I have asked you to clarify this supposed orderliness, and you have not done so. — Sapientia
As for analogies with situations like finding a tidy room or a watch on the beach, these are false analogies, and have long since been shown to be so. I don't see the point in starting with the argument, rather than by addressing the problems with it. — Sapientia
You seem like a novice with regards to logic. One could reorder the above to make a valid argument as follows:
There is cause and effect in the universe.
Order is a function of cause and effect.
Therefore, there is order in the universe.
But what does it mean to say that order is a function of cause and effect, and how do you get from that to the conclusion that a conscious agency created the universe? — Sapientia
I do not see coincidence as the dominant principle - design is the dominant principle of the universe.
— Thinker
I don't see design/coincidence as a legitimate choice. — Terrapin Station
What in the world does that have to do with why you'd be assuming a "designed or coincidence" dichotomy? — Terrapin Station
Is that last line an assertion or a conclusion? If the latter, it doesn't follow. — noAxioms
Right. So why would you think that things would have to be coincidences if not designed? Why couldn't they be the result of something like physical laws rather than coincidences? — Terrapin Station
Are you saying that on your view, there are just two choices--either things are designed or they're coincidences? Is that correct? — Terrapin Station
So are you saying that on your view either things are designed or they're coincidences? — Terrapin Station
But you'd have to assume that it doesn't require work to make the universe tidy. — Terrapin Station
Right. And you simply got silly when I asked you why you were talking about coincidences. Could you seriously answer why you're bringing up that term now? — Terrapin Station
If there's no God, there's no proof for God's existence.
There's no proof for God's existence.
Therefore there's no God.
That's valid according to your fallacious logic. — Noblosh
Back to the idea? You wouldn't say where the idea was coming from in the first place. — Terrapin Station
Preference – why do we have a predilection? Another untidy phenomenon thrown into the mix. Where did “it” come from? — Thinker
So, the question becomes--why would we believe one option or another? What's the answer to that? — Terrapin Station
An untidy room can be caused by chaotic causes e.g. a strong wind, earthquake, etc. However, a tidy room can only be caused by a person. — TheMadFool
According to logic*. I don't have to come up with a counterargument if your argument is fallacious. — Noblosh
What does cause and effect have to do with the idea of their being sentience behind the same? — Terrapin Station
One thing is to be irrational, another to be fallacious and nonsensical.
Too bad this forum has no moderation. — Noblosh
The answer is simple: sin. They don't want to give up their sinful lifestyle. — lambda
Well, it's not ice cream, either, is it?
Why not say that? — Terrapin Station
If no one is saying that anything is a coincidence, why did you use that word? — Terrapin Station
Who is positing that anything is a coincidence first off? Where is that idea coming from? — Terrapin Station
Order isn't sufficient evidence that someone was responsible for the room. it's bizarre that you'd think it is. — Terrapin Station
There isn't order in the universe. Humans try to make it orderly in order to make sense of it. We are the ones that try to put everything in it's own little box. The universe isn't like that. — Harry Hindu
If there's a conscious agency, then there's order.
There's order.
Therefore there's a conscious agency.
The conclusion is not a necessary consequence of the premise; it can be false even when the premise is true. The only inference that can be made is: if there's no order then there's no conscious agency.
In layman terms: there could be order in the Universe for other reasons than the existence of God. — Noblosh
Aside from the fact that the word "coincidence" doesn't at all resemble what science posits, too well for it to be a "coincidence" based on what? In the case of man-made stuff, you can only conclude this because you have empirical evidence of it being made-made (in other cases perhaps than the one at hand). In the case of other stuff, you have no basis for saying what "coincidence" can do. — Terrapin Station
But the reason you conclude that someone was responsible for the room isn't that it's orderly, is it? You'd have no grounds for concluding that someone was responsible for it on that basis alone. — Terrapin Station
There's order in the universe. Conscious agencies are known to create order. So, the all so evident order in our universe implies the existence of a conscious angency - God. Why is this version of the same argument difficult for atheists to swallow? — TheMadFool
Disapproving of the ways of others will not help in the context of international relations where there are great differences between existing cultures. It might work within societies more or less unified by sets of laws, common practices and beliefs, but if applied outside that context can only widen the rift, and further the division.
As I see it, what you are spouting is egregiously prejudiced, hysterical fundamentalist nonsense. — John
Are you making an argument? I honestly can't tell. — Noble Dust
She's a great artist — Wosret
Try love. You suffer all the time. Go suffer for other people, say for 1 month, and see how you feel. Suffering is a resource and you're spending it on the wrong stuff. You don't have a family to support, so you really are free if you have any balls. — Roke
At the risk of sounding too philosophical, courage is contextual. If you're not raised in a context where courage is required or exemplified, you won't have much courage. If you are, you will. So, "the greatest generation" lived in the reality of WWII. They had courage. But because of the context. If we live in a cowardly society, it's due largely to our context, and our context is due largely to the previous generations that have handed us the culture we've inherited. We shape it and morph it ourselves, but we do so within our context. I hate how liberal that sounds (I'm fairly apolitical), but I don't know how else to phrase it. — Noble Dust
They're not responsible for their situation. As "enlightened" intellectuals, we like to say that all men have autonomy and can change their situation. But how true is that, on an every day scale? — Noble Dust
Autonomy requires education, it requires enlightenment (interpret that word however you want). And if we're talking metaphors (I have a tendency to be anal about metaphors), America isn't spiritually fat; we're spiritually malnourished. — Noble Dust
Again, this goes back to my comments about sheep. "Unfortunately"? Again you're implying that the world needs to be more intellectual. I disagree. The rare jewel of the intellectual mind bears itself out; the value of that mind is self-evident. It's value is to give, not to control. Like the Tao, it relinquishes control. Therein lies it's "power". True intellectual power is always self-abrogating. Anything else is a masquerade of power and charisma over others. — Noble Dust
The decline of philosophy, though, has more to do with philosophy itself. Disciplines run their course. Philology is no longer a discipline. Philosophy is a fading discipline. This has less to do with the world going to shit, and more to do with the changing landscape of human consciousness, regardless of whether or not you and I particularly like it. — Noble Dust
If the third world is on fire, and ours soon will be, it has nothing to do with religion and could not be cured by philosophy. It is due to economic greed, exploitation and resource depletion and degradation, and of course, burning fossil fuels. Islam itself is mostly against globalization and the erosion of their traditional cultures and exploitation of the resources that goes with it. — John
I think this concept of sheep is misguided. It's such a common notion, but it's not grounded in reality. Imagine a world full of philosophers. It would be a world of total disagreement and intellectual chaos (just take the disagreement on this forum and magnify it to the size of the world population). The assumption here seems to be, classically, that if only the world weren't sheep and understood "the truth" (my worldview), things would be better off. — Noble Dust
Alrighty, then...done and dusted! — John
the Holy Roman Inquisition lasted 1200 years and killed over 100 million people. Many in the most horrible way. — Thinker