As Bunge himself says: — Arcane Sandwich
Hence the atheist will have to propose serious arguments against it [Anselm's argument] instead of the sophistry of the logical imperialist. (...) In short, Anselm was far less wrong than his modern critics would have it. — Bunge (2012: 175)
Have fun! — Arcane Sandwich
It is fun, I'll admit; trying out arguments like moving chess pieces across the board. Especially when you're skilled, or have the necessary focus, which, I admit, I am not. — ENOAH
The message of love, highlighted by the sacrifice, triggers us to love our species and act in ways which promote its survival and growth. — ENOAH
I'd call it something like "logical reductionism", or something along those lines, something that sounds more "politically correct" but without losing too much bite. — Arcane Sandwich
There is no single argument that proves both FTI2 and FTI3, considered as propositions. Anselm's is arguing for FTI2. — Leontiskos
And another way to critique your FTI1 is to say that essentially no one believes it. — Leontiskos
At least I don't know of any group that believes God is necessarily identical to Jesus (even ignoring the problematic Trinitarian theology here). Christians themselves do not generally claim that the Incarnation was theologically necessary. Or else think about the fact that everyone without exception would agree that FTI1 was false before Jesus was born, and that if God existed before Jesus of Nazareth was born then strict identity cannot obtain. — Leontiskos
The difficulty here is that the existence of God is a very modern preoccupation, whereas the divinity of Jesus has been a perennial question. In a perennial sense the existence of God and the divinity of Jesus are two quite separate questions. — Leontiskos
throughout the centuries, Christian philosophers have been solely preoccupied with proving that God exists, without being equally preoccupied with proving that God is Jesus Christ. — Arcane Sandwich
It can't be proved; they need to get a life! — PoeticUniverse
It's not an either/or type of deal. — Arcane Sandwich
Doesn't matter. The way I see it, logic has nothing to do with belief, just as math doesn't have anything to do with belief. The notion of belief is foreign to the formal sciences. Mathematical truths are still truths even if no one believes in them. The same goes for logical truths. — Arcane Sandwich
Indeed, but my opinion is that throughout the centuries, Christian philosophers have been solely preoccupied with proving that God exists, without being equally preoccupied with proving that God is Jesus Christ. And they should, because otherwise, what makes them Christian philosophers, instead of theistic philosophers in general? — Arcane Sandwich
What use is there in asking people to consider a proposition that no one believes, not even oneself? It seems like putting something on the food menu that isn't edible. — Leontiskos
I think you'll find that Christians make relevant arguments. In Aquinas' day they argued against Islam, because Islam was popular. In the Enlightenment period they argued against Rationalism. Nowadays there are a lot of people claiming that Jesus was not divine, and so Christians tend to argue in that direction — Leontiskos
Here is an example from two days ago. — Leontiskos
No one believed in non-Euclidean geometries during the 19th Century, not even their own pioneers. — Arcane Sandwich
Shorter: math and logic don't care about our beliefs. So we should feel free to explore their uncharted territories, and to do so with whatever beliefs we would like to have in mind while doing so. — Arcane Sandwich
Interesting reference, I'll try to read it tomorrow. — Arcane Sandwich
And that's why it didn't make any sense to talk about them. — Leontiskos
Are you saying that you believe FTI1? Because again, if not and no one else believes it, then it looks to approximate a strawman rather than something fit for discussion. — Leontiskos
For example, should we conduct a dialogue on the question of whether the moon is made of lasagna? No, of course not. Why? Because no one believes such a thing. And using "the moon is made of lasagna" as a premise in an argument would be equally pointless, given that it has no bearing on anyone's beliefs. — Leontiskos
Yet Einstein's conceptualization of spacetime is based on the development of non-Euclidean geometries, particularly Riemann's ideas. — Arcane Sandwich
No, I don't believe FTI1. And even if I did, what I believe (and what anyone else believes) is irrelevant to the truth value of that premise. — Arcane Sandwich
It doesn't matter if we believe that the moon is made of lasagna or not. — Arcane Sandwich
But Einstein believed in non-Euclidean geometries, so the premise fails. No one is objecting to Einstein talking about something he believes in, but after all, Einstein did not talk about the moon being made of lasagna. — Leontiskos
Truths that no one believes are irrelevant to a philosophy forum, for they cannot be spoken of. — Leontiskos
Then why haven't you started a thread on the topic? (Hint: it's because the topic is irrelevant. Why? Because it does not bear on anyone's beliefs.) — Leontiskos
At this point, I'm told that there are no such arguments, because the thesis that Jesus is God is a revealed truth. My counter-point to that is that the thesis that God exists is also a revealed truth. — Arcane Sandwich
The concept of belief is foreign to the formal sciences. — Arcane Sandwich
Not quite. I haven't started a thread on the topic because I know that the moon is not made of lasagna. So does everyone else. — Arcane Sandwich
I have offered one such proof in the OP of this Thread, and I have done so without even being a Christian philosopher. Sure, it's a rather humble proof, but it's still a proof. — Arcane Sandwich
Try using the Block Universe to prove it. — PoeticUniverse
In any case, it would be a small minority which does not think natural reason can do a lot of work on such questions. For example, those who met Jesus during his Earthly life and came to believe that he is divine were not working apart from their natural reason. — Leontiskos
The concept of belief is foreign to the formal sciences. — Arcane Sandwich
Participation in a philosophy forum is not a formal science. Premises which no one believes, such as FTI1, are useless. Their highest level of function is as a strawman. — Leontiskos
Not quite. I haven't started a thread on the topic because I know that the moon is not made of lasagna. So does everyone else. — Arcane Sandwich
But you're skipping around the question. What if you didn't know it is not, but you didn't believe it is. And you knew that no one else believed it is. Would you start a thread on the topic? — Leontiskos
(Lack of belief is sufficient; recourse to knowledge is a different issue. The concept of knowledge is arguably as foreign to the formal sciences as the concept of belief.) — Leontiskos
Why would I do that? — Arcane Sandwich
Show that God is the Block Universe and we are inside God. — PoeticUniverse
(FTI1) If God exists, then God is identical to Jesus.
(FTI2) God exists.
(FTI3) So, God is identical to Jesus. — Arcane Sandwich
If.....God is identical to Jesus....God is identical to Jesus.
That's not an argument. Nothing to digest there. — Fire Ologist
"If we had ham, we could have ham and eggs, if we had eggs." - Larry Fine.
That's a better argument — Fire Ologist
Philosophers have a problem clarifying whether a cat on a matt is really two things, or a thing at all. — Fire Ologist
This post will go nowhere illuminating. — Fire Ologist
It is very difficult to discuss God in any empirical, critical, scientific manner, especially in a forum where many people have no inclination to entertain the notion of "God" seriously. — Fire Ologist
I'm open to the idea that God might exist, and that Jesus might be God. — Arcane Sandwich
Why would I want to show that? — Arcane Sandwich
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