argue that the Atheist belief system is based more on ignorance than not.) — Amen

    I suppose you would. Just as I would suppose people who guess the other way would argue that your "beliefs" derive from ignorance.
  • Frank Apisa
    2.1k
    whollyrolling
    454
    ↪Frank Apisa Hey man, do you know what 'faith' is?
    whollyrolling

    Yeah.

    In a religious or philosophical context...

    ...a "belief" is a guess about the unknown.

    "Faith" is being pig-headed about insisting the guess is correct.
  • Frank Apisa
    2.1k
    Hippyhead
    228
    To the people who assert “there are no gods” or “it is far more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one”…

    …I call, “BULLSHIT.”
    — Frank Apisa

    I believe I've read this before somewhere, just can't remember where though.....
    Hippyhead

    You "believe" that...or you "know" that? :wink:
  • whollyrolling
    551
    That's not what the dictionary says though. Plays on words only serve to derail conversation. Redefining a word is only convenient inside your own head or the heads of others who believe the same sleight-of-word trick works.
  • whollyrolling
    551
    And if you can't agree on terms, then the entire conversation is pointless and will never go anywhere unless it sidetracks into more interesting things that contain common terms and insightful dialogue.

    Repeating the same words without learning or progressing in any way for months isn't philosophy--or maybe it is man, who am I to say I guess.
  • Frank Apisa
    2.1k
    whollyrolling
    460
    ↪Frank Apisa That's not what the dictionary says though. Plays on words only serve to derail conversation. Redefining a word is only convenient inside your own head or the heads of others who believe the same sleight-of-word trick works.
    whollyrolling


    Oh. I thought you were asking me what it is...not what "the dictionary" says it is.
  • Frank Apisa
    2.1k
    Judaka
    736
    ↪Frank Apisa
    What is a god?
    Judaka


    An entity that created or caused to be created what we humans now consider “the Universe.”
  • Frank Apisa
    2.1k
    whollyrolling
    460
    ↪Frank Apisa And if you can't agree on terms, then the entire conversation is pointless and will never go anywhere unless it sidetracks into more interesting things that contain common terms and insightful dialogue.

    Repeating the same words without learning or progressing in any way for months isn't philosophy--or maybe it is man, who am I to say I guess.
    whollyrolling

    Okay. Maybe you want to find a thread that more suits your needs and wants.
  • Echarmion
    2.7k
    I have no idea if “no gods exist” or if at least one does. I prefer not to guess on the issue, because all such guesses would be nothing but blind guesses—nothing more than a coin toss.Frank Apisa

    How reasonable this is depends a lot on what you mean by "exist".

    It's fairly obviously the case that our current best empirical theories about the physical world don't include a god or gods. So if existence refers to physical existence, then God or gods don't exist.

    There is plenty of empirical evidence for people acting as if they believed in a god of gods, and, making some basic assumptions, it follows that God or gods "exist" fairly commonly as mental idea and as a shared social entity.

    If we're talking about metaphysical "existence" in some unfathomable way, the "coin toss" stance seems apt. But the "unfathomable" bit kind of throws a wrench into things. Can something be meaningfully said to "exist" if it's entirely unclear what such "existence" entails? I tend to answer that with a "no".
  • Frank Apisa
    2.1k
    How reasonable this is depends a lot on what you mean by "exist".Echarmion

    Or by what we mean by "How" "reasonable" "this" "is" "depends" etc.

    You know what I mean by "exist." Or...make a guess.

    It's fairly obviously the case that our current best empirical theories about the physical world don't include a god or gods. So if existence refers to physical existence, then God or gods don't exist. — echarmion

    If gods exist...they exist. If humans, the puny beings on this nondescript planet circling this nondescript star in this nondescript galaxy cannot perceive them for some reason...IF THEY EXIST they exist nonetheless.

    We do not know if gods exist.

    There is plenty of empirical evidence for people acting as if they believed in a god of gods, and, making some basic assumptions, it follows that God or gods "exist" fairly commonly as mental idea and as a shared social entity. — echarmion

    We agree on that.


    If we're talking about metaphysical "existence" in some unfathomable way, the "coin toss" stance seems apt. But the "unfathomable" bit kind of throws a wrench into things. Can something be meaningfully said to "exist" if it's entirely unclear what such "existence" entails? I tend to answer that with a "no". — echarmion

    If gods or ghost or spirits or extradimensional beings exist...despite humans abilities to perceive them in any way...then they exist.
  • 3017amen
    3.1k
    The two most worthless philosophical protocols are Pascal's Wager and Occam's Razor. I do not use them.Frank Apisa

    The reason I bring that up is because your 'belief system' (we'll come back to what that means including the concept of belief itself) seems to indicate, that a sort of either/or binary analysis is taking place in your mind, hence, you rolling the dice/Pascal's Wager. And, don't misunderstand, you don't have to buy into anything, I was just making an obvious observation.

    In a philosophical discussion (or a religious discussion) the use of "belief" is a way of disguising a guess.Frank Apisa

    Sort of a glib or insincere response that glossed over then true meaning of holding or having a 'belief', no? We'll come back to what that means (see below list). In the meantime, using logic, think about what it means for human's to have a belief about a some thing, ok?

    am sure the people who "believe" there are no gods or who "believe" it is much more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one...can also enumerate them.

    None hold any water.

    But give me your best one if you want and we can discuss it.
    Frank Apisa

    suppose you would. Just as I would suppose people who guess the other way would argue that your "beliefs" derive from ignorance.Frank Apisa

    **List of pragmatic, existential, metaphysical and cognitive phenomena, including cosmology and logic:

    **Some can easily overlap into other disciplines and/or domains, and this is by no means a comprehensive list

    Logic/epistemology:

    1. logical possibility
    2. logical necessity
    3. a priori v. a posteriori
    4. synthetic a priori knowledge
    5. binary v. dialectic reasoning
    6. reason and belief

    Phenomenology/Metaphysics:

    1. consciousness
    2. subjective truth v. objective truth
    3. the religious experience
    4. revelation
    5. NDE
    6. music
    7. math
    8. love
    9. instinct
    10.sentience

    Metaphysics:

    1. consciousness
    2. self-awareness
    3. the will
    4. the sense of wonder
    5. causation
    6. sentience

    Cosmology:

    1. the illusion of time
    2. holographic principle
    3. participatory anthropic principle
    4. energy
    5. gravity
    6. causation
    7. Panentheism
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