Is that the only point you plan on addressing? And you addressed in the form of putting words in my mouth? Because that's not what I said.
Let's tuch on say #3 which was
>>>Given 3, If something is meaningful or understandable, then it is certainly not hypothetically impossible. To reiterate: ALL hypothetical impossibilities are meaningless and not understandable.<<<
How on earth would you actually know this as a fact? Have you exhausted every thought possible? I highly doubt it so please elaborate on how you know this statement to be true and by true I mean fundamentally and not just your limited human perspective that only matters to you in your little bubble — MAYAEL
I couldn't bother but I'm glad you did — 180 Proof
S.K. merely means 'that one is' manifests (i.e. embodies, becomes) 'what how who & why one is'. In other words, it's vacuous – fallacious – to reify (unsound) "ratiocinations" like @Bartricks does.What does Soren Kier[ke]gaard mean by existence precedes essence? — TheMadFool
:up: :100:The Dunning Kruger paradox:
...those who raise the Dunning Kruger effect are those most likely suffering from the Dunning Kruger effect! — counterpunch
By going in circles.Is it possible to have something more infinite then infinity? How could something that goes on without end, have MORE without end? — Present awareness
Is it possible to have something more infinite then infinity? How could something that goes on without end, have MORE without end? — Present awareness
Questio You provide no evidence that I am begging the question and appeal not to arguments, but authority figures. — Bartricks
As to forward the idea of any entity or reality that can exercise the power to bring about self contradictory state of affairs would itself rely on consistency, cohesivness, intelligibility in order to be forwarded. However, that these things can be undermined results in the idea or argument which leads to such a conclusion to be defeated, as what supports the theisis that reason can reveal any truth if reality maybe unintelligible and thus "outside" the scope of reason? Indeed, any justification through rationality would itself beg the question. Of course, the only option left then is to reject the premise that leads to such result, for there is no gain for either Ockhamist, nor Scotist, nor Cartesian or even atheist in entertaining this idea, except of course the most extreme of skepticisms — Questio
what supports the theisis that reason can reveal any truth if reality maybe unintelligible and thus "outside" the scope of reason? — Questio
Have I denied the law of non-contradiction? No. I think that if a proposition is true, it is not also false. I believe that as firmly as you do. If you are labouring under the impression that I deny it, then you're confused and you're attacking a straw man. — Bartricks
although perhaps he has, of course - perhaps "this proposition is false" is one....but let's not get into that as it's beside the point — Bartricks
So, again, in reality no true proposition is also false. You're not more confident about that than I. — Bartricks
Now, if you want to add to the law of non-contradiction the claim that it is 'necessarily' true that no true proposition is also false, then I deny that. For I deny that anything is necessarily true or necessarily existent. And I deny that becuase God exists and God can do anything and thus nothing is necessarily true or necessarily existent. — Bartricks
But denying that the law of non-contradiction is a necessary truth is not the same as denying that it is true, yes? — Bartricks
I am begging no questions. — Bartricks
You think I am, because you think that if I appeal to reason to establish that God can do anything, then somehow that means that what I prove with reason is bound by reason, yes? — Bartricks
I can see lots of things with my eyes and only with my eyes, but that does not mean that my eyes exercise power over what exists. — Bartricks
I can discover by reason - as can anyone who exercises it as carefully and diligently as I do - — Bartricks
It is also not open to reasonable doubt that there are laws of Reason. — Bartricks
Therefore, there is a mind whose laws are the laws of Reason — Bartricks
I think St Anselm and I would get along like a house on fire. — Bartricks
He'd bloody love my proof of God. I mean, it's better than his, isn't it? — Bartricks
And in 2900 your future twin will be talking in hallowed terms about St Bartricks and how foolish are those who put themselves above him. I mean, it has quite a ring to it - St Bartricks. I like it. — Bartricks
Thank goodness someone else has joined this conversation who understands this distinction! I tried to venture it earlier in the thread, which of course was brushed aside peremptorily. I’m not an expert in the matter, but I believe it’s a fundamental distinction and you’ve made a much better case for it than I was able to do. Suffice to say, I’m more persuaded by the Thomist philosophy than that of the Nominalists. — Wayfarer
S.K. merely means 'that one is' manifests (i.e. embodies, becomes) 'what how who & why one is'. In other words, it's vacuous – fallacious – to reify (unsound) "ratiocinations" like Bartricks does. — 180 Proof
To you I will appear an idiot. — Bartricks
1. If there are laws of Reason, then there is a mind whose laws they are
It is also not open to reasonable doubt that there are laws of Reason. For if you think there are not, then either you think there is a reason to think there are not - in which case you think there are, for a 'reason to believe' something is an instruction of Reason - or you think there is no reason to think there are laws of Reason yet disbelieve in them anyway, in which case you are irrational. Thus, this premise is true beyond a reasonable doubt too:
2. There are laws of Reason
From which it follows:
3. Therefore, there is a mind whose laws are the laws of Reason
The mind whose instructions and commands constitute the laws of Reason would not be bound by those laws, as they have the power over their content. A mind that is not bound by the laws of Reason is a mind that can do anything at all. Thus, this premise is true:
4. The mind whose laws are the laws of Reason is omnipotent
The mind whose instructions and commands constitute the laws of Reason will also have power over all knowledge, for whether a belief qualifies as known or not is constitutively determined by whether there is a reason to believe it - and that's precisely what this mind determines. Thus:
5. The mind whose laws are the laws of Reason is omniscient
Finally, moral laws are simply a subset of the laws of Reason (the moral law is, as Kant rightly noted, an imperative of Reason). And so the mind whose instructions and commands constitute the laws of Reason will be a mind who determines what's right and wrong, good and bad. As the mind is omnipotent, the mind can reasonably be expected to approve of how he is, for if he were dissatisfied with any aspect of himself, he has the power to change it. And if this mind fully approves of himself, then this mind is fully morally good, for that is just what being morally good consists of being. Thus, this premise is also true beyond all reasonable doubt:
6. The mind whose laws are the laws of Reason is omnibenevolent.
It is a conceptual truth that a mind who exists and is omnipotent, omniscient and omnibenevolent 'is' God. Thus:
7. If there exists a mind who is omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent, then God exists
From which it follows:
8. Therefore, God exists." — Bartricks
1. If there are laws of Reason, then there is a mind whose laws they are — Bartricks
Why are you cutting and pasting an earlier post? — EricH
I could go on, but I think you get the idea. As I said earlier I do not have the time / energy to do yet another back & forth, so if you choose to reply I apologize in advance for not replying back. — EricH
Clearly what I wrote was an argument, although not in a formal deductive format. In order for you to forward an argument or even merely assert the existence of an entity which may go contrary to reason (and thus one who may establish an irrational world, or a world which abides by seemingly rational laws but isn't, or a world where we think we're being rational but aren't) would itself need such an idea to be false to be forwarded, — Questio
For, if the God of your conclusions existed he could very well make two plus two equal 7, despite reason; say what you will about whether he would do so, but so long as he could we really dont know if what we reason to is true, false, meaningless, or something in-between. — Questio
he's very adamant we should believe it equals 4, for he tell us we 'must' believe that. — Bartricks
What is meant by the word "are" — EricH
Why is it "a" mind and not many minds?
And when he says "a mind whose laws they are" - to me this implies ownership - there is "a mind" that "owns" these as of yet undefined "laws of Reason". What does all this mean? — EricH
Your begging questions with every extra foot step you take over the "Logic is not necessarily true" line. Its not my fault I just so happen to point it out. — Questio
First, a bunch of minds isn't a mind. Imperatives can't be issued by bunches of minds. They have to be issued by individual minds. — Bartricks
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