But you really out to put the "syllogism" to a logician...and see what he/she says. — Frank Apisa
Amen...save the nonsense for someone willing to deal with it.
Contact a logician at a local university...and ask him/her to comment on your "syllogism."
You won't like the answer. — Frank Apisa
Not necessarily the object itself, only an appearance in which this property of the relation - the sentimental value - is perceived as a potential loss/lack. That would be sufficient for the feeling. The mind then makes sense of that feeling by attributing it to what is apparently missing - so it’s only at this point that the conceptual object is apperceived (this sequence is evidenced in recent neuroscience - see Lisa Feldman Barrett’s book ‘How Emotions Are Made’).
So without the object being apperceived, it’s not that nothing happens, rather it’s that nothing is understood to happen - except perhaps an unexplained feeling or emotion. — Possibility
For you to suggest the Bible proves in any way that at least one god exists...is totally illogical.
Perhaps you ought to try you second best proof, because your "best proof" fails totally. — Frank Apisa
Does not mean anything. Word salad. What is "logically necessary"? How does it differ from necessary? — tim wood
I am pretty sure there are zero "mathematical, timeless, abstract truths" that describe existence. And if there were - whatever they might be - why would they "transcend physics"? What does transcend physics mean? Does it mean that physics is immanent and laws transcendent? How would that work?
#3 More nonsense. — tim wood
All I need to do to achieve this is to remind you of the philosophy of idealism, in which it is considered that consciousness (mind) is primary and the physical world we find ourselves in is some kind of mental projection, is contingent on the mind and consciousness of the beings who experience it. I know this is a big ask and it's not my personal philosophy. But The cogito accepts this possibility.
I think, therefore there is something.
The something cannot to divorced from the being doing the thinking. — Punshhh
The miracle of the appropriateness of the language of mathematics for the formulation of the laws of physics is a wonderful gift which we neither understand nor deserve.' — Wayfarer
Physics is mathematical, not because we know so much about the physical world, but because we know so little: it is only its mathematical properties that we can discover. For the rest our knowledge is negative.
Consciousness is not necessary in general because there's a (simple) possible world without — that's the (simple) logic. — jorndoe
suppose we might ask the old existential problem, why something, why anything at all? — jorndoe
Are you a Christian? — JerseyFlight
The "historical" account of Jesus...is NOT an historical account of Jesus — Frank Apisa
Be that as it may...how does this account possibly show that at least one god exists? What if everything written is wrong...or interpreted way beyond recognition. — Frank Apisa
John Kennedy was killed in an area with hundreds (perhaps thousands) of eye witnesses...and we have dozens upon dozens of stories about what happened. There are PICTURES and MOVIES of what happened...and we cannot get agreement. But you are willing to take the account of some individuals who lived thousands of years ago...who had a bias and motive to slant things...as (you will excuse the expression) gospel?
C'mon, Amen. — Frank Apisa
Present your single most compelling piece of unambiguous evidence that at least one god exists. Then we can move on to what that god is like...and whether or not various descriptions of it work out. — Frank Apisa
Thank you for continuing here, Amen.
I asked for your #1 piece of unambiguous evidence that a god exists.
Give that a shot. — Frank Apisa
The two most worthless philosophical protocols are Pascal's Wager and Occam's Razor. I do not use them. — Frank Apisa
In a philosophical discussion (or a religious discussion) the use of "belief" is a way of disguising a guess. — Frank Apisa
am sure the people who "believe" there are no gods or who "believe" it is much more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one...can also enumerate them.
None hold any water.
But give me your best one if you want and we can discuss it. — Frank Apisa
suppose you would. Just as I would suppose people who guess the other way would argue that your "beliefs" derive from ignorance. — Frank Apisa
In other words, you are saying that something we do not understand is responsible for something else that we also do not understand. — EricH
You can use logic to analyze the religious texts of the various religions and point out all the impossible assertions & contradictions in the texts. But you cannot use logic to prove or disprove poetic metaphors. — EricH
don't see how you get from natural light, even if it's pure energy, to a superconsciousness people call God — Gregory
Grace is a substance of sorts that presents God to you. Natural light does no such thing as far as I can see. God might be an energy, rarified or whatever. Or he might be all the energy in the world as Spinoza and Teilhard might put it. Or maybe he never existed? — Gregory
the celestial realm is supposed to be filled with God's light, which is grace. I don't see how you get from natural light, even if it's pure energy, to a superconsciousness people call God — Gregory
Why can't God be made of energy? — Gregory
Light is not grace. We are asking for proof of a supernatural order. So you know what that means? — Gregory
The world doesn't need more philosophers or academics, it needs more culturally responsible intellectuals. — JerseyFlight
Can you see that it frightens us and depresses us to realize they are not "higher," that they are not "eternal," that they do not correspond to any transcendent realm — JerseyFlight
agree, these things do exist. You ask, what do they mean? This is a strange question, because you seem to be assuming some extra-dimension to which they correspond? They proceed from man and will die with man. — JerseyFlight
This is not my assumption. — JerseyFlight
Amen, amen! Welcome to TPF — 180 Proof
This is a non-sequitur. "rely on objective reasoning" is your own confusion, false premise. Clearly you have an agenda bent in the direction of some form of supernatural idealism. Plato's desire for a spiritual world is not significant, it is psychologically common and primitive. Bottom line is that human's, in general, cannot handle the contingent nature of reality. I challenge you to be a serious thinker and forgo the temptation to retreat into the comfort of idealism. — JerseyFlight
consciousness is not necessary — jorndoe