P
pocaracas
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Itās the IT crowd!!
Remember the box that was the Internet?
According to these guys, āChildren vividly experience interactions with their invisible friends, but they almost always know that these friends arenāt real. Looking at transcripts of interviews of 86 children with invisible friends, Taylor and her colleagues found that 77% of these children said āyesā when asked if they had a pretend friend, and 40% spontaneously remarked at some point during the interview that they were talking about a pretend friend.āYou did. It is a false and badly supported claim, although it might be emotionally pleasant for you. And I have offered a counterexample.
Does the child actually have such conviction? If he doesnāt (and I suspect that he doesnāt), then all this falls.
What?.. Iām saying that, at the psychological level, itās the same thing.Um, you acknowledged the difference between evidence for religions and for imaginary friends that I have noted, and then you conclude that it is not a valid counterexample?
Iām afraid it is not how it works. Instead, you either have to concede that my counterexample works and disproves your claim that evidence of religions and imaginary friends is indistinguishable (that, in turn, means that all arguments that depend on this claim fail), or to explain what is wrong with it.
I try my bestā¦Yes, getting you to be a bit more consistent would be kinda nice.
Oh boyā¦You have claimed that you reject religions because they are related to the psychological features that business also relies on. In that case it would be inconsistent of you not to reject business (or to take back the claim).
But, of course, it looks like you do not care about consistency that muchā¦
I guess itās today that I write it upā¦Feel free to do so. After all, I already have prepared an answerā¦![]()
Thereās a slight chance that it is a fake vulnerability, soā¦ I think itās better than just be open to anything.Um, no, it is not better. It is much worse. Such fake invulnerability makes you much more vulnerable to self-delusions and makes it much harder to detect and recover from them.
Yeahā¦ I knew you take issue with that wordingā¦ but thatās sort of how it comes offā¦ one god, three personsā¦ sounds a lot like one god, three parts, each part with itās particular function, but always linked up with the other two to share information of processing power, or whateverā¦Well, āJesus is a part of Godā is not really a good way to put it (after all, our belief is that God is simple and has no āpartsā), but yes, I think that you should accept that in such case we do have an explanation.
okā¦ I read that thing as fictionā¦ even as fiction, there are many leaps in thereā¦Well, can you at least read the Feserās outline as if it was fiction?
After all, I have read all those things you have claimed without agreeing with them - and was even able to rewords your arguments once in a while (with some success). Is there some reason why you canāt even do the reading part?
Thatās the thingā¦ Step I concerns meta-physics, as long as Physics canāt get there. Nowadays, Physics is getting there. This realization makes it apparent that meta-physics is not valid.Iām afraid I do not get your point. You have made claims that would seem to indicate that āStep Iā was something about Big Bang, I have corrected you that āStep Iā is basic metaphysics, and now you respond with āMetaā¦ indeed.ā?
Really? Will you tell the ones working in SETI that they must believe that aliens do not exist? Naturally, that would mean SETI has to be closed downā¦![]()
Thatās a weird feature of God. An entity that allegedly permeates everything and yet one must be convinced of itās existence prior to sensing it.That, coincidentally, means that, even if evidence would be there to be found, we wouldnāt find it without at least a temporary assumption that aliens exist. It is not that different with religions - if you refuse to consider Godās existence seriously, you will not find any evidence.
I had to go back and review the whole exchangeā¦ there was a bit about āwithout reservationsā that left me on the defensive.Really? You have refused to accept the principle that non-existing things donāt do anything, offered a counterexample, and now, when the counterexample has been shown to be wrong, you claim that thatās why you rejected that principle?
Iām afraid it is not how it works. In fact, now you get to either accept the principle, offer a different counterexample, or to concede that your rejection is not that rationalā¦
It is fictionā¦ as much as the Higgs Boson was fictionā¦ I guess.My point is that this explanation has nothing to do with that basic metaphysics. It is not an āalternative explanationā - I am not even sure that it conflicts with statements of basic metaphysics in any way.
Of course, if it would be found to conflict with them, I think it would be possible to make a case that this āalternative explanationā is just science fiction - but I donāt think that will be necessary.
If itās impossible, then Iāll never know.So, you are waiting for something that (as you concede) is impossible? Doesnāt look like a reasonable thing to doā¦
Oh, wellā¦ Defending atheism seems to require some sacrifices from reason,![]()
Nice articleā¦ did you see into the reasons brought forth to explain why the reproducibility of those studies failed?So, in you view things that are ātestableā, ātestedā - and disproved (after all, in one recent study - see cbsnews.com/news/results-of-many-psychology-experiments-cant-be-duplicated-study-finds/ - about 40 per cent of repeated psychological experiments havenāt given the original results), have more weight than things that are not disproved? Looks pretty unreasonableā¦
Also, psychology is pretty irrelevant here. Something can be true even if it is accepted for a bad reason.
Did you know that people who get a PhD in sciences are getting a Philosophy Doctoral degree?OK, list those philosophical arguments in favour of ether. Something tells me you wonāt be able to (or you will list something other than philosophical arguments).
I donāt think itās impossible that God exists. I think itās unlikelyā¦ very unlikelyā¦ just like dragons.Iām afraid that youāre projecting (to use that same psychology). You think that it is impossible that God exists (etc.), thus confirmation bias starts its work and you take even disproof of your arguments as something that confirms your views (I have cited a couple of examples in those two posts).
Rightā¦ who, would you say, first came up with the premise āThings that do not exist do not do anything.ā?Instead, Godās existence is a conclusion. āBasic premisesā would be basic self-evident statements about the way things are, like āThings that do not exist do not do anything.ā. Even in case of argument from authority, the ābasic premiseā would be something like āMy mother wouldnāt lie to me.ā.
Well, looking through this thread, it appears that you are not in fact as openminded as you would have us believe and I suspect (though I doubt Iām the only one) that you suffer from various naive delusions![]()
Except the Pyramids of Giza are probably the most famous work of ancient architechture on the planetDespite the fact they are āphysically verifiedā your listing them with those other things makes it look as if you do not believe they exist and perhaps think you know better than the hundreds of Egyptologists who have studied these pyramids for years
sigh.Jesus the prophet? Itās necessary to believe that He was the son of God if you are a Christian. Thatās not a requirement for my belief. In fact, itās not possible as I donāt believe in gods. Christians generally ask me what created everything, implying that there must be something omnipotent that could have done this, therefore God.
Science is not with you on this one, Bradski.But what I believe in didnāt require creation. It has always existed.
Originally posted by Steven Hawking>All the evidence seems to indicate, that the universe has not existed forever, but that it had a beginning, about 15 billion years ago. This is probably the most remarkable discovery of modern cosmology. Yet it is now taken for granted.
hawking.org.uk/the-beginning-of-time.html
Ah, no, poca. Thatās only if you re-define āempty spaceā to mean āempty but with some little particles in itā.They show that space-time provides a mechanism for the emergence of particles out of empty-space.
I was?Goodā¦ then why were you talking about things that ācouldā exist?
Well, now youāre moving the goal post, poca.Ridiculous? wellā¦ if you think that you need complexity to bring forth simple things that then assemble themselves to become complex, but never quite as complex as the complex thing that originated the simple thingsā¦ wellā¦ we go back to the main assumption being that such a maximal complexity exists in the first place.
And that goes against observations of everything else in the Universe.
This sounds suspiciously like the Science of the Gaps belief.[cont.]Thatās the thingā¦ Step I concerns meta-physics, as long as Physics canāt get there. Nowadays, Physics is getting there. This realization makes it apparent that meta-physics is not valid.
Well, Iām a Christian and I donāt know what you mean by Aliens with a capital A vs aliens with a small A.I used a capital āAā for Aliens, not a small āaā, for aliens. Iād think that you Christians would appreciate the difference.
And yes, if they were looking for xenomorphs, Iād pretty much want them to shut down SETI!
Huh?Thatās a weird feature of God. An entity that allegedly permeates everything and yet one must be convinced of itās existence prior to sensing it.
: confirmation bias, your seeming lack of ability to even imagine hypothetical supernatural situations, et cetera
ohā¦
Why do you say Iām not open-minded?
And what are those ānaive delusionsā?
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That was on purpose. The pyramids are considered to exist because credible reports do existā¦ they are indeed āphysically verifiedā.
At first, I wanted to include other real world examples, but then got carried away with the obvious paranormal ones.
Itās meant to show that the same reasoning works for anything.
I redefine āempty spaceā?Ah, no, poca. Thatās only if you re-define āempty spaceā to mean āempty but with some little particles in itā.
And, at any rate, that doesnāt have anything to do with the MV, but rather creation from nothing.
Indeed you wereā¦ and there you go again! (my underline)I was?
I thought we were talking about the double standard youāre espousing:
āI believe that the MV could exist, even though thereās not a single shred of evidence for its existence!ā
AND
āI donāt believe that God exists because thereās not a single shred of evidence for his existence!ā
#consistencyisourfriend![]()
I already did that.Well, now youāre moving the goal post, poca.
Youāre offering your refutation of an argument for Godās existence now.
Weāre not talking about that here.
We are talking about the double standard you and Bradski have espoused.
As such you need to explain how it is that you can profess here that you believe in something without any evidence for its existence, but also proclaim that you wonāt believe in something until you have evidence for its existence.
Perhaps my attempt at being careful with the language employed failed miserablyā¦This sounds suspiciously like the Science of the Gaps belief.
āWe donāt understand it, but Science will explain it in the future!ā
How is that really any different from the objection put forth by atheists regarding the āGod of the Gapsā: we donāt understand, therefore God did it.
Youāve just espoused the flip side of the coin to this: we donāt understand now, but, hey, Science will figure it out, man!
#thatsfaithbased![]()
There was a link in there, this IMBD page: imdb.com/title/tt0090605/ā¦ Aliens!Well, Iām a Christian and I donāt know what you mean by Aliens with a capital A vs aliens with a small A.
Can you please 'splain?
errā¦ youā¦?Huh?
Who says that one must be convinced of its existence prior to sensing it?![]()
So, all your evidence consists of word āalmostā? In a blog post? Without actual numbers and methods? And that is enough to get you to believe in that creature of āatheist mythologyā - āa kid that believes imaginary friend he made himself actually existsā?According to these guys, āChildren vividly experience interactions with their invisible friends, but they almost always know that these friends arenāt real. Looking at transcripts of interviews of 86 children with invisible friends, Taylor and her colleagues found that 77% of these children said āyesā when asked if they had a pretend friend, and 40% spontaneously remarked at some point during the interview that they were talking about a pretend friend.ā
Keywords āalmost alwaysāā¦ as inā¦ ānot alwaysā. Sometimes, they really think the imaginary friend is real.
And all it takes is 1% of kids like this, and, out of the billions of people in the world, that automatically makes it a millions of kids experience. Big numbers suck, sometimes.
They would understand their kid is role-playing and, most likely, would play along? Like sane men of other time periods?I wonderā¦ how would people in the the 1000ās react to knowing that their kid was seeing someone who wasnāt really there? playing with that other personā¦ talking to himā¦seeing him, naming himā¦ I wonderā¦
You say many things - it doesnāt make them true. Even the blog post you cited says that 40 per cent of kids did admit that those imaginary friends do not exist - and on their own initiative. It doesnāt look like anything similar to belief leading to martyrdom.What?.. Iām saying that, at the psychological level, itās the same thing.
Certainly, the human borne circumstances may be different, but that doesnāt make the conviction about the existence of either being any different.
So, now those āpsychological flawsā are not reasons to reject religious belief? OK, letās wait for the full argument.Oh boyā¦Thatās not it at all.
I claim that religions exploit (perhaps unaware of it) some psychological flaws that we all (or most of us) share. Psychological flaws that also have an expression in the decision making process of, for example, the business world.
But they are also present in many other of our daily endeavors.
Iād say it is almost certain that it is a fake invulnerability. But, of course, it would not be a fake invulnerability, if you would see it as such.Thereās a slight chance that it is a fake vulnerability, soā¦ I think itās better than just be open to anything.
I see, you havenāt actually argued with a real Muslim apologist. And I have to say that they do not argue in the way that you imagine. Iām afraid that even in a thread dedicated to such miracles (forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=960638), those miracles were kinda downplayedā¦okā¦ I read that thing as fictionā¦ even as fiction, there are many leaps in thereā¦
Althoughā¦ I get the part where he considers Islam as unevidencedā¦ I would, wouldnāt I?
The troublesome part isā¦ I guess that if I follow a muslimās reasoning, heāll probably make some similar initial arguments, then move on to some different ones, never saying anything about any resurrection, and then heād put much more stock on the miracles performed by Muhammad, while considering that Jesus was just a manā¦ and didnāt resurrect. And Iāll understand the part where such a muslim will criticize Christianity, while finding it difficult to follow the leaps in reasoning that get him to Islam.
Oh, I can certainly imagine hypothetical supernatural situationsā¦: confirmation bias, your seeming lack of ability to even imagine hypothetical supernatural situations, et cetera
Thatās the thingā¦ Step I concerns meta-physics, as long as Physics canāt get there. Nowadays, Physics is getting there. This realization makes it apparent that meta-physics is not valid.
So, in your words, what exactly is āMetaphysicsā?It is fictionā¦ as much as the Higgs Boson was fictionā¦ I guess.
Itās something that comes out of the theory. A theory that comes out of considering simple principles.
With that, metaphysics is shrinking in scope.
Reminiscent of a gapā¦
Yes, I could have used that example as well. For without any ātemporary assumptionā that Higgs Boson exists, Large Hadron Collider wouldnāt have been built (well, why would we build something that costly without thinking of any use for it?). And without it, Higgs Boson wouldnāt have been found.Thatās a weird feature of God. An entity that allegedly permeates everything and yet one must be convinced of itās existence prior to sensing it.
Although, if you want to have a more recent example, the Higgs Boson. Theorized for decades, a huge machine was built on purpose for finding itā¦ and it did, to within 5-sigma!
What made people spend all that money? all those resources, into probing matter at ever higher energies, only to find a theoretical particle?
Not all scientists are atheists, you knowā¦ And not all atheists are scientistsā¦Damn scientists and their double standard!![]()
It is nice to see that agreement. So, does it mean agreement with principle of causality telling us that change (actualisation of potencies) requires something (a ācauseā) that is actual already?I had to go back and review the whole exchangeā¦ there was a bit about āwithout reservationsā that left me on the defensive.
But yes, under the philosophical concept of ānot existingā, things cannot do anything.
Um, do you remember how we got here? For you have just agreed with the statement that you were trying to attack in this āsubthreadā.If itās impossible, then Iāll never know.
If it turns out to be possible, then weāll know. I wonderā¦ how will that metaphysics-based building withstand such a discovery?
Either way, better stick with something that comes from simple processes, rather something that posits the existence of a way too complex ordered structure like an immaterial consciousness capable of generating a whole Universe.
The sight of you ending up claiming that āfindingsā of psychology āoutrankā scientific arguments is rather amusingā¦ I guess I should wait and see if you wonāt have to refute this your argument all by yourselfā¦Did you know that people who get a PhD in sciences are getting a Philosophy Doctoral degree?
A scientific argument is a Philosophical one.
Fair enough.I agreed that āI believe that the God could exist, even though thereās not a single shred of evidence for its existence!ā
But I donāt believe God does exist.
Actually, I donāt think it failed at all.Perhaps my attempt at being careful with the language employed failed miserablyā¦![]()
Physics has been clearly gaining terrain to metaphysics. That may have not stopped yet, and may even take over all of that metaphysics concerning the start of the Universe.
Yeah. Saw the link.There was a link in there, this IMBD page: imdb.com/title/tt0090605/ā¦ Aliens!
Ok. This should be quite easy to demonstrate.errā¦ youā¦?
Luke.