The only thing I can defend is that god is currently not known. — ArmChairPhilosopher
I don't think so. But it's a great metaphysical question, to say at least.
Of course it's interesting just what "existing" means as there are the intangible, the immaterial things that we do take to "exist". At least for their usefulness. — ssu
Slightly longer version: Knowledge is transferable. If I know something, I can teach you, show you the evidence or the proof. I.e. if there were any objective knowledge about the nature of god, after several millennia Theists would have come to an agreement. They obviously haven't. (There are 41,000+ denominations in Christianity alone.) Thus, they obviously don't know what they are talking about. — ArmChairPhilosopher
And that is my point. I do not think agnosticism is a legitimate position. They choose to be undecided. — Jackson
It would be so much easier if the Theists could decide what they mean when they say "god". — ArmChairPhilosopher
I think it is pretty straight forward for Christians. God as described in the Bible and supported by theology. — Jackson
Not at all. Christians are all over the place on theology or the Bible. I grew up in the Baptist tradition in Australia. We were taught that the Bible is an allegory and most of the stories myths. We were pro abortion, pro gay rights, pro feminism, etc. Christianity takes many forms and some, like theologian Paul Tillich even hold that we can't know god and he doesn't exist because by definition god is outside of the category of existence which is reserved for corporeal creatures. — Tom Storm
I know what they mean. — Jackson
I think your idea of objective knowledge is too strict. We could also say philosophers have been arguing about the existence of the external world, other minds, whether moral realism is a thing, whether we have control/agency over our actions etc for thousands of years, and therefore philosophers obviously don't know what they are talking about. Maybe we don't.if there were any objective knowledge about the nature of god, after several millennia Theists would have come to an agreement. They obviously haven't. (There are 41,000+ denominations in Christianity alone.) Thus, they obviously don't know what they are talking about.
Let us consider the appropriateness or otherwise of someone (call him 'Philo') describing himself as a theist, atheist or agnostic. I would suggest that if Philo estimates the various plausibilities to be such that on the evidence before him the probability of theism comes out near to one he should describe himself as a theist and if it comes out near zero he should call himself an atheist, and if it comes out somewhere in the middle he should call himself an agnostic. There are no strict rules about this classification because the borderlines are vague. If need be, like a middle-aged man who is not sure whether to call himself bald or not bald, he should explain himself more fully.
I hate to break it to you but you don't. You may have an illusion of knowledge, just as they do but if you put your "knowledge" to the test, you'll find it lacking. — ArmChairPhilosopher
The properties of God Christians teach are:
1. All powerful
2. All knowing
3. Creator of universe
4. Spirit rather than physical entity — Jackson
Fine, tell me what I do not know. — Jackson
Yep.and therefore philosophers obviously don't know what they are talking about — Paulm12
An important difference. "I believe in god(s)" is not a debatable assertion. I could reply "I don't" but that would be the end of the conversation.For instance, there is a difference between me saying "I believe in God" and me claiming "God Exists" — Paulm12
If it has the properties omnipotence, omniscience, omni benevolence, omnipresence. — ArmChairPhilosopher
Only truth/falsity are relevant to decisions. — Agent Smith
I agree.
And neither Theism nor Atheism are well formed propositions, thus can't have truth values. — ArmChairPhilosopher
The word "god" gets defined by P1. "Clapton is god" is short for "I define god as Clapton." — ArmChairPhilosopher
Exactly. (And for the agnostic there is no way to claim that s/he and only s/he is unable to gain that knowledge without special pleading. So there are no "hard" agnostics.)
I realized that Agnosticism is a stronger position (really, a position instead of just an inner state) than mere atheism.
(It also makes me lonely. Neither atheists nor theists know how to handle my arguments so they just ignore me.)
On top of this you are using lower case "god" - not upper case "God" - and this whole conversation is about the upper case version. So even if you could reformulate your original P1 & P2 into expressing your original conclusion (P3), this particular line of reasoning has no relevance to the actual topic under discussion. — EricH
Or am I missing something? I think the only hiccup would potentially be your agnostic "inner state" distinction, but wouldn't that just be a "soft agnostic atheist" (or something like that)? — Bob Ross
"God" is not the name of any god, it is more like a title. Monotheists often forget that fact as their only god is identical to all titular gods they believe in. The gods of the Bible have names, El and YHVH (which got retconned into one when Judaism switched from henotheism to monotheism) specifically. — ArmChairPhilosopher
"God" is a proper name. In a Christian culture everyone know it refers to God in that tradition. — Jackson
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