is that your way of saying [...] — 3017amen
You have not given a coherent definition of the word "God".Can you show me how we can come to exist and be conscious in this world without its being created by a God? — Punshhh
I am pointing out that all discussions of a supernatural god are poetic in nature and have no semantic content.You can't diminish the existential considerations of our origins, as an artistic flourish. — Punshhh
1) Consciousness is logically necessary to perceive existence and by extension is metaphysically necessary.
2) And that's because the physical laws (mathematical timeless, abstract truths) describing existence transcend physics itself.
3) And that in turn transcends the rational concept of possible worlds, as we know them. — 3017amen
I presume you have noted that I am not making an assertion, but rather critiquing the positive assertion that consciousness is not necessary for existence.Consciousness is not necessary in general because there's a (simple) possible world without — that's the (simple) logic.
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The "historical" account of Jesus...is NOT an historical account of Jesus
— Frank Apisa
I don't understand why you would deny that it's a historical account. What title or concept would you categorize or give to it? — 3017amen
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Are you a Christian?
— JerseyFlight
Frank's an Agnostic — 3017amen
All I need to do to achieve this is to remind you of the philosophy of idealism, in which it is considered that consciousness (mind) is primary and the physical world we find ourselves in is some kind of mental projection, is contingent on the mind and consciousness of the beings who experience it. I know this is a big ask and it's not my personal philosophy. But The cogito accepts this possibility.
I think, therefore there is something.
The something cannot to divorced from the being doing the thinking. — Punshhh
Does not mean anything. Word salad. What is "logically necessary"? How does it differ from necessary? — tim wood
I am pretty sure there are zero "mathematical, timeless, abstract truths" that describe existence. And if there were - whatever they might be - why would they "transcend physics"? What does transcend physics mean? Does it mean that physics is immanent and laws transcendent? How would that work?
#3 More nonsense. — tim wood
For you to suggest the Bible proves in any way that at least one god exists...is totally illogical.
Perhaps you ought to try you second best proof, because your "best proof" fails totally. — Frank Apisa
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For you to suggest the Bible proves in any way that at least one god exists...is totally illogical.
Perhaps you ought to try you second best proof, because your "best proof" fails totally.
— Frank Apisa
Frank! With all due respect, using that reasoning, you would have to prove that all historical accounts are either; true, false, half-true or half-false ad nauseum.
As a side note, what does it mean, in this context, to be illogical? — 3017amen
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↪Frank Apisa
I'll refer you to the Anselm's ontological argument. Goggle it and get back to me. Or, see my response to Tim. — 3017amen
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↪Frank Apisa
Sorry dude, you gotta do some homework. This isn't remedial philosophy class. If you're arguing EOG, you gotta come to the table with the basic's. Sorry, do the necessary training (or read my response to Tim). — 3017amen
Thus in your usage "logically necessary" means necessary at/in logic, and "logically impossible" means impossible in logic. This is not standard or ordinary usage. More significantly, having constrained the logic to itself, you now have the task of refuting the "So what." That is, granted in logic, but what does that say about anything else? Granted logic is useful, can be useful, wrt the world, but your claim is much more substantive, and you have not yet made the case - or any case.So, to answer your concern consider the statement: "There exists at least one true proposition". Call that proposition A. Is A necessarily true? Suppose I contend that A is false. Call this proposition B. "A is false."
But if A is false, so is B because B is a proposition. And if A is false there are no true propositions. So A must be true. It is therefore logically impossible for there to exist no true propositions. — 3017amen
Same business with these. Your claims are substantial. To stand they need substantive support.What does it mean to perceive "existence"? Is existence something perceived? And back to necessity: what is metaphysical necessity? What is, and what makes such a thing necessary? — tim wood
#2) I am pretty sure there are zero "mathematical, timeless, abstract truths" that describe existence. And if there were - whatever they might be - why would they "transcend physics"? What does transcend physics mean? Does it mean that physics is immanent and laws transcendent? How would that work? — tim wood
They transcend physics because they are mathematical truth's. Mathematical truth's are a priori, abstract, Platonic entities. And more importantly, the are considered Metaphysical. A Metaphysical language (kind of like Music). There are abstract mathematical objects whose existence seems independent of us and our language, thought, and practices. Just as electrons and planets exist independently of us, so do numbers and sets. — 3017amen
I'm not a big 'morals/ethics' person, but here's the classic approach to the moral argument for God’s existence. Stated as a syllogism, it looks like this:
•If there is no God, then there is no objective morality (no lawmaker, then no laws).
•But there is objective morality (evidenced by the problem of evil).
•Therefore, there is a God. — 3017amen
The form of the syllogism is valid (modus tollens), and the premises are true. Therefore, the argument is sound. — Amen
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↪Frank Apisa
Really? I don't understand. Okay must be my bad again. Well, can you make them sound for me? I mean, you seem to be an expert. I'll anxiously await your correction, thanks!
1.If there is no God, then there is no objective morality (no lawmaker, then no laws).
2. But there is objective morality (evidenced by the problem of evil).
3. Therefore, there is a God.
•First, for anything that came into existence, there must have been something that caused it to come into existence. Clearly, effects have causes. Pretty basic, and entirely consistent with our common-sense experience of the world.
•Second, the material universe (the cosmos) came into existence sometime in the past. Virtually everyone affirms this point because of the widespread and, I think, justified belief in the Big Bang.
•Therefore, the material universe must have had a cause.
As an alternative (just trying to help) maybe go back to my list that I made for you and pick some other concept to parse, that might be easier (for you). (Some of those relate to a posteriori types of phenomenon/experiences rather than a priori and deduction.) — 3017amen
Amen...save the nonsense for someone willing to deal with it.
Contact a logician at a local university...and ask him/her to comment on your "syllogism."
You won't like the answer. — Frank Apisa
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Amen...save the nonsense for someone willing to deal with it.
Contact a logician at a local university...and ask him/her to comment on your "syllogism."
You won't like the answer.
— Frank Apisa
Is that another way of saying you lost and are throwing in the towel? Gee Frank, what a sore loser. I thought you had more integrity. Oh well, Karma is a mysterious thing. I think I understand now why the moderators closed that other thread that you did...it was indeed just another rant of sorts LOL
Be well my friend! — 3017amen
But you really out to put the "syllogism" to a logician...and see what he/she says. — Frank Apisa
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