1 – If a belief has valid, though non-conclusive, arguments defending it, then it is reasonable to hold said belief — DPKING
2 – Though they inherently contradict one another, both atheism and theism have valid arguments that defend their position on the (non)existence of God, — DPKING
C – It is reasonable to believe in either atheism or theism — DPKING
I would say that whether something is reasonable isnt based on what it concludes but rather the reasoning itself.
One could be and atheist for poor reasons, and accurately be called unreasonable even though they reached the right conclusion (atheism). Likewise with theism if you think theism is true, one could have poor reasons and be right by accident.
Its not the conclusion that can be measured by reason, its the process that can be measured by reason. — DingoJones
Theism is an affirmative belief. To establish the substance of that belief as real when that "substance" is not self-evident is the burden of the folks who hold it real. Notable - and to my way of thinking conclusive within its ambit - is that Christians simply aver their belief and are explicit in this, in their, "We believe...".arguments for theism and atheism, — DPKING
1 – If a belief has valid, though non-conclusive, arguments defending it, then it is reasonable to hold said belief — DPKING
Atheism as argument is not on any position regarding God, it is instead a pointing out of the inadequacy of the arguments of theists.Though they inherently contradict one another, both atheism and theism have valid arguments that defend their position on the (non)existence of God, — DPKING
Atheism itself is not a belief. Atheism is a reasoned and principled reaction to unproven claims of others.C – It is reasonable to believe in either atheism or theism — DPKING
What do you mean by “non-conclusive“? — DingoJones
I would say that whether something is reasonable isnt based on what it concludes but rather the reasoning itself.
One could be and atheist for poor reasons, and accurately be called unreasonable even though they reached the right conclusion (atheism). Likewise with theism if you think theism is true, one could have poor reasons and be right by accident.
Its not the conclusion that can be measured by reason, its the process that can be measured by reason. — DingoJones
Yes. Both Theists and Atheists are reasonable in the sense that they each have reasons to support their pro or con conclusion. The problem is that Atheists don't accept the proposed "evidence" in favor of god-belief (miracles, moral stance, etc). So, it's not the reasoning that makes a difference in conclusions, but the initial motivation, which defines acceptable evidence. The conclusion is inherent in the initial assumption.C – It is reasonable to believe in either atheism or theism — DPKING
Atheism itself is not a belief. Atheism is a reasoned and principled reaction to unproven claims of others. — tim wood
For example, Theists tend to feel that a supernatural deity is necessary to explain the very existence of our temporal conditional world. Atheists, though, seem to be un-bothered by the open question of bare existence. — Gnomon
Yet in both perspectives, eternal existence of something (God or Multiverse) is, perhaps subconsciously, taken for granted --- as an unproven Axiom. That timeless unconditional fundamental power-to-be is what I call BEING. It's a logical necessity that any reasoning about ultimate questions must build upon. So, how about essential BEING as a starting point for reasoning about otherwise open-ended philosophical questions? :smile: — Gnomon
Fair enough. But I don't think you need look further than - in this case - the word itself. Beyond that there's no accounting for what some people think or believe. And why would anyone undertake to prove a negative, and how would they do it?I think this is what Flew talks about as positive and negative atheism. I know that Flew is a major figure on non-belief atheism, but who else would you recommend to read to get a better picture? — DPKING
Great, call it what you like. But on what basis do you say anything about it? And, what answers the question of where the multi-verse came from, or being itself? If we're talking about belief, these are relatively trivial questions. If what is real, not so easy.is what I call BEING — Gnomon
I just can’t see how one side is built upon invalid arguments if both sides have been so inconclusive in dismissing their opposition’s arguments — DPKING
Atheism as argument is not on any position regarding God, it is instead a pointing out of the inadequacy of the arguments of theists. — tim wood
Ah - back to the Definition Wars. — EricH
It seems to me that this is where you're going to get the most disagreement. There are a set of very contentious issues such as global warming where the science is absolutely clear and yet by your definition of inconclusive - it's actually unclear whether there's global warming or not. Since many people still believe it's a hoax, the arguments in favour of global warming existing must be inconclusive? We can't judge the veracity of an argument based on how many people remain unconvinced by it. — Judaka
So, you would not forgive climate change deniers, their existence does not prove the inadequacy of the argument for climate change. You say "the evidence makes the best case for it". Yet this is often the position of the theist and atheist. You have not answered what the "evidence makes the best case for" and instead simply relied on this notion of "inconclusiveness". — Judaka
If I said I conversed with a fairy, would you be uncertain because you could neither prove or disprove the claim or would you ask for proof? In this circumstance, you would likely not even adopt a stance of non-belief but actually you would actively reject the plausibility of my claim. I think here, basically, there are billions of people who do believe I conversed with a fairy and so you hesitate and that's fair but does that logic really hold up upon closer examination? — Judaka
Similarily for political or moral issues, you just won't take a stance because a debate has two sides? That is silly, surely you can agree? — Judaka
What "alternative theories about existence" did you have in mind? Most atheists seem to just take the existence of "Reality" for granted. Hence, the Multiverse theory is merely an extension of the pre-Big-Bang assumption of an eternal material universe. Variations on that immortal-matter theme were cyclical temporary universes, and ongoing natural creation of matter to replace the stuff lost to Entropy. A recent Hypothesis to fill the gaps in Inflation Theory is Eternal Inflation. Are such turtles-all-the-way-down theories not satisfactory for you?What if it’s not a matter of feeling that a God is necessary, but that alternative theories about existence don't seem to be satisfactory for theists. — DPKING
BEING is a personal neologism, coined to encapsulate the notion of fundamental essential existence that is logically necessary, and not beholden to any traditional belief system --- including Theism and Physicalism. What theory of Reality do you believe in? :joke:is what I call BEING — Gnomon
Great, call it what you like. But on what basis do you say anything about it? And, what answers the question of where the multi-verse came from, or being itself? If we're talking about belief, these are relatively trivial questions. If what is real, not so easy. — tim wood
NOTE : Tim, what is your belief system, — Gnomon
Who cares? Part of my point is that beliefs are sanctuary from rigor - and at least some rigor is what we ought to be trying for. As being is a matter of what is, why not think in terms of what is? And as what is, we have no need of personal pronouns to distinguish between what your is is, and mine.What theory of Reality do you believe in? — Gnomon
Regarding the multitude of arguments for theism and atheism, is it reasonable for both sides to hold the positions they hold? — DPKING
What about any item on your list makes it a "naturally occurring metaphysical phenomenon." — tim wood
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