S
Spirithound
Guest
That’s fine. We’ll work on the appearance of the Necessary Being once we have agreed that he exists.Or the FSM, as I have demonstrated.
That’s fine. We’ll work on the appearance of the Necessary Being once we have agreed that he exists.Or the FSM, as I have demonstrated.
Actually, he would! You see, that’s the whole difference between scientists and the hard-core religious. If you gave Dawkins proof, or even a decent amount of evidence, that God exists and Jesus rose from the dead, etc., then he would believe that!Again, though, God, at least directly, cannot be amenable to science. And Dawkins is a disciple of scientism! It would not accomplish anything to attempt to persuade him. His presuppositions, which are wrong, do not allow for God. Besides, if they would not listen to Moses or the prophets…
Dawkins said that if he went back in time to the first century, saw Jesus die, and saw his resurrected form with other people around him affirming the vision, he still wouldn’t believe. He said the same if a statue of Mary waved at him, and if he felt God’s presence and heard his voice in his mind/body.Actually, he would! You see, that’s the whole difference between scientists and the hard-core religious. If you gave Dawkins proof, or even a decent amount of evidence, that God exists and Jesus rose from the dead, etc., then he would believe that!
But there is no proof. As I said, there’s some evidence, but definitely not proof. For example there’s the Gospels that say he rose, but that can’t remove any shred of doubt. Christians have faith that those authors were divinely inspired and got it right, but that’s not proof at all.
That’s the whole difference between science and religion; science is open to new ideas and ready to discard old ones once enough evidence comes along to prove it wrong, while religion relies on millenia-old tradition and (usually) has an uncompromising attitude towards change.
No, I observed and flagged the common theist rearguard action of claiming that the argument is too complex or subtle for the atheist to understand. I then pointed out that the reason such arguments are difficult, if not impossible, for critical thinkers to understand isn’t because they are too complex or subtle, but because they are not robust, nor coherent. I think I understand the argument as far as it goes, I’m just not prepared to make the leaps of assumption that theists do to convince themselves that the argument is sound.You criticized him for saying you don’t understand the argument, and then in the next paragraph you admit that you don’t understand the argument.
By “reasonable,” do you mean, “in agreement with my argument?” If so, bye-bye!Okay. If you don’t have something more reasonable to say next time, I’m going to find something else to do.
Dude, you criticize us for saying that God is a necessary being repeatedly as though it made the argument stronger, and then you call the argument at hand incoherent without even saying how, instead just repeating how.No, I observed and flagged the common theist rearguard action of claiming that the argument is too complex or subtle for the atheist to understand. I then pointed out that the reason such arguments are difficult, if not impossible, for critical thinkers to understand isn’t because they are too complex or subtle, but because they are not robust, nor coherent. I think I understand the argument as far as it goes, I’m just not prepared to make the leaps of assumption that theists do to convince themselves that the argument is sound.
By “reasonable,” do you mean, “in agreement with my argument?” If so, bye-bye!
Maybe I will get around to responding to your original post in this thread, and it’s many errors, but, for now, I will respond to this.Actually, he would! You see, that’s the whole difference between scientists and the hard-core religious. If you gave Dawkins proof, or even a decent amount of evidence, that God exists and Jesus rose from the dead, etc., then he would believe that!
But there is no proof. As I said, there’s some evidence, but definitely not proof. For example there’s the Gospels that say he rose, but that can’t remove any shred of doubt. Christians have faith that those authors were divinely inspired and got it right, but that’s not proof at all.
That’s the whole difference between science and religion; science is open to new ideas and ready to discard old ones once enough evidence comes along to prove it wrong, while religion relies on millenia-old tradition and (usually) has an uncompromising attitude towards change.
Pfft, hardly.Or the FSM, as I have demonstrated.
There is a necessary being, a necessary explanation for what is. Either it is nature or it is God.And by the way, simply repeating “there is a necessary being” doesn’t make it so.
You are doing exactly what I said, then. You are merely using the characters F-S-M instead of G-o-d. Well, fine. It makes no difference.Nope, because I define FSM as being none of those things. Therefore it is the necessary being, therefore it exists.
It is not an argument, it is an observation, and one that I have observed too frequently with atheists on the internet.Aha, the good old “You just don’t understand the argument” argument! The last throw of the die for the theist who can’t prove their superstition! Us dumb ol’ atheists, we just don’t have the smarts to understand, not like you clever believers!
I don’t think I am the one being uncritical, here.However, you’re right, I don’t understand the arguments. But that’s because they are neither sensible nor coherent, rather than for any other reason. They rely on the credulity, the cognitive dissonance, and the suspension of critical analysis by the theists who so direly wants their belief to be true.
Why would we agree on such a thing when such a being can’t be proved? And your choice of pronoun implies that this is a done deal in your mind - which I’m sure is the case, but doesn’t really provide much hope for objective discussion.That’s fine. We’ll work on the appearance of the Necessary Being once we have agreed that he exists.
In philosophy, a being does not necessarily mean a person. A rock is a being.Why would we agree on such a thing when such a being can’t be proved? And your choice of pronoun implies that this is a done deal in your mind - which I’m sure is the case, but doesn’t really provide much hope for objective discussion.
Well, the first flaw in the argument is that a “necessary being” hasn’t been proven. It may seem instinctive when considered against the alternative of an infinite regress, but this is a poor reason to consider something “true.”Dude, you criticize us for saying that God is a necessary being repeatedly as though it made the argument stronger, and then you call the argument at hand incoherent without even saying how, instead just repeating how.
Awatkins wasn’t asking you to agree with him, he was asking you to appropriately show him where the flaw in the argument is and stop being a bleeding hypocrite. You used a strawman, hypocrisy, circular reasoning, repetition, and ad homenims so far. Please give us something slightly less fallacious - disprove the existence of a necessary being, disprove one or more of its attributes, or disprove it being able to be God.
The point is that when using this argument, theists define God as having attributes x, y, and z, oh and also, he’s obviously “necessary.” Therefore if he exists, he’s necessary. Therefore if he can exist, he does. Therefore he exists.Pfft, hardly.
Maybe there is, maybe there isn’t. As I said in my previous post, it seems instinctively true. But do did Geocentricity, once upon a time.There is a necessary being, a necessary explanation for what is. Either it is nature or it is God.
I shouldn’t have to explain that I was using the FSM tongue-in-cheek. How about I remove God from my fake hypothesis? How about this instead: The FSM was a non-sentient, immaterial blob of nothingness that one day sneezed out the universe, which then immediately started to expand exactly as described in Big Bang theory.You are doing exactly what I said, then. You are merely using the characters F-S-M instead of G-o-d. Well, fine. It makes no difference.
Sorry, but that adds no weight. Particularly it strongly implies that of those who have considered the argument, the theists are consistently more intelligent and/or educated than the atheists. This might be true, but statistically it’s extremely unlikely.It is not an argument, it is an observation, and one that I have observed too frequently with atheists on the internet.
Of course you don’t!I don’t think I am the one being uncritical, here.![]()
Indeed - that was my point when calling out Spirithound on his/her use of the male pronoun.In philosophy, a being does not necessarily mean a person. A rock is a being.
Sorry - should have said “hasn’t been.” My mistake.Why can’t a Necessary Being be proven?
Indeed. But not this one. And we’re not talking about just me that’s not convinced, are we?A reason or proof can be sound, even if it fails to convince you.
Really? Well then I guess I don’t have much to say to you. Of course, I might not exist. You might be imagining this whole discourse. But your first-hand experience presumably suggests to you that this is not the case.I would be more interested in knowing how it is you know that you exist, or know that you are a separate being from, say, the computer you are typing on. It is my position that it is just as reasonable to affirm that you exist, and that the computer exists, as it is to affirm that God exists.
I’ve not heard of this law until now, but a quick scan of Wikipedia makes me think that yes, I probably do agree with it.In other words, do you affirm the law of identity, and if so, why do you think it unreasonable to posit the existence of a first cause?
A proof can fail to convince 1 person, or 100, or 1 billion, and still be reasonable. The number of those not convinced is irrelavent.Indeed. But not this one. And we’re not talking about just me that’s not convinced, are we?
This works both ways. I could just as well say atheists have an emotional interest (subconsciously even, just like theists are accused of having a strong subconscious desire for God). This is really a red herring and doesn’t help one side or the other.Let’s be clear - theists have a vested emotional interest in believing the things they do.
It’s tempting to throw off the question as “silly,” I know, but it is legitimate to ask how it is your intellect senses your own existence. This is particularly important in the question of epistemology. How do you distinguish yourself from the “other” or “things”?Really? Well then I guess I don’t have much to say to you. Of course, I might not exist. You might be imagining this whole discourse. But your first-hand experience presumably suggests to you that this is not the case.
Ah, but you are assuming what’s in question, and what as of yet has not been proven or falsified - the deity’s existence. It is circular to say at this point he doesn’t exist. As of this point in the argument, it is an unknown.What’s more, my existence, and the existence of the computer, are much less spectacular claims than that of an undetectable deity…
Again, this is all question begging. The existence of a deity is what is in question at this time, so it is circular to go on about these things.…that just decided to create the world one day, without much in the way of a reason that we can derive; that knows the inner thoughts of all 6.5 billion of us; that allegedly intervenes in human affairs on a daily basis, even though we can’t detect such intervention; and so on.
Is it? I could just as easily say it is common sense to say God exists, but I doubt you would find that reasonable. Why cannot I object to your “common sense” or “intuitive” anti-solipsism?This is just common sense to anybody who isn’t a solipsist.
Then you must hold the mind can know that things exist “in themselves.” This admission is fundamental. Not all – Kantians, for example – hold this, and thus they reject metaphysics and the proofs for God’s existence.I’ve not heard of this law until now, but a quick scan of Wikipedia makes me think that yes, I probably do agree with it.
Geocentricity may hold more weight than you think.It’s not unreasonable to posit the existence of a first cause, but I’ve never seen a robust proof for one. As I’ve said, it seems instinctively right, but so did geocentricity at one point.
I don’t think the Christian God can be proven with the metaphysical certainty of the first cause. What I am going after is simply a “first cause” or “completely actual being” whose “essence is existence.” I don’t think you can deduce the Trinity from this, the virgin birth, etc. (It is odd, however, that a 2,000+ year old text has a “god” telling a man his name is “I AM WHO AM” .Furthermore, even if one concedes a First Cause, I’ve never seen a proof that turns it into the Christian God; or at least, I’ve never seen such a proof robust enough that it couldn’t be used to “prove” the existence of any number of other hypothetical beings.
How precisely do brain processes explain truth?Is there any explanation in terms of tangible objects?
On the contrary, it is a precise, verifiable experience you can discover if you venture to explore what is occurring in your mind.As usual, you’re demanding a complete and precise scientific answer, yet offering only a vague and unverifiable supernatural one.
Your addiction to abuse remains uncontrolled!You are not able to provide the level of precision you are demanding from me, so your standard argument from ignorance is also an argument from hypocrisy.
It’s the only form of independently verifiable explanation.It is beyond the scope of scientific explanation but that is not the only valid form of explanation.
Is it? Do you mean verifiable by the senses? If so how can we verify that you’re not mindless?
This is just opinionated waffle, it doesn’t add anything of value at all.Truth and beauty are interdependent because - like goodness, freedom, beauty, love and joy - they presuppose persons with rational insight. Truth and beauty are different aspects of the immense value of existence.
Your response is just abusive waffle which does not refute my statement.
In that case you must regard your own existence, not to mention that of everyone else, as valueless…Referring to the “immense value of existence” is just vague rhetoric…
More opinion. No proof. As ever!They are all essential conditions of personal fulfilment.
More evasion, no refutation - as ever! Can you explain why truth, freedom and love are **not **essential conditions of personal fulfilment?
I can prove my mind exists with far more certainty than you can prove your “Supreme Being” exists.Your mind is an equally supernatural, undetectable, unexplainable, unknowable, unpredictable and unprovable entity!
How? At least give us some indication.
Given that neither hypothesis can fully explain the processes, origin etc. of these attributes, the more economical explanation is one that doesn’t invoke unnecessary supernatural hocus-pocus.Is there a “more economical explanation”?
It would be equally facile to refer to unnecessary natural hocus-pocus. BTW How do you define “natural”? Is truth natural?
Which are? None have been shown to exist, as far as I’m aware.Kant’s starting point was not the existence of God but the convergence of teleleological laws, i.e. the purposes which are evident in the universe.
You don’t consider that living organisms are purposeful, that the universe provides a basis for purposeful activity, that your own activity is teleleological?
What you’ve done here is quote someone who (baselessly) states that there is a purpose to the Universe, then simply assert that this “explains” your mystical “common origin.”The common origin of truth, goodness, freedom, beauty, joy and love. How do you explain them?
You are implying that the universe serves no purpose whatsoever - which is blatantly false.
The point, which you have not addressed, is that modern science does NOT presuppose an overall purpose behind the Universe.Not anecdotal but historical fact when the role of Aristotle - amongst others - is taken into account in the development of science. Belief in a chaotic universe is hardly a sound basis and incentive for scientific investigation. And modern scientific endeavour is hardly an adequate explanation of purpose.
My point is that the development of science was based on belief in an orderly and intelligible universe.
That is hardly surprising because modern science is fragmented but it is still based on the assumption that the universe is orderly and intelligible. And in medicine and biology teleological explanation is still valid.The science of today is not the same as the natural philosophy of Aristotle’s time.
The only credulous fools who want to believe in superstitious nonsense are those who believe science has dispensed with purpose when in fact to do so would be defeating the purpose of scientists: to explain.You have got one thing right though- modern scientific endeavour is not an adequate explanation of purpose. Nothing is - there is no evidence of purpose, no reason to suppose a purpose… so why would science attempt to answer a question that doesn’t exist other than in the minds of those credulous fools who want to believe in superstitious nonsense?
Well, as I’m sure you know, there’s actually no onus on me to disprove your outrageous claim - the onus is on you to prove it.If the success of science is best explained as the ultimate result of fortuitous events it is indeed a non sequitur. But the onus is on you to explain why a multitude of fortuitous events are more adequate and credible than one rational, purposeful Being.
Do you mean you reject the explanation that life originated as the result of a “fortuitous concourse of atoms”, that random events have played a dominant role in the development of rational beings and that the universe is purposeless? That would amount to two outrageous claims on your part:
(1) You deny that is what you claim.
(2) You affirm that it is a more adequate and credible claim than the claim that one rational, purposeful Being is the ultimate explanation.
To put it in a nutshell, you attribute your power of reason to that which lacks the power of reason, i.e. you perform a metaphysical conjuring trick!
So now you understand the argument? Fair enough. You say you’re not prepared to make some assumption. Which assumption is that: (1), or (2)?No, I observed and flagged the common theist rearguard action of claiming that the argument is too complex or subtle for the atheist to understand. I then pointed out that the reason such arguments are difficult, if not impossible, for critical thinkers to understand isn’t because they are too complex or subtle, but because they are not robust, nor coherent. I think I understand the argument as far as it goes, I’m just not prepared to make the leaps of assumption that theists do to convince themselves that the argument is sound.
Of course, our opinions change. My point however, from the very beginning, was to say that an atheist must deny that God is even possible. And that switches the burden of proof to them to show some logical contradiction in the idea of God.The atheist does not say, “This cannot be correct,” he/she says, “there is no reason to suppose it is correct.”
No. I mean denying a premise and stating why you deny it, which is something you have avoided doing for a very long time. Which premise do you deny here, (1) or (2)?By “reasonable,” do you mean, “in agreement with my argument?” If so, bye-bye!