C
Charlemagne_III
Guest
“A theory with no evidence to support it” is not really a theory.Actually, probably not. A theory with no evidence to support it just seems like a bad theory to me.
There is matter. What the materialist does is claim that matter is sufficient for explaining everything that is observed. He argues that his theory is explanatorily sufficient and simpler than alternatives which posit more entities. There is evidence that matter exists, and A theory with no evidence to support it .
Claiming that materialism has an atheistic premise is not an effective way of arguing against it.
The principle of parsimony, ie. Occam’s razor, has almost nothing to do with Occam himself. It has been employed by virtually all philosophers because it is a sound epistemic principle.
“What the materialist does is claim that matter is sufficient for explaining everything that is observed” is not the same as providing proof that matter is all there is.
Claiming that materialism has an atheistic premise is an effective way of arguing against it.
Obviously, there is no proof the materialist can offer that God does not exist, and so again he cannot prove that Spirit does not exist as opposed to matter.
Occam’s Razor is not always a sound epistemic principle, as Einstein was pleased to note. You can get very carried away with it, as Einstein himself did when he found no need to presume the universe was anything other than infinite and uncreated. He was proved wrong on both counts. The materialist makes the same presumption (without proof) that matter is all there is. If you want to call that Occam’s Razor, go ahead, but I insist that a presumption is not proof. Nor is it a theory.

And I hate to break it to you, but I think we are starting to repeat ourselves.
