S
seductus_sum
Guest
PRESCRIPT: I don’t mean for this to be a “why are/do atheists/theists” kind of thread. If it is, I apologize. I am actually really interested in hearing responses to this. It has been on my mind for some time.
I have been reading on this forum this morning and have come across this kind of sentiment a number of times:
(premise)1. There is no evidence for God.
c(onclusion)1. God is improbable.
c2. I will be an agnostic.
2. I have direct experience of the world and natural causes.
c3. There are natural causes.
3. Science has always discovered new natural causes.
c4. Science will continue to find new natural causes.
c5. Naturalism is more sound than theism and I will be a naturalist.
If I have misrepresented this view, I am sorry. I do not like straw men.
This view is, of course, mostly logical. The naturalist-agnostic is saying that only that which is based on evidence is probable, and that he will personally believe in only that which is probable or provable. This leads him to agnosticism, because there is no conclusive evidence either way, and to naturalism, because the only evidence he has experienced is of the natural world and natural causes.
But…
Where is the justification IN NATURE for ascribing belief in what is probable? Why is c2 justified?
Where is the justification IN NATURE for believing that there are natural causes because one experiences natural causes? Why is c3 justified?
How do we know FROM NATURE that science will continue to find new natural causes? Why is c4 justified?
Heck, why ascribe belief in what is more sound? Why is c5 justified?
It seems to me that someone who will only believe in something that is based on evidence cannot actually believe in much at all. If someone rejects God because there is no evidence, then should they not reject a whole host of things because they have not yet received evidence (e.g., that natural causes cause an effect, that people tell the truth about scientific experiments that they perform, that the world is round, that China exists, etc.). And what evidence makes our ability to receive evidence accurately reliable?
And how can the logical argument I outlined above be accepted? Logic is operated in our brains, and how do we know we are thinking straight? What evidence is there for that? How do we know, logically, that we are not “a brain in a jar?” It seems the only LOGICAL conclusion is… nothing, that nothing can be logically true.
But who is the world lives like this? And why should I believe you?
In the end, I do respect the agnostic more than the atheist, because I feel he is more honest. He does not lie and say that he can disprove God. But why not take it all the way? Can the logical naturalist-agnostic believe that anything is true?
On the other hand, if one believes in God, one suddenly finds that the windows of explanation open wide: “In the beginning was the Word…” Only something beyond the world can explain the world. Thanks be to God, who gives light our own minds and to the world.
I have been reading on this forum this morning and have come across this kind of sentiment a number of times:
(premise)1. There is no evidence for God.
c(onclusion)1. God is improbable.
c2. I will be an agnostic.
2. I have direct experience of the world and natural causes.
c3. There are natural causes.
3. Science has always discovered new natural causes.
c4. Science will continue to find new natural causes.
c5. Naturalism is more sound than theism and I will be a naturalist.
If I have misrepresented this view, I am sorry. I do not like straw men.
This view is, of course, mostly logical. The naturalist-agnostic is saying that only that which is based on evidence is probable, and that he will personally believe in only that which is probable or provable. This leads him to agnosticism, because there is no conclusive evidence either way, and to naturalism, because the only evidence he has experienced is of the natural world and natural causes.
But…
Where is the justification IN NATURE for ascribing belief in what is probable? Why is c2 justified?
Where is the justification IN NATURE for believing that there are natural causes because one experiences natural causes? Why is c3 justified?
How do we know FROM NATURE that science will continue to find new natural causes? Why is c4 justified?
Heck, why ascribe belief in what is more sound? Why is c5 justified?
It seems to me that someone who will only believe in something that is based on evidence cannot actually believe in much at all. If someone rejects God because there is no evidence, then should they not reject a whole host of things because they have not yet received evidence (e.g., that natural causes cause an effect, that people tell the truth about scientific experiments that they perform, that the world is round, that China exists, etc.). And what evidence makes our ability to receive evidence accurately reliable?
And how can the logical argument I outlined above be accepted? Logic is operated in our brains, and how do we know we are thinking straight? What evidence is there for that? How do we know, logically, that we are not “a brain in a jar?” It seems the only LOGICAL conclusion is… nothing, that nothing can be logically true.
But who is the world lives like this? And why should I believe you?
In the end, I do respect the agnostic more than the atheist, because I feel he is more honest. He does not lie and say that he can disprove God. But why not take it all the way? Can the logical naturalist-agnostic believe that anything is true?
On the other hand, if one believes in God, one suddenly finds that the windows of explanation open wide: “In the beginning was the Word…” Only something beyond the world can explain the world. Thanks be to God, who gives light our own minds and to the world.