D
ddarko
Guest
(Continued from above post…)
On the other hand, I would disagree with Ramesh’s particular description of this higher power since it leads to some contradictions. As I said once before, one cannot hold self contradictory “truths” as self-evident. But this is an issue of comparative religions and not the point of our debate. I think I would be correct in conceding that which description matches God best is OBVIOUSLY not a self-evident truth. If it was, then God obviously wouldn’t have had to have a plan to “save his people”
Self-evident truths do not lead to nihilism. Ironically the atheist (I don’t mean the leading new atheist these days who seem to have zero logic in their positions) have been trying for centuries to justify objectivity and escape the slide to nihilism in the atheistic view. Now if God is a self-evident truth, you already have justified objectivity. The belief in a God comes with the implication that there is an objective truth. So I see no way of things sliding down to nihilism unless you are ok with accepting contradictory truths as self-evident. I clearly made my point in my last post that this was not the case. If something is contradictory, it can’t be held as a self evident truth.

Whats ironic is that you missed that point entirely
God Bless
Actually this is the mistake you are making here. I would say God or a higher power is indeed self-evident. Denying God is like denying science. Irrational. So your friend Ramesh is correct in asserting a self evident knowledge of something greater than him-self. I do not disagree with him.Plantinga is defending a litote, the idea that theists are “not irrational”, or are believing according to his particular sense of “warrant”, which is NOT the conventional sense, but something more like “proper function”.
I have a friend Ramesh who considers the reality of Brahma and, Ganesh as divines as “self-evident”. My other friend Joe considers the Christian God “self-evident”. Now what? Do propose an epistemology that just accepts “self-evidence” for conflicting claims? Neither of these men are internally conflicted on that matter. It’s only between them that we understand that “self-evidence” is false indicator in one or both of these guys’ claims.
No, other minds is an idea that stands up very well to evidential evaluation. The idea that we blindly accept whatever people want to assert (and you’ve pegged the needle here in your last post with the most egregious abuse of that kind of license – God as self-evident!) as “true” and that’s the end of the matter is absurd in the strictest sense. It produces absurd outcomes, like Ramesh and Joe both embracing contradictory “truths”. That’s where the nihilism comes in – as soon as you become promiscuous with the idea of “self-evidence”, and if you are affirming God as self-evident, there’s not further to go in terms of self-permissiveness, then all knowledge is destabilized as a result. If we can “know truth” byut just supposing X is true because it seems that way to us, then “true” and “know” just collapse in terms of meaning.
On the other hand, I would disagree with Ramesh’s particular description of this higher power since it leads to some contradictions. As I said once before, one cannot hold self contradictory “truths” as self-evident. But this is an issue of comparative religions and not the point of our debate. I think I would be correct in conceding that which description matches God best is OBVIOUSLY not a self-evident truth. If it was, then God obviously wouldn’t have had to have a plan to “save his people”
Self-evident truths do not lead to nihilism. Ironically the atheist (I don’t mean the leading new atheist these days who seem to have zero logic in their positions) have been trying for centuries to justify objectivity and escape the slide to nihilism in the atheistic view. Now if God is a self-evident truth, you already have justified objectivity. The belief in a God comes with the implication that there is an objective truth. So I see no way of things sliding down to nihilism unless you are ok with accepting contradictory truths as self-evident. I clearly made my point in my last post that this was not the case. If something is contradictory, it can’t be held as a self evident truth.
If that rule of thumb is indeed true, then you are just explaining to me a self-evdent truthAs a hint, consider a good rule of thumb for “self-evident”. If your denying the proposition causes you to contradict yourself in articulating the denial, you are in good shape.
-TS
Whats ironic is that you missed that point entirely
God Bless