↪Frank Apisa
Well you are a true agnostic then. — Devans99
On the other hand, I personally have an urge to try to answer all questions even if the answer is only a probability. — Devans
Why is there something rather than nothing is particularly troublesome. They say even God might not know the answer. — Devans
I would be interested in seeing any evidence against the proposition 'the universe was created'... I can't find any. — Devans
The question of whether or not "the universe" is a "creation" or not...may simply not be answerable — Frank Apisa
I believe the question it is probably not answerable deductively. It might be answered through inductive or empirical routes though. But both of these forms of knowledge are inherently uncertain. In fact there is an argument that most/all of human knowledge is inherently uncertain: we assume we are not brains in vats; we know this inductively only; we cannot prove anything deductively.
So we have to live with the fact that most of our knowledge is of an inductive nature. We base our lives on the principle of induction. So I see no problem with extending its use to address questions like whether the universe was created.
I think I am only doing explicitly what our minds do when we process multiple pieces of inductive evidence for the same proposition... what you call blind guessing is probably a sub-conscious probability analysis. — Devans99
Your one liners will go a lot further here than you suppose. — Frank Apisa
He'll have stiff competition. And no, I'm not referring to Banno. :strong: :grin: — S
We are in agreement there, Devans. Of course, that makes me wonder why you titled this discussion, "God exists, I'll tell you why." — Frank Apisa
It's not my OP. — Devans99
For the record, I would (and have) said the same thing to people who purport to have made probability estimates that show "no gods" or "more likely no gods than gods." — Frank Apisa
So how then do you solve problems that require a meta-analysis? — Devans
For example, we have a proposition for which we have multiple inductive pieces of evidence for and against. How would you go about judging the worthiness of the proposition if it is not using a probability meta-analysis? — Devans
You are kidding yourself, Devans. The fact that you are supposing you have solved a problem that the greatest minds that have ever existed on the planet have not been able to solve. — Frank Apisa
I have not solved the problem of whether there is a God or not... — Devans99
I've just done a probability analysis of whether there is a creator of the universe. — Devans
And you are not pointing out any problems with my analysis so what am I to think? — Devans
↪Frank Apisa
Probability that a creator of the universe exists (I’ve plugged in very conservative estimates this time):
1. Start at 50% / 50% for a unknown boolean proposition
2. The start of time/Big Bang: 50% + 50% * 50% = 75%
3. Fine tuning of the universe for life: 75% + 25% * 50% = 87.5%
4. Why is there something rather than nothing 87.5% + 12.5% * 25% = 90.6%
So a 91% chance of the existence of a creator of the universe.
What exactly am I ‘pretending’ about? Why is it fiction? It looks like a perfectly valid probability analysis to me. It could be more detailed I grant and the actual numbers used are guesstimates but it is still a more refined approach to the problem than just saying 'I don't know'. — Devans99
Any approach that come from "there are no gods" is as absurd in unfounded as the approaches that come from "there is at least one god" or "there has to be a god." — Frank Apisa
The point I'm making is that we know that the statement:
(there are no Gods) OR (there are God(s))
Is true.
One seems to be true. — Devans99
So scientific investigation should allow for both possibilities. There is a heavy inclination towards atheism in science that I feel is biasing the direction of investigation. Hardly anyone puts forward theories that are compatible with God... so there is a chance we are collectively heading up the wrong alley. — devans
↪Frank Apisa
I don't need God. For example, I am very much a humanist, I think that humans should help themselves rather than rely on the possibility of God helping them (see https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/5437/the-eternal-life-company/p1 for example).
But humanist or not, I am still interested in whether there is a God or not and probability is a more enlightening approach that just saying 'I don't know'. — Devans99
↪Frank Apisa
IMO I'm trying to be scientific about it. Also IMO, I don't think science takes a very 'scientific' approach to God:
We don’t know if there is a God or not. No-one can prove anything 100% either way.
So why do (the relevant, mainly cosmology theories) scientific theories always assume that there is no god? Surely if they don’t know, they would be better off assuming both cases (there is no God / there is a God) and developing theories to match both possibilities.
So I think my probabilistic approach that keeps an open mind on the question as to whether there is a God is appropriate. — Devans99
...then your wording should be adjusted to indicate that you are speculating rather than pontificating. — Frank Apisa
I'm sorry if it came over as pontificating; I am definitely not insisting my argument is correct; it goes against intuitiveness on the nature of time for one thing. I'm not sure if my argument is correct or not; all I can do is assign a probability that my argument is correct (having taken into account all the other related evidence). — Devans99
Yes. I think we can conclude if there was a creator, then he would have the following characteristics:
- Timeless
- Powerful
- Benevolent — Devans99
But there is a gulf between the above and the traditional religious view of God. Thinking of God as the creator of the natural laws partially bridges the gap in terms of omnipresence and omnipotence. It does not cover omniscience or omnibenevolence. I'm not sure that the traditional religious view of God is amenable to being tackled with a logical proof. The very idea of omnipotence/omniscience/omnibenevolence seems to fly in the face of logical thinking, — Devans
In some much larger reality...what we humans call "the universe" may be a molecule in an experiment being performed by a kid using a chemistry set. — Frank Apisa
It is an interesting point. When discussing the universe, it is sometimes helpful to use the term 'base reality' to refer to the entirety of everything. Then we can look at creation arguments and say whether they apply to our reality or 'base reality' or both.
Arguments that relate to our universe and our time generally recast as arguments relating to base reality and base reality time with no problem I find. — Devans
You seem determined to suppose "the universe" is fine tuned.
It may not be — Frank Apisa
It's a hotly debated subject. Personally I think both the weak and strong Anthropic principle arguments can be countered. My conclusion is the universe is probably fine-tuned for life. — Devans
There is some interesting stuff being discussed here...but mostly it seems to be an exercise in at least one person INSISTING that his blind guesses about the true nature of the REALITY of existence...HAS TO BE CORRECT — Frank Apisa
I am not insisting that my arguments are correct; I think there is a reasonable probability that my arguments are correct and I'm arguing for them. I maybe wrong. Further debate may bring that out. — Devans99
↪Frank Apisa
I think a logical argument can be made for a similar but distinct question 'Is there a creator of the universe?'. — Devans99
For example, the fine-tuning argument: The universe is fine-tuned for life; there must be a fine tuner. But who fine-tuned the fine-tuner's environment for life? There must be another fine-tuner. This infinite regress terminates with a timeless fine-tuner (IE timeless so beyond cause and effect so does not in itself need creating). — Devans
As to the question of 'Is there a God?'; if the definition of God includes the 3O's then framing a logical argument is more difficult. People sometimes say that the laws of nature possess some or all of the 3O's and then associate the laws of nature with God... — Devans
Can harming other humans ever be justified. (Other than in self defence) — Andrew4Handel
Please tell me your thought on this website:http://godisimaginary.com This does not necessarily represent my opinion or that of anyone else's. However I would love to hear you feedback! I would like to debate on this so if you could reply that would be best. Don't bite off more than you can chew though! — OpinionsMatter
No problem! I had it formatted to green for you as well, but unfortunately when I copied and pasted it didn't stay green. — OpinionsMatter
If you come from the position that harm is unacceptable then that would undermine any justification for harm. — Andrew4Handel
I think once you have reasoned that some harm is acceptable then you undermine the grounds for saying any harm is unacceptable. — Andrew
I think a lot of superstitions are not evidence based anyway. — Andrew
If someone was sacrificed to The Rain God to create rain and that did not create rain that would undermine the justification for the killing — Andrew
Or at least, that apparently is what the Trump administration thinks.
Education Secretary, Betsy DeVos certainly feels okay with that sentiment…even though she was not able to estimate the number of kids who would be impacted by the $18,000,000 in cuts. (272,000 is the number.)
Hey…it was a worthwhile trade-off for the Trump people. The very wealthy got large tax cuts…and the kids, who don't even vote, got screwed.
Sounds like par for the course to me.
I understand that green fonts denote sarcasm in Internet postings.
Don't have font colors here...so, if it is not too much trouble, color this post GREEN!
- Frank Apisa
What does anyone else think of this? — OpinionsMatter
Consent mitigates this situation somewhat. You could argue that desired pain is actually pleasure. — Andrew4Handel
Should we choose culture over reason? — Andrew4Handel
I am thinking more of a reason based assessment. — Andrew
Utilitarian has an issue here. A utilitarian could justify killing one totally innocent healthy person to save a thousand lives. But would you want to be that person? — Andrew
On the other hand if you do accept the death of one person like this what logical grounds do you then have for condemning arbitrary violence. — Andrew
You might contrast this with a boxing match however where there is consensual harm. Someone might accept harm and allow themselves to commit it. But I see that as an endorsement of harm per se. — Andrew
↪Isaac
↪Frank Apisa
I have a paper under review with a journal at the moment. — Devans99
I don't know. I don't understand infinity either. It's just a logical inference. You think that your calculations using infinity are correct. The greatest mathematical minds in the world have not reached the same conclusion as you. You probably haven't understood infinity properly.
I mean... If you have reached a truly world-shattering conclusion like this, then I strongly recommend you publish, and subject it to peer review, an Internet forum is not going to do it justice. — Isaac
I am not a god, if that is what you're asking. :smile: Seriously, of course this is a hopefully engaging theory and not a perfect proven truth.
I wouldn't call it an untestable hypothesis as anyone who is serious enough can test it for themselves by experimenting with managing the volume of thought.
This has already been done many times by many people over many centuries leading to many different flavored explanations. I'm not claiming the wording I choose is somehow superior to anyone else's explanations, it's just the best I can personally do at the moment. My hope is that my choice of words might occasionally succeed at engaging some number of readers who can't connect with other explanations of these phenomena, such as for example, those of a religious flavor. Whether that ever works is debatable, but this is what I know how to do, so I do it.
Getting back on point, I wouldn't suggest anyone simply accept what I'm saying. Even if one did agree completely, that would just be another pile of thought. Instead, if one is interested in any of this conduct your investigation, have your own experience, and if like me you simply have to explain what you find, explain it however you can.
In my view, the rational approach to this is to focus mostly on the experience itself. As example, if one is hungry the rational approach is to eat the food on the table. Explaining the food might come later, if ever. — Jake
Do you mean:
Bolding #1: From my point of view good wording.
Bolding #2: As I understand it, good wording.
Bolding #3: In my personal opinion, oh, my. — T Clark
From my point of view, we aren't separate, a fact which anyone can confirm for themselves with this experiment. Hold your breath for 2 minutes. At the psychological level, almost everything we're thinking, feeling and saying is just content that is absorbed from our cultural surroundings and then regurgitated with our names attached.
As I understand it, the illusion that we are separate is part of the life/death cycle, giving us the will to live etc. It's not a matter of right or wrong, good or bad, it's just the nature of reality, like it or not.
The illusion that we are separate does lead to a great deal of suffering however, so it might be wise for us to try to learn how to manage that illusion to some degree. — Jake
Not argument, just explanation. A tenet of Ignatian spirituality is to see God in all things. When one goes through the Spiritual Exercises, a large part of that process is the ability to become more aware of the presence of God in our every day lives. To those with a predisposition to feel so, this will sound very hokey. But to hundreds of thousands of jesuits that have done the exercises it is very real. They would say all of life is a spiritual experience if you train yourself to be aware of it. Who is to say that they are wrong, or deluded, or anything else, simply because though a different frame a reference one can not understand how such a thing could be. — Rank Amateur
