Originally Posted by Gaber
Yes, insofar as solely using reason as a method of accomplishing the alleged end.
That’s an agreement. There’s nothing in your view that can or should be debated. You haven’t provided any reference points outside of your own personal experience – and therefore we can just accept your assertions or not. It’s not something to debate about and you seem to agree.No, it is a discounting of the argument itself as being based on insufficient data. The reference points I could provide, mine or anyone’s through history, including Jesus, would only do what I’ve done: point to the need for anyone seriously or practically interested in the Nature of Reality and its perceived manifestations to examine the tool they use to make their assertions.
Ultimately I’m simply saying that the design proposition is in effect plowing the wrong feild in terms of the result it wishes to “prove.” What have you proved to me? Yet I can ask you, “Are you aware?” you must perforxce say “Yes.” And if I asked “do you refer to yourself as “I”?” you must again perforce say “Yes.” Since those two things, not the proposed premioses and terms of your argument are alll that we actually share in realiy as a common ground, any useful examination of reality and phenomenon must rest on an expereintial understanding of what “awareness” and “I” are before any overlay of thoughts about them.
Commentary on what those are is valid only after the root expereince of their actual nature. Then we can talk, knowing what the structure of reality and percepotion is from an experiential basis. Until then we, or one of us, is speculating. But if you are interested, there are libraries of books, all pointers, that describe the discovery and conclusion of the process. They are from ancient to contemporary, from all four directions, and from people of remarkably variant background, even Catholic.
But none of them claim to be a “proof.” That is as impossible as a “proof” of the existance of God. the motto here is “vamos a ver.” Let’s go see. From your position you are arguing about the reality of Chinese rural life, never having been there and not speaking any Chinese dialect, and not having directions to get there to begin with. How useful is that?
You phrased the above as "**solely **
using reason" to accomplish the “alleged end”.
The Design Argument has an
end. One must use reason to accomplish that end. In the same way, mathematical formulas have an end. One does need to use mysticism in order to solve a math problem…I think you meant to say “one does (not) need to use mysticism in order to…” But you are
not proposiing a math problem or a solution to one. You are proposing at theory explicatiing what this Creation might in your opinionn be, and that is not a matter of logic or reason, though one can use those tools to speculate. That’s called rationalization. And surely logic and reason cannot account for the Ineffable, nor describe its Nature of how it feels to experience it, never mind what one must conclude experiencing such.
I think the Design Argument has been made very clear in many places on this thread. If you want to engage the argument, that’s great. But I think you’re not interested in that – but rather are turning the topic to your own private, personal experiences.
N, I am lodging an argument that those who propone the design idea are not proceediing from fact, but conjecture, and have offered a way to remedy that. So I have done two things, not one, and when it comes down to it, you just don’t like that there is a hole in the of structure of your argument.
Would it be better if I called your “view” an “opinion”? That’s what it is. You’re an anonymous person on a web forum making assertions about things. Again, in the very first point raised in this reply, you made your assertions and that’s the end of it.
No, it is not an opinion, because I have given you a useful way to ascetain for yourself the truth of it. Your refusiing to take those means is like your unexperienced allegations about the reality of the hypothetical village and me having been there, speaking their dialect, having got there by a useful map, would make my comments about it an opinion. You are the one with an opinion in this matter.
We don’t want to deal with it because you’re not offering anything that is worth discussing.
And you are???
Again, you had a private experience and you insist on how great that was for you. Ok, we can be glad you experienced something. But after that, there’s nothing to “deal with” except your own private life – and we’re not interested in analyzing that.
You are using the same lame excuse for lack of engagement that Tonyrey did. What is private about an estate with open gates and invitation signs? Does your refusal to entyer make it private? Or does your refusal allow you to maintain a personal story line about how you would like things to be because you bought into a fun nearrative that stimulates your brain?
You haven’t provided any coherent opposition to the Design Argument at all. In fact, you’ve made it clear that you’re not interested in pursuing that kind of argumentation.
And why would anyone persue argumentation along a clearly debased line? Why would I oppose a fiction? To lend it verity? I don’t think so. It
could be more useful to recommend a way to fill the hole in your premises, as I have. You can refuse that, but hey, it doesn’t make your arguments any more sound.