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Is atheism logical or illogical?
Atheism is illogical in the sense that it cannot give an adequate rational explanation of the universe.Is atheism logical or illogical?
It is illogical because it ignores the spiritual side of men. You can not have a logical system that based only on just part of the truth.Is atheism logical or illogical?
You need to be careful here. This form of your argument can be refuted:* P1 Everything that exists has a previous cause.It’s illogical because for everything in existence, there has to be a previous cause.
Quite the opposite, it takes no faith to be an atheist.it takes a lot of faith to be an atheist
Just what is this “self-evident contradiction” ?Atheism is illogical in its own self-evident contradiction.
How do you arrive at your wild ideas?It takes an absolute faith devoid of any reasonable doubt that is on par with papal infallibility to be an Atheist.
There is no intrinsic assertion, atheists just don’t believe the assertion made by the religious.Thus the intrinsic assertion “There is no God”
This is flawed because it relies on there being an assertion, as previously covered.contradicts the assumption that there are no objective absolutes while simultaneously making a subjective exception for its own absolute conjecture. Thus the assertion pretends to god-like wisdom but lacking a god-like face, at face-value it does not scale extrinsically to convince anyone of its own self-evident merits.
Throwing insults does not validate your argument.Thus an Atheist is illogical as well as arrogant
I would be wary of playing the insanity card in regards to atheism, while seriously believing that someone walked on water, fed 5,000 with a little bread and fish, rose from the dead etc.and if she takes herself seriously is probably only one step removed from insanity.
Given that subjective nature of spiritual experiences, you’d be hard-pressed it has any relation to an objective truth.It is illogical because it ignores the spiritual side of men. You can not have a logical system that based only on just part of the truth.
Your first example is not a refutation, but an argument that ironically proves God’s existence anyhow. If the atheist is arguing that God has a previous cause, he is, in the least, admitting a belief in God. The mystery that God IS the cause, and not just a non-corporeal being, is a puzzle that no one can unlock. Yet, logic demands that there is a first-mover, and that first-mover is the Supreme Being, or God.You need to be careful here. This form of your argument can be refuted:
rossum
- P1 Everything that exists has a previous cause.
- P2 God exists.
- C3 God has a previous cause.
Any reasonably intelligent atheist has seen the argument from a first cause put in this form and knows the refutation. You would do somewhat better with the Kalam argument:- P1 Everything that has a beginning has a previous cause.
- P2 The universe has a beginning.
- C3 The universe has a previous cause.
See Wikipedia Kalam Argument for more. Bear in mind that many atheists will have read the same description.
Buddhism is technically not atheist:At that time Shakra Devanam Indra with his followers, twenty thousand gods, also attended. There were also the gods Rare Moon, Pervading Fragrance, Jeweled Glow, and the Four Great Heavenly Kings, along with their followers, ten thousand gods.Given that subjective nature of spiritual experiences, you’d be hard-pressed it has any relation to an objective truth.
That said, you statement is demonstrably false. See Buddhism for details.
Atheism and Buddhism however are not mutually exclusive as the earlier writings attributed to the Buddha say nothing of deities.Buddhism is technically not atheist:At that time Shakra Devanam Indra with his followers, twenty thousand gods, also attended. There were also the gods Rare Moon, Pervading Fragrance, Jeweled Glow, and the Four Great Heavenly Kings, along with their followers, ten thousand gods.
Present were the gods Freedom and Great Freedom and their followers, thirty thousand gods, Present were King Brahma, lord of the saha world, the great Brahma Shikhin, and the great Brahma Light Bright, and their followers, twelve thousand gods.
Lotus Sutra, Chapter 1
In Buddism gods are of very little importance, their main function in scripture seems to be to applaud when the Buddha has spoken.
No gods can enlighten us, we have to do that for ourselves.
rossum
Or demonstrating that the one making the prime-mover arguement is indulging in a special-pleading fallacy.Your first example is not a refutation, but an argument that ironically proves God’s existence anyhow. If the atheist is arguing that God has a previous cause, he is, in the least, admitting a belief in God.
Not it doesn’t. Reason invoke Occam’s Razor to remove the idea that uses more naked assertions. If you are going to indulge in asserted a non-created thing/entity/force, then you might as well make it energy given the law of conservation. WHy would you add another unknown to the first then declare it correct when there would be no logical reason to prevent a case of infinite regression?The mystery that God IS the cause, and not just a non-corporeal being, is a puzzle that no one can unlock. Yet, logic demands that there is a first-mover, and that first-mover is the Supreme Being, or God.
If the argument becomes, “well God can’t be God if He had a previous cause”, then that previous cause would be the Supreme Being, and thus God. The only answer to stop the chain of causes is to conclude that God has no beginning or end, the how’s and wherefore’s being a mystery…
The argument shows that God cannot be the “uncaused cause” because God has a cause. It also invites an infinite regress: if God’s cause exists then it also has a cause and so on. An infinite regress usually indicates a problem with the logic somewhere.Your first example is not a refutation, but an argument that ironically proves God’s existence anyhow.
No, the atheist is showing a logical fallacy in the argument that the theist has put forward.If the atheist is arguing that God has a previous cause, he is, in the least, admitting a belief in God.
In this sort of discussion an atheist will tend to translate “mystery” as “I do not have a logical argument at this point, you just have to believe me because I say so.”The mystery that God IS the cause, and not just a non-corporeal being, is a puzzle that no one can unlock.
Why supreme? All a first mover has to be is a) first (i.e. early in time) and b) a mover (i.e. a cause). Once the first mover has been first and moved then there is nothing left for him/her/it/them to do so they could easily be nonexistent now. There is no logical requirement for either “supreme” or “currently exists” here.Yet, logic demands that there is a first-mover, and that first-mover is the Supreme Being, or God.
You ask, ‘just what is this “self-evident contradiction”’ ?CentralFLJames;3990215:
Just what is this “self-evident contradiction” ?Atheism is illogical in its own self-evident contradiction.
It takes an absolute faith devoid of any reasonable doubt that is on par with papal infallability to be an Atheist.
Thus the intrinsic assertion “There is no God” contradicts the assumption that there are no objective absolutes while simultaneously making a subjective exception for its own absolute conjecture. Thus the assertion pretends to god-like wisdom but lacking a god-like face, at face-value it does not scale extrinsically to convince anyone of its own self-evident merits.
Thus an Atheist is illogical as well as arrogant and if she takes herself seriously is probably only one step removed from insanity.
James
How do you arrive at your wild ideas?
There is no intrinsic assertion, atheists just don’t believe the assertion made by the religious.
This is flawed because it relies on there being an assertion, as previously covered.
Throwing insults does not validate your argument.
I would be wary of playing the insanity card in regards to atheism, while seriously believing that someone walked on water, fed 5,000 with a little bread and fish, rose from the dead etc.
Assuming that your “earlier writings attributed to the Buddha” refers to the Pali Cannon, then you are mistaken. Gods appear but again are of very little importance. For example in the Kevatta sutta (Digha Nikaya 11) the gods are unable to answer a question:"When this was said, the gods of the retinue of the Four Great Kings said to the monk, ‘We also don’t know where the four great elements… cease without remainder. But there are the Four Great Kings who are higher and more sublime than we. They should know where the four great elements… cease without remainder.’Atheism and Buddhism however are not mutually exclusive as the earlier writings attributed to the Buddha say nothing of deities.