I’ve been away for a few days so haven’t managed to keep up with what’s going on, but a quick scan through shows a number of posters putting forward the argument from contingency and the argument from personal incredulity with a confident smugness and an apparent lack of awareness of how flawed these positions are. I’ll try and keep up from now on, but for now, I’ll finish the post I was replying to before my brief hiatus:
Let’s put it another way. Do you consider that the quanta of physical energy is derived from anything? (You will probably answer “I don’t know”!)
You’re right - I have no idea, I’m not a quantum physicist. But even if it is derived from something, there’s no way of knowing what that something is, ergo no rational reason for declaring it to be God.
Why can’t I say you are metaphysically closed-minded?
You can - what you’re saying is that I reject the consideration of things that cannot be shown to exist, either directly or by effect. I’m fine with that
No, this doesn’t make me gullible, it makes me logical and honest.
Is it a virtue to regard science as the sole means of explaining reality?
Yes, in one sense of the word ‘virtue.’ It’s honest because it’s the only means that can produce reliable methods.
Let’s put it to the test. Do you believe physical energy is the sole type of energy? Of course you do. But how can you possibly know?
I believe it is, but I accept that there might be other types of energy. Whether they would actually be defined as ‘energy’ is an interesting but ultimately moot point. The fact remains that there is
no evidence of any other type of energy. It’s easy to say that that’s because we can only observe physical energy, but that’s sort of the point. Why believe in something you can’t observe, measure, test?
Here again it seems that the only possible evidence is that which you define as evidence. Yet in a court of law there is much acceptable evidence that is not scientific but personal. Intangible motives, decisions and purposes that you would rule out on principle are taken into account and serve as a basis for determining innocence or guilt…
Well, I’ve had this conversation with WSP as I’m sure you’re aware. You can call it my personal definition if you like, but the, “beyond reasonable doubt” standard of evidence is ubiquitous and I think most people would agree that it is the level of evidence required when attempting to prove the existence of a given entity. I think that trying to equate the intent of an individual with non-physical energy, as you seem to be doing in your example, would fall under the heading of “redefinition fallacy.”
This proves the point I have just made. Have you read Two Dogmas of Empiricism?
I’ve started to, but it’s quite tough going. Can you summarise the parts that you think support your argument?
That really is a dogmatic statement. What on earth leads you to that conclusion?
It’s not dogma, it’s common sense. If I experience a vision of the FSM, floating in front of me, does that mean it’s really there? If I believe in fairies, does that mean that they exist?
If many people have the same subjective experiences is that not objective evidence?
Well, it depends on the nature of the experience. Generally such a set of experiences should have some historical basis in fact. For example, if a group of people experienced extreme cold, then it’s not unreasonable to accept this as evidence that the temperature was low at the time. We know about cold, we have each experienced it at one time or another, we know that being cold is possible. If however, a group of people underwent an experience that convinced them that Allah wanted them to fly aeroplanes into buildings, does that mean that Allah exists and he really did want it to happen? (And if so, where does that leave Yahweh?)
On the contrary. It opens up opportunities for further investigation into spiritual reality.
But such investigation can prove nothing, so the activity holds no validity or value.
Science doesn’t take us very far into the exploration of the things that really matter.
It has a better chance than philosophy, which can only provide us with subjective, untestable rhetoric.
Do you conduct your life according to scientific principles?
Slightly ambiguous question. Certainly I do not think things like, “I’ll pop to the shops tonight because E=MC2,” or whatever. Neither do I say, “I’ll pop to the shops tonight because the abyss also looks into me.” I’ll pop to the shops because I need some milk or something. Ultimately I believe that my decisions are governed by the laws of nature - some of which are known, others of which aren’t.
Do you believe it is an objective fact that we are persons who are thinking and making decisions?
Yes.
Does that count as objective evidence for anything?
I guess it counts as objective evidence that we have the ability to think and make decisions.
Do you believe in the principle of sufficient reason?
There are different forms and interpretations of the PSR, and after a recent war of words in another thread, I won’t commit myself to a simple, “Yes” or “No.” That “no fact can be real or no statement true unless it has sufficient reason why it should not be otherwise” rings true, but ‘sufficient’ quickly becomes subjective when used in discussions such as this, as I have found out in another thread. Also, the PSR can be read in two ways - firstly: “If a statement has sufficient reason to be true, then it must be true,” or “A statement must have sufficient reason to even be considered further as to its truth.” Both of these statements can be held to be correct, but rely on different levels of “sufficient” and different meanings of “reason.”
That the cause must be proportioned to the effect?
Are you referring to the 2nd law of thermodynamics? I’m certainly not educated enough to contradict it.
Please explain precisely what is the evidence that you as a person exist?
I think therefore I am. That’s the only evidence to which I can personally attest.
Is there any limit to the number of things you don’t know beyond which atheism becomes an untenable theory?
The number of unknowns has no link to the validity of atheism. Yet again you demonstrate your lack of understanding of a very simple principle. The atheist position is a lack of belief in God due to the absence of evidence. The alternatives to atheism are agnosticism, delusion, or blind faith. The only way to refute the beliefs of atheists is to provide evidence of the existence of God. As I said previously, “beyond reasonable doubt” is an appropriate level of evidence.