“Witnessed by others”? Who? Who here claimed that God came down and told them “be reasonable”? Just Bart — khaled
I didn't say that there are no people who at least claim to have been told things by God, just that I'm not one of them and neither are most people I know. — khaled
Because I am not religious. Why would I be? Presumably you think that if someone reasons to the conclusion God exists, they will then think 'well, I better go join a religion'. Why would I do that? How does one get from 'God exists' to 'the bible is correct about everything' or 'the Koran is correct about everything'?? Maybe they are or one of them is - but it is not implied by the argument on whose basis I believe in God. — Bartricks
If a proposition is true, do not believe that it is also false. — Bartricks
↪Bartricks
If a proposition is true, do not believe that it is also false.
— Bartricks
And you have memory of God saying this to you? — khaled
You do not have to know that it is God who is issuing them. — Bartricks
I was guessing, not reporting — praxis
I take it you accept that this is indeed an imperative of Reason and thus you accept that premise 1 is true. — Bartricks
You have a faculty of reason - in your case an extremely ropey one - and it is via that faculty that you gain an awareness of these imperatives. — Bartricks
You do not have to know that it is God who is issuing them — Bartricks
I learn from the sign in the park that someone doesn't want me to walk on the grass. — Bartricks
I prefer to ignore them. — Fooloso4
Ah so I didn't hear them or take the input in through any sensory channels but my faculty of reason detected a command to not believe a proposition to be true and false at the same time.... somehow. — khaled
Right but I must at least remember getting issued them. — khaled
Having one gives one some awareness - in your case, scant and very foggy awareness - of reasons to do and believe things, including imperatives to do and believe things. — Bartricks
Is that what your reason tells you - does your reason give you the impression that it is an imperative of Reason that if you are aware of an imperative, you must remember someone having issued the imperative to you? — Bartricks
Now, to your mind this means that we have to be aware that they are imperatives of God and must remember encountering God and God telling us them. — Bartricks
That is, like I say, as stupid as thinking that if someone demonstrates that water is made of tiny molecules, then you can refute them by just saying "no, water is NOT made of tiny molecules — Bartricks
The evidence that imperatives of Reason are imperatives of God is.....the argument. The proof. — Bartricks
Ah careful. Reasons to believe things =/= Imperatives to believe things. As I already said, faculties don't give imperatives. This is the part that's beyond dispute. Does your sense of sight itself tell you to do something? No that's ridiculous. — khaled
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