So, you're not really trying to understand Someone's argument. You are just looking for excuses to dismiss it. You came looking for a non-existent so-called "logical fallacy" rhetorical magic wand to wave at it and make it disappear. — T Clark
Metaphysical naturalism says there are no supernatural phenomena. Scientific methodological naturalism says only that science is not capable of examining supernatural phenomena. — T Clark
"But if God doesn't exist, who wrote the laws of physics?" This is analogous to asking: if Santa didn't put the toys under the tree, then who did? In the case of the toys, it was Dad. In the case of the laws of physics, opinions vary. God is in the line-up but is only one suspect out of several mentioned in this thread. — Cuthbert
If Someone failed to provide an argument that will convince you, there's little chance I will. I think how he expressed it is better than I can do it. — T Clark
You don't seem to grasp the distinction between methodological and metaphysical naturalism — T Clark
No, I'm saying his imposition of natural vs supernatural makes no difference to the argument. I am not disagreeing at all with what they mean. I even said at least once that I'm letting him decide what they mean.Seems to me that any confusion comes from disagreements on the meanings of several words - natural vs. supernatural, — T Clark
"That's baloney." His reason? You've mistaken science for metaphysics. — T Clark
Definitions of words are established by humans based on a consensus of usage. There are good and bad definitions, but no true or false ones. — T Clark
Yours is a bad definition if for the only reason that no one else will know what you're talking about. — T Clark
That is not a standard definition of "reality." — T Clark
Passing wind may convey information as may a million other non-linguistic events. — Baden
No nothing went over my head. You were pointing out something in agreement with what I originally stated, which was:The analogy just went over your head. I understand letting children suffer would be an injustice - thus I pointed it out. — ToothyMaw
When you responded asking whether we should "allow children to suffer so we can test them?", I had therefore already answered this question in the comment I made you were responding to. So I don't know which analogy you think I missed, if it isn't the comparison you made between people's responsibility to intervene and God's responsibility to intervene, which I've pointed out isn't a correct comparison.We have free will and it is our responsibility to create just outcomes in society. — Hallucinogen
Yes that's definitely correct, and I didn't assert at any point such a dependency of our responsibility to intervene on God's unfathomability.If we allow those whose condition we have control over to suffer, then we are guilty for not preventing that suffering, no matter how, as I have had to point out many times in this thread, unfathomable God is — ToothyMaw
This is just you repeating that you think God is responsible for creating justice among humans, when I've already pointed out this is our responsibility which you haven't countered, as well as you assuming that God doesn't create justice in heaven in rectification for that earthly suffering. God has power over the destination of person's spirit, which is the reason why allowing suffering in the material realm does not make God unjust, as he can rectify this in heaven, according to the suffering someone suffered.Then God is even more culpable than the parent who lets their child suffer, as he has absolute control over our outcomes and whether or not they are just. — ToothyMaw
Hello left-wing utopianism. Everyone gets a participation trophy, and anything less than that is all God's fault! I'm concluding here that you're just angry at reality for containing suffering and that you're just going to keep insisting that the responsibility lies in God's lap instead of in the laps of people who make those decisions, while ignoring that the justice God appropriates is divine and therefore trumps any assertion of injustice on God's part you can make.We could just try to arrange society in such a way that people get what they deserve? Do you honestly believe that someone could only be rewarded with a Nobel Prize if someone else falls off a cliff? What connection is there between some people's suffering, or the lack of just outcomes, and the just outcomes others receive, and why couldn't we all at least mostly get what we deserve? — ToothyMaw
Would you say that adults should allow their children to suffer injustices at each other's hands merely so they can be judged by adults? That we should allow children to suffer so we can test them? — ToothyMaw
And what about good people that get cancer? How are we supposed to enact justness there? If we can't enact justness, then shouldn't God protect good people from injustices we cannot rectify if he is even remotely just? — ToothyMaw
Expecting God to do everything for us so we needn't do anything is lumping the means by which we show God who we are onto God's lap, which would be pointless because God created creation to see how we react to life. — Hallucinogen
Then God really half-assed creation. We could demonstrate our worth, compassion, bravery, ingenuity etc. in a world with significantly less suffering. — ToothyMaw
Isn't it like that? — Cuthbert
Applying a truth-value to every element in a domain, as an invariant and valid operation toward producing a result; there you go using a self-evident axiom again.ALL of THEM — dclements
The examples that I gave and am basing my argument on aren't. They're self-evident in logic. Using examples other people have incorrectly said are self-evident isn't a counter-argument to my position.are based on one's own beliefs and desires — dclements
So there is a true way in which things are?how things really are. — dclements
So black swan theory is a true axiom?"Black Swan Theory" — dclements
I don't think it "assumes" a thinking being, rather points out to you the fact that you are thinking. All it assumes is a dependence of thinking on being, and so therefore produces the result that observing you are thinking proves that you are being.Descartes's "I think therefore I am". It assumes that a "thinking thing" — dclements
It doesn't need to.However, it doesn't address the issue of how such a thing exist — dclements
Like all formulations of logical relativism, this is a self-contradiction. It's literally "the x is not x"."The only truth (axiom) is that there is no truth (or 'true axiom")" — dclements
If this God has free will, then how do you know he will always do good? — Michael McMahon