All languages originate in minds, and the laws of physics and mathematics are languages, so the existence of these laws implies the existence of God. — Hallucinogen
"That's baloney." His reason? You've mistaken science for metaphysics. — T Clark
The relationship between physics and mathematics isn't a scientific one; it is metaphysical. — Hallucinogen
This isn't what I wanted the post to be about though — Hallucinogen
If my premises are natural, then God is natural. If God is supernatural, then the very definitions he's insisting on that natural premises exclude supernatural conclusions is wrong. — Hallucinogen
Mathematics is a descriptive language invented by people that turns out to be very good at describing the world. There is no more a metaphysical relationship between math and physics than there is between the English language and the reality it describes or a map and the terrain it depicts. — T Clark
Mathematical descriptions are capable of describing the world because they have an ontological status in the world; ie the world is mathematical in itself. — Hallucinogen
Mathematical descriptions are capable of describing the world because they have an ontological status in the world; ie the world is mathematical in itself. If this weren't the case, mathematical descriptions would be useless. — Hallucinogen
What sort of world would it be, if mathematical descriptions did not apply? ... only God could begin to conceive such a thing. — unenlightened
This isn't what I wanted the post to be about though. — Hallucinogen
I'm looking for the kind of error being committed when he's basing his disagreement on a few definitions about natural and supernatural in which they contradict and insisting that I'm concluding a supernatural thing from natural premises. — Hallucinogen
Tell me more; disagreement excites me. — unenlightened
No, I'm saying his imposition of natural vs supernatural makes no difference to the argument. I am not disagreeing at all with what they mean. I even said at least once that I'm letting him decide what they mean.Seems to me that any confusion comes from disagreements on the meanings of several words - natural vs. supernatural, — T Clark
No, I'm saying his imposition of natural vs supernatural makes no difference to the argument. I am not disagreeing at all with what they mean. I even said at least once that I'm letting him decide what they mean. — Hallucinogen
Well to get the op's 'name the fallacy' bit out of the way, it's a very old and all too common fallacy of "refusing to agree". — unenlightened
My suggestion is that mathematics is the study of abstract arrangement, such that absolutely any world comes under its purview. So neither is its effectiveness unreasonable, nor is it an invention of the mind. I mean fancy inventing that there are 17 wallpaper patterns. It's just untidy! Of course if we lived in a world where wallpaper was not a thing because geometry was different or whatever, we may not have been interested to find out about wallpaper patterns, but then some other 'construct' would become relevant, and that would be 'unreasonably effective.' — unenlightened
What is it that I've failed to understand? — Hallucinogen
If Someone failed to provide an argument that will convince you, there's little chance I will. I think how he expressed it is better than I can do it. — T Clark
You don't seem to grasp the distinction between methodological and metaphysical naturalism — T Clark
but someone didn't explain any distinction between the two and didn't explain why it would affect my argument. — Hallucinogen
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