Are you including the philosophical arguments for God in this?
The cosmological argument.
The moral argument for God.
Aquinas's Five ways
The ontological argument
The argument from beauty
The argument from consciousness
The teleological argument — Andrew4Handel
I think it is a straw man to present God in a way that seems easy to disbelieve like portraying God as the Flying Spaghetti monster which ridicules the notion of God so people forget about the more sophisticated arguments like causal role/explanatory Gaps. — Andrew4Handel
No Country For Old Men
— Bradskii
Hated the book so much I wouldn't watch the movie. — T Clark
we are the ones that failed the most historically, consistently pressured to "up our game". — Benj96
My case stands. — Wayfarer
We need to know we are doing good and we don't and possibly can't. If I judged people based on my own moral intuitions it would condemn a lot of human activities which is one reason we need to resolve moral disputes. — Andrew4Handel
Secular humanism is unavoidably conditioned by underlying prejudices, such as the idea that life is a consequence of blind physical laws. — Wayfarer
The only relevance of gods here is that they are attempts at explanations and to some extent causal explanations. — Andrew4Handel
I've often heard Dawkins make comments to the effect that Darwinism is an awful social philosophy. What I haven't heard is any plausible suggestions for an alternative... — Wayfarer
"Intelligent life on a planet comes of age when it first works out the reason for its own existence. If superior creatures from space ever visit earth, the first question they will ask, in order to assess the level of our civilization, is: 'Have they discovered evolution yet?'"
Based on this comment he appears to be asserting that evolution is the only way for life to come into existence. — Andrew4Handel
I call it idealism because it claims that there is some sort of abstract entity in the universe independent of actual phenomena. — T Clark
That is where atheism teams up with evolution and the big bang to claim there is no longer any role for God in reality which I view as faulty and more of a faith position. — Andrew4Handel
I really don’t know what you’re concurring with. Believing laws (or objects) exist without people is not idealism. It’s the opposite of idealism. It’s realism. — Mikie
He clearly has wanted people to accept his model of evolution and the negative ideas found in his books regardless of what else he has said. — Andrew4Handel
How is that idealism? You meant realism, yes? — Mikie
Objects in the unobserved universe have no shape, color or individual appearance, because shape and appearance are created by minds — Charles Pinter, Mind and the Cosmic Order
What is being called into question is the notion of the 'observer-independence' of the objective domain. — Wayfarer
If you can't understand when an argument is refuted discussion is pointless. — Wayfarer
On the contrary, it might have huge impact. If you’re Buddhist, then it affects your conduct and your view of life, and if you’re not, then you might suffer for want of those same principles. — Wayfarer
But the entire philosophical question is about whether everything is determined by physical laws, or is not. That is the question at issue, so your response begs the question - it assumes the point at issue. — Wayfarer
One version of this argument is The Evolutionary Argument against Reality, by Donald Hoffman - particularly apt because it is (purportedly) based on evolutionary theory. It actually ties in with some of what Robert Lanza says (although they're very different theorists.) — Wayfarer
For what it's worth, we know of one person who wrote a play called "Hamlet," but he was born in the 16th century. — T Clark
That's only because you've stipulated the first set of characters, so it's no longer random. — Wayfarer
The existence of time requires the establishment of duration between points in time. That is what is supplied by the mind. You're neglecting or overlooking the way in which your mind is actually involved in constructing what you call 'the objective universe', by imagining it as if you can see it from no point of view whatever. — Wayfarer
The problem with your view is how much it ascribes to chance. Ultimately, you say, stuff just happens, but that is actually not an argument or an explanation. — Wayfarer
As we're into video show-and-tell, here's a presentation by Robert Lanza on 'biocentrism'. I'm not sure how he is regarded in the mainstream - I suspect not highly - but I find his attitude philosophically superior to your common or garden varieties of materialism. — Wayfarer
I feel you, i'm not afraid of death but the only reason a really want to live forever is to see it all happen before my eyes, to be a part of it through the whole ride. — punos
Consider now how human intelligence is beginning to manipulate genetic information. This ability affords us the possibility to move into a new kind of evolution that is more efficient, and purposeful, and also signifies to me the coming of age of our species. Any species that takes control of its own evolution becomes in my view an "adult" or mature species in the universe. — punos
They seem to be the two horns of a dilemma, don't they? I'm familiar with the dogma, but I still say it's a reasonable question, from the perspective of speculative philosophy. — Wayfarer
This is the first dictionary definition I found of belief. Strangely...
"An acceptance that something exists or is true, especially one without proof. — Andrew4Handel
The evidence can guide but might not decide.
There is also the Natural selection arguments for and against belief validity which relates to the other debate. Would we chose to have beliefs that are not advantageous? Some people do come to self eliminating beliefs. Survival of the fittest belief or survival of the most accurate belief? — Andrew4Handel
Well, we'd need to decide how we want it run.
Based on personal subjective preferences — Andrew4Handel
Fair point. I guess the question I’m angling towards is that of whether evolution is directional in nature - whether it tends towards (for instance) creatures with higher degrees of intelligence. I understand that the mainstream view is ‘definitely not’. But then you can ask whether it is a question that is in scope for biology or science at all. What evidence could there be for either the affirmative or negative? It would seem to me to be more a matter of the starting assumptions. — Wayfarer
But the question is how did you come to have the trait of being a good runner? How can something be selected for if it does into already exist. — Andrew4Handel
Did you forget my quote from Darwin himself earlier and if not how does it not invoke value and how do terms like "advantageous" and "fittest" not invoke value judgments? — Andrew4Handel
I do sometimes ponder why evolution didn't simply come to an end with blue-green algae. Heaven knows they proven their ability to survive for near a billion years. — Wayfarer
That story does not explain why the surviving rabbit was able to run faster. It explains why it survived which is a trivial observation. — Andrew4Handel
How we should run a country.
What I should have for tea.
Whether there should be a death penalty — Andrew4Handel