T
The_Exodus
Guest
So are you saying that the idea there is a God is a claim which can never be proved in principle, in the same way that one cannot count up to infinity?The notion isn’t vague. A ‘universal negative’ is just an unbounded search. There is no “end point” where we can say we have established the negative. It’s no more vague than the set of positive integers, as a concept. That too is unbounded, you will never count up and reach the end. There is no point at which we can stop searching for a god and say “we have reached the end of our search”. One can always suppose there’s yet some other supernatural way for a god to exist that we haven’t considered or can’t determine yet.
Which amounts to the positive: “this something does not exist.”As I read your formulation, “something” is the subject in both cases. If there is no designer, there is no ‘something’ to be the subject.
Practically speaking, this may be correct, but in terms of theoretical reason, what you say above is subjective and arbitrary.Yes, because the null hypothesis doesn’t carry the same burden as the claim “there is a God”.
I have no idea how I would enter a debate on either topic, to tell the truth.Do you suppose you have the burden of proof to show there is no teapot in orbit beyond Saturn, or that unicorns exist?
I do think if someone brought forth reasons for thinking teapots did orbit Saturn or that unicorns existed, I would initially find such claims laughable. But again, that would be my mere conditioned reaction, which springs from everything I’ve heard about the ridiculous nature of such wild claims. Every advance seems ridiculous and incredulous to the person across the table, but what does our “feeling” or “reaction” say, as far as the argument goes?
If you assume that there is no designer, no God, of course. I could just as easily say, “I have no reason to think the evidence I see is the result of unintelligible, random, processes.” In other words, the truth of your claim seems to you to be so intuitively. Have you any reasons for thinking this? I do not see how you avoid bringing your conclusion with you to the table.To say X exists is not at epistemic parity with saying X doesn’t exist, or more precisely, we have no basis to say that X exists.
How your belief obtains has nothing to do with whether or not that belief is true though. You can describe all day long how your mind leans toward certain propositions, but I don’t see how this mental characteristic does anything towards actually substantiating your claim.My belief can obtain without considering any evidence at all
I maintain that there is compelling evidence for a God, which is why I affirm the proposition that God exists. I see no reasons - beside unsubstantiated practical ones, or weak appeals to authority - for thinking unicorns exist or do not exist, and so I remain agnostic about them.If they were, you’d be as much a unicornian as you are a theist.