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dostoyevskyfan
Guest
Much like the Ontological proof, I consider TAG one of the few irrefutable philosophical proofs for the existence of God, specifically the the Roman Catholic Triune God–the Father, Jesus Christ, and the Holy Ghost; who are all one essence. This is primarily because the proof relies on the foundations of epistemology, objective morality, and logical absolutes. In order to stay on topic, I will not go into why other gods (the god of Martin Luther, John Calvin, Muhammad, Homer, etc) are logically inconsistent, I will just assert that they are, and a logically inconsistent god, logically, cannot be united with the Platonic Form that is logic itself or cannot author “logic”; which is a necessary presupposition in order to have any meaningful conversation whatsoever, let alone formal argumentation that “works”.
I must admit that I am not well versed in presuppositionalism and their form of apologetics, although I know a few traditional catholics who are.
I understand the logical implications of atheism; namely that they cannot account for the problem of induction, the uniformity of nature, logic, the functionality of the scientific method, and the consistency of sense experience. This is a serious, and I would even go so far as to say, catastrophic, problem for atheistic epistemology. Atheists cannot claim that the consistency we see with our five senses will actually remain consistent, only that it always has. In short, they do not “know” with any epistemic certainty that their hand won’t suddenly morph into a watermelon at a future time or that the sun will not rise in the west and set in the east tomorrow. The idea that the scientific method is the end all be all solution to knowledge, is itself an idea that cannot be verified by the scientific method, not to mention also relies on the presupposition of the existence of logic to function in the first place.
Either the universe is random or it is not random, in the teleological sense, but also in the sense that it is uniform and consistent; not blind, arbitrary, and without aims or intentions. A lack of belief in God necessarily implies a belief that the cosmos are a haphazard result of statistical (im)probability. When atheists claim that they “do not believe the universe is random”, they provide no justification or they point to the laws of physics, which can be explained in the context of a random universe by the fact that repeating consistent patterns will inevitably emerge in a large string of random numbers. The laws of physics, themselves, in no way prove that the universe is NOT random, and there is no guarantee that they will continue to function they way that they do in the present as they will in the future. This is not “argumentum ad the matrix movie”; rather it demonstrates a logical inconsistency in all non-Catholic worldviews with respect to epistemology.
We must presuppose the existence of God in order that science and logic may function. The argument has its roots in Kant and can be formulated in many different ways. Please discuss your favorite formulation.
I must admit that I am not well versed in presuppositionalism and their form of apologetics, although I know a few traditional catholics who are.
I understand the logical implications of atheism; namely that they cannot account for the problem of induction, the uniformity of nature, logic, the functionality of the scientific method, and the consistency of sense experience. This is a serious, and I would even go so far as to say, catastrophic, problem for atheistic epistemology. Atheists cannot claim that the consistency we see with our five senses will actually remain consistent, only that it always has. In short, they do not “know” with any epistemic certainty that their hand won’t suddenly morph into a watermelon at a future time or that the sun will not rise in the west and set in the east tomorrow. The idea that the scientific method is the end all be all solution to knowledge, is itself an idea that cannot be verified by the scientific method, not to mention also relies on the presupposition of the existence of logic to function in the first place.
Either the universe is random or it is not random, in the teleological sense, but also in the sense that it is uniform and consistent; not blind, arbitrary, and without aims or intentions. A lack of belief in God necessarily implies a belief that the cosmos are a haphazard result of statistical (im)probability. When atheists claim that they “do not believe the universe is random”, they provide no justification or they point to the laws of physics, which can be explained in the context of a random universe by the fact that repeating consistent patterns will inevitably emerge in a large string of random numbers. The laws of physics, themselves, in no way prove that the universe is NOT random, and there is no guarantee that they will continue to function they way that they do in the present as they will in the future. This is not “argumentum ad the matrix movie”; rather it demonstrates a logical inconsistency in all non-Catholic worldviews with respect to epistemology.
We must presuppose the existence of God in order that science and logic may function. The argument has its roots in Kant and can be formulated in many different ways. Please discuss your favorite formulation.