I take it you are new to philosophy, and that's perfectly fine. You may want to Google it on your own time; Subjectivity v. Objectivity. — 3017amen
the standard definition of "God" (and I capitalized here) involves some notion of a supernatural spiritual realm. Supernatural means it is NOT part of nature - it does not physically exist. That is the key differentiator. And - as both Frank and I have pointed out - the word "existence" means existence in the natural physical world. — EricH
As I point out in the second half of that post, "the crux of the matter" comes down to the grounds, or reasons, given to warrant any position taken on any "deity type"; whether or not a "deity type" is demonstrated to "exist" could be one of grounds, or reasons. Whatever "↪180 Proof
You "deity types" categories split things up on what "Goddoes or does not do". That does not clarify whatthe sentence"God exists" means. — EricH
makes explicit that, at minimum, giving grounds, or reasons, is needed to make ontological commitments (re: "exists") meaningful.(iv) Assuming you agree that beliefs,disbeliefs or doubts require sufficient grounds ... — 180 Proof
:up:• x is subjective = x's EXISTENCE is mind-dependent (e.g. fictional (fictions EXIST too))
• x is objective = x's EXISTENCE is mind-independent (e.g. real)
That's not every use of the words, but those are common in philosophy. — jorndoe
Uh oh ...I took Philosophy 101 & 102 in college, so I am familiar with the broad outlines of the history of philosophical thought. — EricH
I'd bet they didn't teach paraconsistent logic in "Phi 101-102".All religious talk is outside any possible rules of logic that can be constructed - religious talk is a form of poetry.
And your grounds, or reasons, for this assertion? Nothing mentioned in your post history (the last few pages of this discussion) warrants such a categorical statement - unless I've missed it.You can use metaphor, simile, etc - but once you invoke the supernatural you have positioned yourself outside of any logical reasoning.
Are you in favor of this particular vapid ex nihilo interpretation of the big bang theory? Given the only people I here espouse it are pop-science journals (to layman) and perhaps also creationists or rather poorly literate apologists.
Can you account for any opinion that there is no supernatural component in our origin, I can't see one? — Punshhh
Are there any Christians on this thread? — JerseyFlight
I appreciate why people become religious. It gives people a sense of belonging - to both a community as well as to something bigger than themselves. It provides people with a source of comfort. It provides like minded people with a support network of other like minded people. It gives people structure and "meaning" to their lives (whatever that means).
I will not argue with this - I see it first hand in my friends & relatives - people that I love dearly. I am not trying to talk you out of your faith. Faith is mysterious and unfathomable. Of course so are many other things in life - love, art, etc. — EricH
I realize that asking you to give a clear definition of "God exists" is asking the impossible of you. In our conversations I have been trying - as gently as I can - to nudge you in the right direction, but you keep veering off topic into notions of "objectivity" and "truth". These are important philosophical topics but they are unrelated to "God exists". — EricH
By saying "God exists"? You are saying there is something (the supernatural component/property of "God") that does not physically exist and yet it physically exists. And once you assert that? You are breaking the Law of Noncontradiction.
The penalty for breaking The Law of Noncontradiction is an indefinite stay in the metaphorical Philosophy Jail :smirk: — EricH
Can you can think of some new way of making coherent sense of "Nonexistent-God exists"? Is there some new way to express this thought in such a way that it can be analyzed for correctness/truth? Alternatively, perhaps you can figure out how the words "true" & "false" can be used when discussing "God's Supernatural Realm"?
Note that I bold faced "new way" - I did this to stress yet again that all existing attempts have failed. You need to come up with something new.
If you could do any of those things you would become world famous. Go for it! — EricH
I'm gonna start by going meta-conversation for a few minutes.What are you talking about exactly? — 180 Proof
180 is not a theist. They are, like me, arguing that your claim: supernatural things are beyond philosophy and more like poetry is asserted without any support.But instead I will give you an easier task. Forget about all us blindly ignorant agnostics/atheists/ignostics/etc. — EricH
This thing we humans call “the universe” may not be all that exits…in fact, it may not even be MOST of what exists. — Frank Apisa
Which would be supernatural and more akin to poetry if we were to accept what Eric says. :s — DoppyTheElv
With "god did it" and "supernatural magic" anything goes. :sparkle:
Could literally be raised to explain anything, and therefore explains nothing.
Might as well be replaced with "don’t know", which incurs no information loss.
Is not itself explicable, cannot readily be exemplified (verified), does not derive anything differentiable in particular, and has consistently been falsified in the past.
Literally a non-explanation.
That's ↑ not a dis/proof, but just explicates the vacuity of such utterings.
Doesn't take long studies in philosophy, does it?
• x is subjective = x's existence is mind-dependent (e.g. fictional (fictions exist too))
• x is objective = x's existence is mind-independent (e.g. real) — jorndoe
How exactly would anyone know (if they were)? — tim wood
Question can easily be rephrased, is there anyone on here who considers themselves a Christian, believes exclusively in the Christian God? — JerseyFlight
How about a christian who does not so believe? My point being that whatever a christian is, is not so easy to define. — tim wood
Well then, the burden of proof would be on you to demonstrate that you belong to the tradition, which is certainly a futile exchange you will not be having with me. — JerseyFlight
I hold there is an ethical core to Christianity, perhaps oft neglected (for sure oft neglected), that has nothing to do with any supernatural entity or being — tim wood
No, the usages of words, not words alone, have meaning or not. Read e.g. Philosophical Investigations and On Certainty, both by Ludwig Wittgenstein. Meanwhile, Eric, I'd still like you to answerWords have meanings/usages — EricH
Another meta-babble stream of non sequiturs will indicate to me that you neither know what you're talking about nor understand my concerns."All religious talk is outside any possible rules of logic that can be constructed - religious talk is a form of poetry."
"You can use metaphor, simile, etc - but once you invoke the supernatural you have positioned yourself outside of any logical reasoning."
— EricH
And your grounds, or reasons, for these CATEGORICAL assertions? — 180 Proof
Is this core complete or is there room for growth? — JerseyFlight
Of the person or the core? — tim wood
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