I'm saying that we wouldn't be able to use the donkey logic at all, but we reliably can, and that would indicate that our logic is not faulty. If the logic is faulty then why would one be able to use that logic to come to correct conclusions? And if you are saying faulty logic would have no effect on our ability to form arguments then why would there be an issue for the arguments applied to God? — ToothyMaw
But if we can confirm that the appropriate application of logic always leads to correct outcomes, or almost always, then why do we have reason to doubt its integrity? — ToothyMaw
If the logic still can be used to describe reality, is it even faulty? — ToothyMaw
If the logic didn't work, we wouldn't be able to combine the separate statements that donkeys are both small and gray to describe a donkey. The logic is just as necessary to the donkey example as the fact that they are indeed observably small and gray. If God had changed the rules of logic in such a way as to make the combined statement about donkeys false, we would not be able to use the donkey logic to come to any conclusions about donkeys or other things at all. But we can - merely with the premises that donkeys are small and gray.
If I'm wrong on this one, someone who knows more about logic correct me, please. — ToothyMaw
For instance, if we can verify the claim that donkeys are small separately from the claim that they are gray to come to the conclusion that they are indeed both small and gray, then we know that the statements "donkeys are small", and "donkeys are gray" are non-contradictory.
That might seem pretty basic, but it demonstrates that we have a means of knowing if God has made two logical statements contradictory. — ToothyMaw
Sounds sort of fun. To live powerless for a while and allow others have the power and then resume control when needed - for example when there is too much abuse of his/her power and to restore the natural balance of things — Benj96
He could make any two contradictory things possible at the same time if he so desires. — ToothyMaw
I can imagine a scenario wherein my thoughts are not mine — Tom Storm
Not really, unless God were threatening me with death, or an eternity of damnation for defying him. — ToothyMaw
Then we have to accept that God is an insane asshole that actually believes that serial rapists should not be punished except when caught? — ToothyMaw
Then everything ethical and just is absolutely arbitrary. Or we don't need God. Read this for clarification.
My garden? Not because I say so, but because I can justify it. I built it, planted it, and tilled it. If you can justify why it is yours, perhaps you can have it. — NOS4A2
I find language is often underestimated! Maths is good in its domain for sure, but I think true understanding only comes from the clarity of a well constructed sentence.
It is important, therefore , to analyse words like ‘to be’, ‘to cause’ and ‘to mean’ to see what they’re really getting up to! — invizzy
What's your take on how gravity work? Newton famously confessed his ignorance (hypothesis non fingo) in re how mass attracted mass. Albert Einstein came along, 3 centuries later, and explained the mechanism viz. that mass warps spacetime. — Agent Smith
the discovery of a mechanism of causation — Agent Smith
The electron cloud (?) represents, if anything, our ignorance. A particle can't be in two places at the same time, period! When someone's lost, his/her location is a fuzzy circle centered on his last known position, but that doesn't imply s/he is everywhere within that circle. Off-topic? The devil made me do it! — Agent Smith
I have explained why the ethical basis for the proposition is consistent with everyday human ethics and why we can make similar decisions about the things we do in this regard. — Graeme M
In addition to future generations possibly viewing us as savages for eating meat, future generations could possibly view us as savages for aborting fetuses (if public opinion will eventually take a sharply anti-abortion turn) or, alternatively, for refusing to give unwilling male parents a unilateral opt-out from paying child support. — Xanatos
The idea is that physical sensation or matter is how consciousness seems when viewed from a particular perspective — Tom Storm
Blame Descartes. If the source of all certainty is "I think therefore I am", then all there is, is what I think. — Banno
Those with whom I have discussed this issue suppose that one infers the existence of other minds from one's experience. But then, if we can do that, why not infer the existence of three-tonne boulders on that same basis? — Banno
The reason why you think 0.9 is rational is because you believe it equals 1, which is indeed a rational number. — keystone