Shawn         
         I'd say an assumption is an assumed proposition.
I see lots of people throw the word "God" around when that term, that concept, has not first been defined in the discussion. — James Riley
Shawn         
         
Shawn         
         Because they start from axioms. Empiricism, for instance, starts from the requirement that whatever is posited is discernable by sense-experience, or is mathematically provable with reference to such evidence, as a matter of course. Logic starts from axioms and rules, such as the law of identity and the law of the excluded middle. — Wayfarer
Gregory         
         
Bartricks         
         
Wayfarer         
         One first has to assume what does it mean to say that God exists, and I don't mean this in the traditional sense. — Shawn
Shawn         
         
James Riley         
         An assumed proposition is similar to question begging in asking for no doubt to be utilized in face of a suppository argument about X to be held as true. — Shawn
Shawn         
         You will encounter in various schools of philosophy, the assertion that God is 'beyond being'. — Wayfarer
Valentinus         
         
Shawn         
         
James Riley         
         
Wayfarer         
         This is where language goes on holiday. I — Shawn
I believe that with dispensing the Principle of Sufficient Reason, that science and logic so heavily rely on, one is committing oneself to the supernatural or creationism. — Shawn
Banno         
         How do science and logic rely on the Principle of Sufficient Reason?I believe that with dispensing the Principle of Sufficient Reason, that science and logic so heavily rely on, one is committing oneself to the supernatural or creationism. — Shawn
Shawn         
         No, it's where philosophical theology exceeds your grasp. Don't take that as a pejorative. But there is a definite and real method here if you're patient enough to try and grasp it. — Wayfarer
Manuel         
         
Shawn         
         How do science and logic rely on the Principle of Sufficient Reason? — Banno
Shawn         
         So early belief is in some respects easier to think about than modern belief in terms of what one uses to explain certain phenomena. — Manuel
James Riley         
         There's no reason to argue with him if he's going to accept fallacies. — Wheatley
Shawn         
         
Shawn         
         But what if God is purely an internal thing and is not above, below, alongside, and in any sense outside the world. The sufficient reason isn't outside things. Science can explain just fine how the world came to be (Hawking's hypothesis, ect)
2m — Gregory
Valentinus         
         Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.