If by "theories" you mean explanations of how states of affairs change or formal abstractions work, then I don't think "religions qualify as theories". — 180 Proof
But what about the claims of religions, are those incompatible, or are you unsure? — Hallucinogen
Usually. No. — 180 Proof
They have the same function (re: pacifying false fears with false hopes) — 180 Proof
their contents may be "incompatible" like e.g. 'styles of art' or 'varieties of medicines' or 'tribal/territorial identities' throughout history and across cultures. — 180 Proof
Would this be religious pluralism? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Indifferentism is used to describe the non-committal belief that no one religion is better than any other — Count Timothy von Icarus
I am not sure if there is a specific sub-type of religious pluralism that specifies that all religions are epistemologically disjunc — Count Timothy von Icarus
"Action or conduct indicating belief in, obedience to, and reverence for a god, gods, or similar superhuman power; the performance of religious rites or observances." — Oxford Dictionary
It's still missing the premise that asserts that there exists something which is TTWNGCBC — Michael
1. If there exists something which is TTWNGCBC then this thing necessarily exists
2. God is defined as TTWNGCBC — Michael
1. If there exists something which is the greatest conceivable vampire then this thing necessarily exists
2. Dracula is defined as the greatest conceivable vampire
3. Therefore, Dracula exists
The conclusion doesn't follow. I'd need as a premise that the greatest conceivable vampire exists. — Michael
How does 2 differ from 3? — Michael
If some X is TTWNGCBC, then X necessarily exists
God is an X.
Therefore, God (necessarily) exists. — Hallucinogen
1. If there exists something which is TTWNGCBC then this thing necessarily exists
2. If there exists something which is TTWNGCBC then this thing is God
3. There exists something which is TTWNGCBC
4. Therefore, God (necessarily) exists.
But 3) is an empirical claim that needs to be shown. It's not something that's true a priori. — Michael
Then the argument is:
1. If there exists something which is TTWNGCBC then this thing necessarily exists
2. If there exists something which is TTWNGCBC then this thing is God
3. Therefore, God (necessarily) exists — Michael
Which again is invalid. — Michael
You're misunderstanding the logic. Look at existential quantification. — Michael
1. If there exists something which is TTWNGCBC then this thing necessarily exists
2. If there exists something which is TTWNGCBC then this thing is God
3. If there exists something which is God then this thing necessarily exists
4. Therefore, God (necessarily) exists — Michael
If some X is TTWNGCBC then X necessarily exists
If some X is TTWNGCBC then X is God
If some X is God then X necessarily exists
Therefore, God (necessarily) exists
This is what the argument amounts to. The conclusion is a non sequitur. — Michael
a) If some X is TTWNGCBC then X necessarily exists — Michael
Given 4), replace "TTWNGCBC" with "God:
b) If some X is God then X necessarily exists — Michael
1. If TTWNGCBC existed contingently, then there would be something greater than it (viz. a version of TTWNGCBC that existed necessarily).
2. Nothing is greater than TTWNGCBC.
3. Therefore, TTWNGCBC exists necessarily.
4. TTWNGCBC is God.
5. Therefore, God is necessarily existent. — Epicero
Your argument appears to be:
1. If God exists then God necessarily exists
2. Therefore, God (necessarily) exists — Michael
Why would this topic of "being given existence but only for a limited time" "only a problem for ... atheists"? — 180 Proof
It seems only a problem for the believer who expects there to be more to life and nature than this life — 180 Proof
As a philosopher how do you reconcile these two seemingly contradictory notions of being given existence but only for a limited time? Does it not sometimes make one feel powerless or at worst nihilistic in the face of it? — invicta
Strawman fallacy.
Because you allowed it. You should have repeated your original argument, not entertain a strawman. — L'éléphant
Some radical circularity here. The "law" is discovered by the repeated failure to produce perpetual motion machines, etc. The law doesn't prove anything about the world but contrarywise, the world proves the law. And there is a built in contradiction; if energy cannot be created how come there is energy? Laws have a scope; and energy is conserved in the universe; how energy got to be in the universe is necessarily beyond the scope of the conservation law. — unenlightened
Is atheism then a concern of theists only, and atheists concerned only with refuting the theist conception of God? — Ciceronianus
I don't feel the need for math (fields) to explain/discuss religion — Agent Smith
unless [ math ] clarifies the matter (...) That's all there is to omnipresence. — Agent Smith
In a universe consisting of 2 points, a god that's omnipresent is in both points. — Agent Smith
and you insist that He's in hell too — Agent Smith
The field F itself is analogous to God, the elements a and b are analogous to any objects or locations therein, and the operations + and × are analogous to the means of interaction and relation between elements. Calling God omnipresent therefore is asserting that God is the field under which all elements that exist are closed and interrelated.a field is a set F that is a commutative group with respect to two compatible operations, addition and multiplication, with "compatible" being formalized by distributivity (...) Closure of F under addition and multiplication F or all a, b in F, both a + b and a × b are in F (or more formally, + and × are binary operations on F).
No I am not saying that. Did you not read the comment directly above? I just said Hell is in God. I’m not using a definition of God that makes it inconsistent with being in Hell, you are. I told you to explain why my God is inconsistent with Hell, not yours. You even saidThe inconsistency is that God can't be in hell and you're saying He is — Agent Smith
You were meant to explain why my God is inconsistent. Now you switch misleadingly by replying as if you are arguing against your definition of God.If it were true it would make your god is everywhere inconsistent, oui? — Agent Smith
No I did not. That is what you just did. I never replied to you as if I believed God can’t be in Hell.Then you changed tack - you now claim hell is in god — Agent Smith
It is no less supported than your own assertion that God can’t be in Hell. Besides, you haven’t given any reason why my definition of Hell/omniprescence is unsupported, especially since you seem to be avoiding arguing against it and prefer to switch to your own definition to argue against, even when you’re told to do the opposite.you now claim hell is in god (unsupported conclusion) — Agent Smith
If it were true it would make your god is everywhere inconsistent, oui? — Agent Smith
God being everywhere is inconsistent with hell, as I already explained. — Agent Smith
Why is my formulation of hell false? — Agent Smith
In my universe, possible means consistent although not necessarily true à la scientific hypotheses. — Agent Smith
Omnipresence is consistent with god being in all worlds, but not in hell. There are only 2 kinds of beings in hell - those who hurt and those who hurt and god can't be either of them for He is sinless. — Agent Smith
However, omnipresence has a specific definition as far as I know and from that definition, your argument is a non sequitur. — Agent Smith
Coming to your belief being a possibility, one among many others, to my reckoning, no contradiction is entailed. — Agent Smith
As for it being necessarily true, I have my doubts (vide supra). — Agent Smith
You mean to say god's everywhere doesn't entail a contradiction in any world? But it does in our world (the problem of evil). What about the omnipotence paradox? — Agent Smith
God is in Heaven, but it doesn't mean He isn't anywhere else, especially if He is omnipresent.I thought "Our God in heaven" for a good reason. — Agent Smith
What contradiction? — Agent Smith
As for possibility, I used the standard definition - isn't or doesn't entail a contradiction. — Agent Smith
Why do you think so?but of course it's too obvious to mention why omnipresence is much less defensible that God existing in some possible world. — Agent Smith
Why can't God be present in Hell? If he built the place it doesn't seem as if there'd be a repulsive force barring any future interaction with it.Clearly, God, a fortiori, can't be in hell, a legit possible world. — Agent Smith
I was also using the standard definition. I didn't say that you were in contradiction, though. Only that if God exists anywhere, He already exists everywhere, in all "worlds", and this encompasses the very law by which "possibility" is generated.As for possibility, I used the standard definition - isn't or doesn't entail a contradiction. As far as I could tell, your statements didn't imply one and hence my reply "possible". — Agent Smith
Yes.Are you saying there's no alternative other than to accept your statements i.e. to reject your position entails a contradiction? Please clarify. — Agent Smith
You made a claim and it seems possible. How did I miss the point and I couldn't possibly be begging the/any question because ... — Agent Smith
"Possible" presumes a relation or syntax in which that which is possible is distinctly identified and related to the rest of reality. God by definition would subsume the whole of that reality by dint of omnipresence, so if your conception entails God existing in any part, God by definition subsumes the whole. — Hallucinogen
↪Hallucinogen
Yep, that's something that seems possible. — Agent Smith
In a true democracy the government should serve (all) the people, so we have a system where the people are the master and the government the servant (not derogatory). — TheMadMan