Comments

  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    EnPassant
    119

    Ummm...you seem to be talking about a particular God here.

    I'd like to know more about it.

    Could you put a bit of "flesh", so to speak, on it. — Frank Apisa


    Ok, you asked, but as I say I don't want to get into a God debate. Consider this as food for thought.

    I someone says 'I am', superficially, that is the personality or ego speaking: I am a great fellow, I am a celebrity, I am such a cool guy etc.

    But if we can truly say 'I am' in the most meaningful sense of the word, that 'I am' is God because if we say this truly it is being itself speaking. And God is being.
    EnPassant

    There is no way I will get into a "god debate"...so we can take that off the table.

    BUT...I am interested in the God to which you refer in your statement:

    "That might be true if by 'knowing' you mean abstractly knowing. But God is not an abstraction. You don't seem to be talking about God here, you seem to be talking about abstract knowledge of God."

    You did not use the definite or indefinite article...you just used "God."

    Tell me something about that God...several things if you would.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    That might be true if by 'knowing' you mean abstractly knowing. But God is not an abstraction. You don't seem to be talking about God here, you seem to be talking about abstract knowledge of God.EnPassant

    Ummm...you seem to be talking about a particular God here.

    I'd like to know more about it.

    Could you put a bit of "flesh", so to speak, on it.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    Merkwurdichliebe
    477
    ↪Frank Apisa


    In the atheist sense, knowing God exists is as ridiculous as knowing your ethical principles exist. Even if you attempted to prove you held to certain ethical principles, you would need to be eternally tested by every possible moral choice, and you would never prove anything.
    Merkwurdichliebe

    Correct.

    I VERY SELDOM as for proof from a theist of the existence of a GOD. (There is none.)

    In almost any other forum, the moment I realize the individual with whom I am discussing is a committed theist...I bow out. Particularly if the person avers, "I know there is a God." There is nothing to gain...and possibly a bit of self-respect to lose.

    I am deviating (for the nonce) from that here. I expect more of someone who would post on a board dedicated to philosophy.

    We'll see. Don't want to rush to judgement.

    Going to prod and poke...and see what jumps out.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?

    EnPassant...you seem an intelligent fellow.

    Get your error. Get your rationalization.

    You can go far if you drop the pretense.

    Honestly.

    You either KNOW gods exist...or you do not.

    Having those feelings (vague or not so vague) is NOT a substitute for KNOWING.

    There are people right here in this forum who claim to KNOW there are no gods.

    There are people here who claim to KNOW there is at least one.

    It is pitiful to see intelligent people playing these kinds of games.

    It is okay to acknowledge that you do not KNOW if any gods exist...on any plane or in any way.

    It will not harm you.

    Do it.

    Just do it.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    We humans simply do not (perhaps, cannot) know if any gods exist...or if none exist.

    Some of us are willing to acknowledge that simple fact.

    Some of us, however, are so averse to acknowledging it...that pretenses are invented to pretend that one CAN KNOW a god exists...by means other than KNOWING it.

    Anyone pretending to KNOW a god exists (or that no gods exist) by KNOWLEDGE that is little more than vague "feelings that a god exists (does not exist)"...is playing a game with him/herself.

    We do not know.

    Attempting to pretend any of us knows by tortuously mangling the meaning of KNOW...is beneath anyone who wants to discuss things in a philosophy forum.
  • Are causeless effects possible?
    This is a simple question. It's the answer that's difficult.

    Does every effect have a cause, or is it possible for causeless effects to happen?
    Pattern-chaser

    I have no trouble with the answer for me:

    I do not know. Nor do I see any way to determine if it is more likely "Yes than no" or more likely "No than yes."

    I would add: I doubt anyone else knows either.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?

    Anyone using "atheism" as part of a self-descriptor...is doing so because of a guess that there are no gods...or a guess that it is more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one.

    Either guess is a blind guess...absolutely no more science-based or logic-based than the guesses theists make that there is at least one god.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    If you restrict the definition of God to 'creator of the universe' then there is actually plenty of evidence for such a proposition:Devans99

    There is no unambiguous evidence FOR the existence of any kind of god. None whatever.

    There also is no unambiguous evidence that no gods exist.

    Any assertions in either direction are nothing but blind guesses.

    I know...I know...that is difficult for someone making such guesses to acknowledge.

    I suspect that eventually...you will. And you will be the better for it.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    If it's possible that gods are "involved in the reality of existence" then it's possible that the gods inform some people and not others of their existence. Perhaps they speak to those who are open enough to listen. If that were the case, the people to whom the gods speak would know directly, through acquaintance, the existence of the gods. They would not be "blindly guessing", but rather expressing their direct experiential knowledge, when they speak of the existence of the gods.

    Of course the problem is that, in the context of philosophical argumentation, one is expected to produce inter-subjectively convincing arguments to support one's assertions.This is impossible to do regarding god or gods (and no doubt many other things) if your interlocutor has not had the kind of experiences involving god or the gods that you have.

    That is why sensible people who have faith in god or gods don't bother with such paltry arguments and the time-wasting talking-past-the-other that this thread so amply exemplifies.
    Janus

    It is okay for people to blindly guess that gods exist...or that gods do not exist...

    ...and pretend their blind guesses are something other than just blind guesses.

    When hearing that stuff in a forum devoted to philosophy...there is a humorous element.

    Continue with that "faith", "believe", "direct experiential knowledge" stuff. It is not wasted. It provides some humor in a too often stuffy setting.
  • Beyond The God Debate

    Or said another way...

    ...I didn't answer the question because there are no decent answers.

    The epiphany nonsense is nonsense.

    If there is a god that wanted to KNOW it exists...no epiphanies would happen.

    Sorry you were insulted by my question. But considering the question might be a lot more beneficial than reading all those books that lead to your epiphany.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    EnPassant
    104

    We are talking about whether gods exist or not. — Frank Apisa


    No. We are talking about the kinds of arguments for/against God's existence. Those kinds of arguments depend on what is considered to be 'rational'. The question for debate is about why atheists and theists cannot agree on which rationale to use.

    We are not discussing what an orange tastes like...or what it feels like to bang some movie star. — Frank Apisa


    We are talking about what is acceptable as a rationale. What is acceptable is in terms of knowledge. That there is a non rational kind of knowledge is an important point because it shows that things can be known by consciousness alone. People who demand elementary proofs dismiss knowledge that is gained purely by consciousness, yet I have shown that this kind of knowledge exists.
    EnPassant

    Obviously you are one of those people who will never acknowledge "I do not know"...and would prefer to kid yourself with "alternate reality."

    Good luck with that...and with your blind guess.
  • Beyond The God Debate
    Devans99
    1.6k
    ↪Frank Apisa
    God made a single large 'explosion' - the Big Bang - he did not individually go and make each star and planet.

    You do not know the number of stars in the universe...you do not know how many years old the universe is...so it is all bullshit. — Frank Apisa


    Number of stars in observable universe:

    https://www.space.com/26078-how-many-stars-are-there.html
    Devans99

    I said you do not know how many stars there are...and I stand by it.

    Neither does anyone else alive...or who has ever lived.

    As for your link...notice how many times the word "estimated" is used...and what it means. It is being revised as we speak.


    There was breaking news last week of a major revision of the age of the universe.

    Also keep in mind that prior to the early 20th century...scientists supposed they knew the extent of the universe...and found that they had missed the mark by a factor of gazillions.

    You should either refrain from statistics...

    ...or learn to use qualifiers. And the qualifiers should not include "it is basic math."
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    Daniel Cox
    104
    ↪Frank Apisa
    Hi Frank, we know people can be idolized or godded.
    Daniel Cox

    Maybe you do...but I do not.

    I do not even understand what you meant there.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    Pattern-chaser
    980

    I also am someone unwilling to pretend I can calculate probability for things I cannot. — Frank Apisa


    How wise, and how unusual! Most will say, without thinking, (for example) that the probability of the world our senses show us NOT being Objective Reality is 'vanishingly small' or even non-existent. The truth is that, in matters such as this (and there are more of them than you might think), we don't even have a starting point for calculating an actual statistical probability for this. It's refreshing to see at least one other person aware of this. :smile:
    Pattern-chaser

    We are 5 x 5 on this, PC.
  • Beyond The God Debate
    Devans99
    1.6k
    ↪Frank Apisa


    Its just basic math:

    number of stars in universe / number of years universe is old = number of stars God must search a year
    2*10^23 / 1.4*10^10 = 1.4*10^13

    So God must search 1.4*10^13 stars a year in order to find us. That is plain not possible.
    an hour ago
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    Devans99

    You are being a jerk here, Devans.

    If the god could actually make all of that...it could easily search the whole thing in 10 humans seconds.

    And stop with the phony statistics...and pretense at "basic math."

    You do not know the number of stars in the universe...you do not know how many years old the universe is...so it is all bullshit.
  • Beyond The God Debate
    Devans99
    1.6k
    ↪Frank Apisa
    The being just initiated the Big Bang rather than hand creating the universe.

    The universe has only been around for 14 billion years - you cannot search 2*10^23 star systems in 14 billion years - no where near enough time - so there is no way God could have found us.
    Devans99

    Devans...step away from the edge.

    We do not even know if there are any gods...let alone that particular being you are calling God.

    And you are assuming an entity that can create EVERYTHING...and then limiting its ability to find us.

    Stop! You are going to fall off.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    What do you see as wrong or inappropriate about simply acknowledging that we do not know if gods exist or not? — Frank Apisa


    I have already acknowledged that it is not possible to prove it in intellectual terms.
    EnPassant

    Okay...so we are left with "I do not know."


    But is there a kind of knowledge that can be gained in a non intellectual way? — EnPassant

    Could be...but we are not talking about that kind of stuff.

    We are talking about whether gods exist or not.


    Of course there is. The intellect will not tell you what an orange tastes like. You can only know directly, by eating the orange. Likewise with carnal knowledge. Intellect won't enlighten you. These kinds of knowledge about the world can only be known directly. — EnPassant

    We are not discussing what an orange tastes like...or what it feels like to bang some movie star. We are talking about whether gods exist or not...and the evidence atheists supposedly demand.

    If the intellect is concerned only with abstract knowledge then it is confined to a subset of all possible knowledge.

    We are discussing whether gods exist or not, EP.

    WE DO NOT KNOW IF THEY DO OR IF THERE ARE NONE.

    Why is that so difficult for you?
  • Beyond The God Debate
    Devans99
    1.6k

    You are suggesting a God who could create the planet Earth, the other planets in the Solar System, the Sun, the 200+ billion stars in our galaxy...and the 300+ billions of other galaxies we know of...

    ...and it cannot do something as simple as contact us???? — Frank Apisa


    I'm saying I cannot think how. For starters, how would God ever find us amongst the 2*10^23 stars in the observable universe?

    If you can think how, please tell...
    Devans99

    If there is a being that could create the entire of what we puny humans call "the universe"...which may well be just a tiny part of a much, much greater "verse"...it could find us the way we can find our car keys in the morning.

    Look in the refrigerator.
  • Beyond The God Debate
    Devans99
    1.6k

    ..why would the GOD continue to make it so difficult to KNOW its existence to people who are relatively sophisticated, relatively knowledgeable, less superstitious now? — Frank Apisa


    God has no way of communicating his existence to us - the universe is billions of light years in size - how could we expect God to possibly communicate to us?
    Devans99

    You are suggesting a God who could create the planet Earth, the other planets in the Solar System, the Sun, the 200+ billion stars in our galaxy...and the 300+ billions of other galaxies we know of...

    ...and it cannot do something as simple as contact us????

    C'mon.

    Can you think of a way that God could communicate to us (assuming non-omnipresence)? — Devans

    Yes.

    - Messages in the sky look different from different angles, would be destroyed in the BB in any case
    - Messages encoded in the standard model might upset a delicate balance

    God is aware that life exists in the universe but not aware of our presence on earth in any specific sense IMO.

    Are you thinking the only way would be by writing a message in the sky?
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    EnPassant
    102

    One cannot arrive at any of these four things (to follow) using logic, reason, science or math:

    1) There is at least one GOD.
    2) There are no gods.
    3) It is more likely that there is at least one GOD than that there are no gods.
    4) It is more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one. — Frank Apisa


    That is exactly what I'm saying. It is not possible. So we need to reason it out using a broader definition of 'reason'. The rationale of science is primitive so we need a looser language more appropriate to the task.
    EnPassant


    What do you see as wrong or inappropriate about simply acknowledging that we do not know if gods exist or not?

    IF people inclined toward "there are no gods" do as you suggest "...reason it out using a broader definition of 'reason'..."...they will come up with "there are no gods." And if someone inclined toward "there is at least one GOD" do it...they will come up with "there is at least one GOD."

    You do not need a "looser language more appropriate to the task." You need to accept that we cannot know...have no unambiguous evidence...

    ...and can only make a blind guess about it.

    Which is what I have been arguing all along.
  • Beyond The God Debate
    Wayfarer
    7.2k

    why would the GOD continue to make it so difficult to KNOW its existence to people who are relatively sophisticated, relatively knowledgeable, less superstitious now? — Frank Apisa
    Wayfarer

    I hope you eventually answer my question.

    Sorry, but I very seldom view videos posted to me.
  • Beyond The God Debate
    Wayfarer
    7.2k

    I would phrase it that most of the time we don't think things through for ourselves but rather reference some authority, typically some slice of the group consensus. — Jake


    I went through a strong rejection phase against any form of organised religion and what I saw as 'consensus reality'. But my views have softened, because I have begun to appreciate the vast diversity and depth of the Christian tradition. It encompasses all kinds of perspectives, some dogmatic and brutal, others refined and nuanced.

    Second, and I'm certainly not claiming any attainments, I have had epiphanies of sorts at various times of my life. Of course the implications of these are extremely hard to communicate, and I find that when I try to do so, I'm often completely misunderstood. But I make the point because I think such episodes have opened up perspectives about these questions which cast them in a new light.

    A somewhat tongue-in-cheek illustration: imagine if you were from a world where there was no sound. Everything was communicated visually. You mount an interstellar mission and land on earth, and happen to fetch up in a concert theatre, where an orchestra is playing. What in heaven are these people doing? you would wonder. What are those things they're holding, what purpose do they serve? If you were an anthropologist, you could even come up with an ornate theory about the visual meaning of their actions - look how well synchronised their movements are! But of course without understanding the nature of sound, you would have no idea.

    So, interpreting the 'nature of religious experience' is analogous to this. Often when you read of such things, what you're encountering is a second-hand account of an epiphany. But the person who has that epiphany might see something or understand something quite outside ordinary experience - another dimension of experience altogether. 'What "dimension"?', you might demand. But without an inkling of that experiential dimension, you can only conjecture. 'Oh well, she's making it up', is quite an understandable reaction.

    You could argue that a great deal of what is put under the umbrella term of 'religion' are the records of just such 'encounters with the numinous'. But then when they're encoded in symbolic form, they become like a two-dimensional depiction of a three-dimensional object. So something becomes lost. And now, with the incredibly rapid transformation of culture and society - we are living through the greatest rate of change that the planet has ever seen - the original intent or meaning of these symbolic forms is now almost entirely lost. So maybe what you're engaged in, is a kind of 'reimagining' of what the original intuition was before it became encoded in the cultural tropes of what we now see as 'religion' (as I myself have devoted a lot of time to.)

    To which end, have a read of John Hick's 'who or what is God?'

    There are numerous extensive and intensive methods of observing reality and describing its contents and its laws, yet no god or grand cause has ever been demonstrated. — whollyrolling


    What you're not seeing here, is that the 'extensive and intensive methods' you're referring to, are those of modern science, which was defined in such a way as to specifically exclude any ideas of first, final or formal causes. The whole point of modern scientific method is to proceed wholly in terms of what can be empirically observed, quantified and explained in line with current physico-mathematical hypotheses. So while it may be true that Devans99 exhibits confirmation bias in his arguments, this is no less the case for yourself, who is essentially arguing from the general perspective of positivism.
    Wayfarer

    A question, if I may:

    If a GOD exists...especially one that sought to "reveal" itself to an ancient, relatively unsophisticated, unknowledgeable, relatively superstitious people...

    ...why would the GOD continue to make it so difficult to KNOW its existence to people who are relatively sophisticated, relatively knowledgeable, less superstitious now?

    If the GOD exists...and wants humans to KNOW of its existence...

    ...why not "reveal" itself in a totally unambiguous way?

    Why should people have to go through what you went through to derive this communication?

    Why the need for an epiphany...when absolute certainty could easily be given by the GOD?
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    EnPassant
    101

    .I am speaking what I suppose to be the truth.

    I mean you no disrespect. But I will speak what I see to be the truth. — Frank Apisa


    Ok, we are on the same page now. The question of theism/atheism is not for want of 'evidence' if we adhere to the simplest definition of evidence: everything that is there. The universe and everything in it.
    EnPassant

    Thank you, EP.

    I agree with that last part. I try always to qualify my comments about "evidence" with the word "unambiguous."

    EVERYTHING is evidence...but whether it is evidence that at least one god exists...or that no gods exist...is the question.

    What is this evidence for? Theists and atheists differ in this respect because 'evidence for' is subjective. What to do?

    The only way forward is to form arguments about what the evidence seems to suggest. Theists argue for the Fine Tuning Argument. Atheists counter this with the multiverse etc.

    Theists argue for design in the natural world. Atheists try to explain the appearence of design as an illusion and try to replace it with elaborate arguments concerning random mutations etc.

    Which arguments are most coherent and have most explanatory power? That is the only level the debate can proceed on.
    — EnPassant

    Slight disagreement here.

    I would word it: Is it possible to determine if the arguments favored by theists are stronger than the arguments favored by atheists...or the other way around.

    And my answer to THAT question always comes up: There is absolutely, positively no logical way to decide.

    One cannot arrive at an of these four things (to follow) using logic, reason, science or math:

    1) There is at least one GOD.
    2) There are no gods.
    3) It is more likely that there is at least one GOD than that there are no gods.
    4) It is more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    Devans99
    1.6k

    What I am, Devans...is a person willing to acknowledge I do not know the things I do not know — Frank Apisa


    I wonder though that the 'I do not know attitude' is the only valid attitude to take? If everyone had that attitude then we would not progress so fast I think. Not saying there is anything wrong with that attitude, it is valuable to have neutrally positioned people in on the discussion. But I feel we also need people to champion certain ideas else we will not make much progress - ideas are the live blood of progress.
    Devans99

    Okay, think that. But I think the reason for most progress...is the acknowledgement that we do not know. If scientists thought they knew everything...there would be no progress.

    So we differ on that.

    So in summary, I am sticking to my guns about a first cause, a start of time etc... and I have a good justification for doing so.

    I expected that.

    And I, and several others here, will continue to disagree with you.
  • Assange
    Janus
    7k

    NOTHING trivial about it. In this case, legal battles will be fought both in the UK and the US. If you are going to consider the fact that something has happened to be trivial in determining whether or not it CAN happen...you are missing the point. — Frank Apisa


    I have no idea why you would say I am missing the point. It is trivially true that whatever happens can happen. For me the point is that if whatever happens that is sanctioned by governments and judicial authorities is defined as what is legal, and yet what happens in one instance might not be the same as what happens in another identical instance, whether it is determined by negotiation between the same countries in both instances or between different countries altogether, then it would seem that what is legal is not something fixed by principles of justice at all, but something determined by power and influence. If you feel satisfied with that and supportive of it, then that is your business. personally I find it quite repugnant.
    Janus

    If you double down and continue to suppose the laws and decisions of a nation are trivial...not much I can do about it.

    So continue to think that. It is an absurd thought as you would discover if you defied those laws and decisions. And of course they are determined by power and influence. That is what people are elected to do...to decide what is legal and what is not so that civilization can thrive. Otherwise everyone would do what they want when they want...and there would be chaos and anarchy.

    I do not do "believing"...but if you are asking if it is my opinion that the US government would accept that...under certain circumstances, I do, indeed. — Frank Apisa


    What is the difference between believing that something is so, and being of the opinion that something is so?
    — Janus

    Use of the word "believe." I do not use that word. Most of the times it doesn't matter, but there are times when it does, so I simply do not use it. I do not do "believing." If I am making a guess, or offering an opinion or estimate...I use the words "guess", "opinion", or "estimate."

    The laws of the UK will determine that. And I expect the US to accept the decision of the UK courts. — Frank Apisa


    Well, that is trivial too. What other options but acceptance do you think the US would have? Trade sanctions? Declaring war?
    — Janus

    Well I guess any country could...and I am sure some countries have declared war.

    I doubt that would happen here.

    If the UK decides they will not extradite Assange to the US...the US will almost certainly, reluctantly, accept that decision.

    Of course all these matters are power plays, not examples of some fine principle of justice at work. We may not be able to do much about what goes on at the highest levels of international power relations, but we don't have to like it!

    I do not care whether you like it or hate it, Janus. It is my opinion that whether you like it or not...is trivial.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    Devans99
    1.6k

    Why should it be blind guess? — EnPassant


    Frank is a committed agnostic I think. He denies the validity of empirical and theoretical evidence of a first cause. He also denies we can use probability to induce the existence of God.

    I think maybe Frank with his reluctance to trust empirical and theoretical evidence is borderline solipsist...
    Devans99

    What I am, Devans...is a person willing to acknowledge I do not know the things I do not know. And I also am someone unwilling to pretend I can calculate probability for things I cannot.

    Give it a try. It won't hurt.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    EnPassant
    99
    EnPassant: Truth is a vision of the world as it really is. This vision comes from God. This is what, in some religions, is called enlightenment.

    Is it a blind guess...pretending to be something more? — Frank Apisa


    It is my understanding of the world. It is far from a blind guess.

    And since it is dependent entirely on a blind guess that there is a "god"...why should it be given any more consideration than one would any other blind guess? — Frank Apisa


    Why should it be blind guess? Do you think all theists are stupid or guessing things out of thin air? Don't you think people put a lot of thought into philosophy and religion? Philosophers don't proceed according to blind guesses, they think and if they believe in God it is because their thinking has convinced them. From a philosophical point of view belief is a conviction with a lot of thought behind it, not a blind guess.

    And yet, in the context of debate, this looks a lot like an ad hominem, a personal attack. Such approaches have a long and wholly unsuccessful history within debating circles. When applied to humans, they are counter-productive, in terms of the debate. No point. — Pattern-chaser


    Thank you.
    EnPassant

    No problemo, EnPassant.

    You are allowed to blindly guess there is a god...and call that blind guess a "belief"...and suppose it came from thought and reflection and is not a blind guess.

    There is absolutely no ad hominem attack intended.

    Just as you are speaking what you suppose to be the truth...

    ...I am speaking what I suppose to be the truth.

    I mean you no disrespect. But I will speak what I see to be the truth.
  • Beyond The God Debate
    Devans99
    1.6k
    ↪Frank Apisa
    I'm not sure what are you implying?
    Devans99

    Just busting chops, Devans.

    The word "movement" has lots of meanings.

    My thought after reading your post went to the euphemism, BM...initialization of "bowl movement."

    No nastiness meant.

    To me it was a humorous thought. I laughed...and then shared it.
  • Beyond The God Debate
    Devans99
    1.6k
    ↪Terrapin Station
    Everything is moving apart from everything else so everything must have once been one. We have evidence of this from the redshifts of galaxies and the CMB radiation.

    Even the leading multiple universe theory (eternal inflation) posits afirst movement.
    Devans99

    First movement!

    Gotta be Freudian!
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    Shamshir
    18
    I will tell you God exists, but I will ask what does it matter?

    Before the discovery of gold, gold existed, though it was not evident.
    Now by the same characteristics, I say God exists - because it is possible.

    But of course, it is not evident - and as the word would imply, that means there is no evidence to showcase. One is just left with the notion of God, unsure what to do with it.
    God being nonevident - is like trying to point out water, fully submerged in it.
    I cannot point out the water from within just as I cannot look at my own eyes; but I may be aware.

    Even so, what does it matter?
    Shamshir

    Shamshir...what would it matter if you took the more logical step of saying, "I have no idea if any gos exist or not?"
  • The right to die
    Txastopher
    168

    Listen, T...because Kant says something does not mean it is so. — Txastopher


    It doesn't matter who said it. What matters are his arguments.
    Txastopher

    Just shakes head...and leaves!
  • Beyond The God Debate
    Terrapin Station
    8.6k

    Everything is put in motion by something else. — Devans99


    There's no way to know whether that's the case or not.
    Terrapin Station

    Exactly.
  • Beyond The God Debate
    Terrapin Station
    8.6k
    ↪Frank Apisa


    There are proofs in the sense of:

    (1) If P, then there is a first cause.
    (2) P
    (c) Therefore, there is a first cause.

    Which goes to show us just how much value proofs are.
    Terrapin Station

    If you want to continue to claim something as a proof...that OBVIOUSLY is not a proof...
    ...nothing can be done about that except to call the error to your attention.

    I've done that.
  • Beyond The God Debate
    What I'm claiming is:

    - there are many proofs that a first cause exists
    Devans99

    There are absolutely NO PROOFS that a first cause exists.

    NONE WHATSOEVER.

    You keep claiming that...but it simply is not so.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    EnPassant
    98

    People are willing to have a meaningful discussion with you, EnPassant, but you are averse to it — Frank Apisa


    Not at all. What do you want to discuss within the context of the thread?
    EnPassant

    Okay...your comment:

    Truth is a vision of the world as it really is. This vision comes from God. This is what, in some religions, is called enlightenment.

    What is that supposed to be?

    Is that revelation of a truth you obtained from on-high?

    Is it a blind guess...pretending to be something more?

    And since it is dependent entirely on a blind guess that there is a "god"...why should it be given any more consideration than one would any other blind guess?

    Admittedly, all questions. But...I will respond to whatever you offer in response.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    Pattern-chaser
    974

    This is what humans with a functioning brain call "bullshit." — Frank Apisa


    And yet, in the context of debate, this looks a lot like an ad hominem, a personal attack. Such approaches have a long and wholly unsuccessful history within debating circles. When applied to humans, they are counter-productive, in terms of the debate. No point.
    Pattern-chaser

    My point was a counter to what EnPassant wrote:

    "Truth is a vision of the world as it really is. This vision comes from God. This is what, in some religions, is called enlightenment."

    It was meant to be a snarky, sarcastic counter-point to what I consider nonsense.

    Apologies!
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    EnPassant
    97

    This is what humans with a functioning brain call "bullshit." — Frank Apisa


    This is what I call meaningless rhetoric designed to avoid proper discussion.
    EnPassant

    More bullshit!

    People are willing to have a meaningful discussion with you, EnPassant, but you are averse to it...which is probably why you refer to it as "proper" discussion.

    There may be gods involved in the REALITY of existence...but there is no way to know if there are or not...and allowing people like you to propose that their blind guesses have to be true makes no sense.

    There is nothing wrong with you blindly guessing there is a GOD...just as there is nothing wrong with others blindly guessing there are no gods. But in the end...all we have are BLIND GUESSES.
  • Why do atheists ask for evidence of God, when there is clearly no such evidence?
    EnPassant
    96

    And I hate vague religious-sounding talk with little or no clear meaning. The way I see it, it's your responsibility to be clear, not my responsibility to keep asking what the heck you're talking about. — S


    The intellect cannot discern spiritual truth. Truth must come to us from God. The world is filled with human patterns. These patterns are not ultimately real, they are ephemeral. The true pattern of the world is spiritual. Truth is a vision of the world as it really is. This vision comes from God. This is what, in some religions, is called enlightenment.
    EnPassant

    This is what humans with a functioning brain call "bullshit."
  • The right to die
    Txastopher
    167

    You made a claim to me earlier. I challenged you to show where that claim is written or promulgated. — Frank Apisa


    Oh, because some German philosopher said so.

    Listen, T...because Kant says something does not mean it is so.

    In any case, if YOU think one enjoys rights only if first able to identify a "corresponding duty"...defend that proposition...or identify it as a preference...NOT A DUTY.
    Txastopher
  • Assange
    Janus
    7k
    ↪Frank Apisa
    It's trivially obvious that if Assange is indicted by the US, then he can be indicted by the U S. The question is as to whether that indictment is just and in accordance with international law and general international agreements, or whether it is being, despite those laws and agreements, facilitated by US croneys.
    Janus

    NOTHING trivial about it. In this case, legal battles will be fought both in the UK and the US. If you are going to consider the fact that something has happened to be trivial in determining whether or not it CAN happen...you are missing the point.

    Do you think that if there were a Russian or Chinese investigation or an investigation by any country you care to name, that US citizens who had never been in the country in question could be indicted by that country? — Janus

    Yes. Definitely.


    Do you believe the US government would accept that?

    I do not do "believing"...but if you are asking if it is my opinion that the US government would accept that...under certain circumstances, I do, indeed. The circumstances and treaties would dictate it, but "yeah" they might.

    In any case, I think the US authorities expect the UK to extradite Assange to the US for a trial. That may happen...and it may not. The laws of the UK will determine that. And I expect the US to accept the decision of the UK courts.