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Dan123
Guest
It’s hardly a new idea, epistemology is one of the oldest fields of philosophical study. I believe for example that raising the minimum wage in the US would lead to greater economic success for many Americans. I found this believe on historical economic data. But lacking the ability to foretell the future I would not claim to know that course of action would lead to that result.The biggest distinction between a lot of “New Atheists” and the older guard is the fairly novel insistence that “knowing” and “believing” are discrete activities.
While I didn’t write a paper or design a course I did spend quite a bit of time just yesterday making graphs and laying out the function of natural selection for someone in another thread. Sadly I’m now convinced he was just trolling.You might try to correct strawmen or go over some basics, but you wouldn’t feel obliged to write up your own academic paper that covers the theory of evolution in a comprehensive way from start to finish, nor would you design a course yourself for them to go through. It’s a lot of effort!
Much of your post presents a form of the Kalam cosmological argument and I’m sure you’re already familiar with the objections to it so I’ll take your suggestions and not write a long response but to say you make a huge leap. Nothing about Kalam prevents there being 2 creators, nothing requires omnipotence or omniscience. It’s maybe one of the better arguments for deism but says nothing beyond that.
There’s still a material component to those however, you still have brain chemistry interacting to produce those results. If someone suddenly destroys your brain what happens to the ‘happy’ that was inside you?How the hell do you measure “good” or “happy” in an objective way?
I was responding to other posters who I assume had one in mind.But you may need to specify which argument for the existence of god that you’re alluding to. Honestly, there’re quite a few, naturally with varying degrees of soundness among them.