So if the arguments for a start of time are excepted, presentism is impossible, implying 'more than only now exists'. That sounds a lot like Eternalism. Some of the physicists believe in Eternalism/Spacetime. Einstein famously believed free will was an illusion. — Devans99
Religion is a confusing mess in this area. The omniscient of God requires he knows the future but free will is required in order to send folks to hell. I would not like to be a theologian; very tricky job. — Devans99
To argue for a conclusion that has been decided upon before the argument is a basic logical fallacy. It doesn't matter if it's about convincing an atheist. I would even argue that if your argument is solid, the atheist will definitely take that into account, not to become a believer, but to accept the conclusion since it cannot be countered easily. — Christoffer
So there's no belief to be seen. — Christoffer
My argument is the first cause must be timeless; IE able to see all of time in one go, IE eternalism must apply. That is not really enough to convince people. A start of time also rules out presentism, but again it's quite an abstract argument so I can see why people will not be convinced. — Devans99
Deism is more science friendly than a theism. It's a believe that there was a first cause who created the universe, but is not actively involved in the universe day to day. The first cause does not have unreasonable attributes (like the 3Os). Knowledge is to be found in science rather than ancient scripture. — Devans99
Theists settle with a conclusion and then tries to argue for it. — Christoffer
Claiming that we can't know anything for sure does not render the two equal, one is clearly more fit to scrutiny knowledge over the other. That's just logic. — Christoffer
Atheism is just accepting the world as we know it, as we can know it, nothing more, nothing less. Atheism doesn't need fantasy to explain anything. Relying on fantasy is unnecessarily complicated if we want to understand more about everything. It's like an Occam's razor for perspective. — Christoffer
It's not a belief. Atheism just accepts what we observe, prove and measure to be known, the unknown is fascinating, but there's never a belief like described and not as you describe. Atheists do not just accept data to be reliable, the difference is that theists just conclude that fact with "...and therefore God", which is a lot worse as a rational stance than "we have enough data to have a scientific theory". — Christoffer
I believe that in recent times, we have moved further away from the truth. — Devans99
Still we must keep on trying. — Devans99
So I think for simple questions, it is possible to 'know the mind of God' — Devans99
. It’s not possible to exist permanently in time (an infinite regress; it would have no start so could not be), so the ‘something’ must be a timeless first cause. — Devans99
Faith, as in religion, is a belief is something very specific. Faith in the unknown, or rather a fascination with the unknown is somewhat closer to atheism. — Christoffer
Mexican hat — Devans99
I don't think we have to completely understand intelligence before we can recognise it in other situations — Devans99
So you have a ball balanced on top of a sphere; the symmetry breaks when the ball falls to one side. I would have thought that the 'cause' of the symmetry break is the fact that the ball was slightly off centre to start with? If it was perfect; it would never fall to one side? — Devans99
And I'm not sure how symmetry breaking can create matter. And it does not help if it does because it leads to infinite density. — Devans99
To be an uncaused cause clearly requires an internal driving force / self motivation. That is likely requires some form of intelligence. — Devans99
nothing would logically exist without a first cause. — Devans99
The question of whether the first cause is intelligent or not: — Devans99
If you restrict the definition of God to 'creator of the universe' then there is actually plenty of evidence for such a proposition: — Devans99
We sceptics are asking for evidence of the territory, and you are telling us that the map exists. We aren't asking about the map. If, say, the map is a map of Atlantis, then we are clearly being reasonable by asking for evidence of the territory. And the concept of God is like a map of Atlantis. — S
So what you're saying, in summary, is that you're a troll. — whollyrolling
You can experience genetics by observing their behaviour, and then you can have your findings peer reviewed by a number of critical experts who attempt to vilify your results in some way. — whollyrolling
Please share your brilliant thoughts on how genetics have no place in determining who we become. — whollyrolling
You have so many empty words. — whollyrolling
We are not born a blank slate though, obviously. — whollyrolling
↪Merkwurdichliebe
You are humiliating yourself. — whollyrolling
The same questions aren't being asked within empiricism. — whollyrolling
Everything that has been determined about our surroundings has been through empiricism. Please feel free to explain what philosophy has done for humanity apart from its isolation of wealth as the epitome of knowledge. — whollyrolling
Yes, a key point that is often ignored or glossed over by empiricists is that they are basing their positivism regarding the metaphysical provenance of science on nothing more than personal preference for a mechanistic worldview; and if they rightly try to eliminate the latter, they will indeed be left with, as you say, "absolute doubt or solipsism", since there is no way to get from an empirically eliminativist paradigm to the fullness of human experience. — Janus
The final outcome of empiricism is some possible understanding of things — whollyrolling
Well, you can tell well enough if there's a consensus by looking at the language (from an objective perspective --utterances, text, etc.) folks are associating with their concepts. — Terrapin Station
Well, you can't literally have a collective concept. Concepts are inherently individual, personal. — Terrapin Station
This was supposed to be about the source of morality, remember? There was never any claim that neurobiology can adequately explain morality. It can definitely provide insightful information on the source of morality, and those who are saying that this isn't adequate are just coming across as complacent. — S