Ahh - if empirical claims are based on experience, and the vast - VAST - majority of people will, if you ask, happily tell you that they have experienced God in one fashion or another, then why don’t atheists accept THAT empirical evidence - based on the experience of these people - of His existence, as they do the evidence for Guernica’s genius?
Again: “Guernica is a work of genius” is a
value claim, not a
fact claim. Putting it in the same category as the claim, “A disembodied intelligence exists” is making an enormous
category error.
Now, people’s experience of various gods – and people of all different religions report experiencing all kinds of gods – is evidence that human beings tend to have feelings that they describe as spiritual, just as people’s experience of a painting as being cool tells us that a lot of people experience that paining as cool.
In both cases, the claim is something about the world inside people’s heads.
If you wanted to make a claim about the world outside of your head, you need evidence from outside people’s heads.
Your feelings can’t prove that a conspiracy is out to get you, and your feelings can’t prove that a god exists. I’m sorry. That’s not how things work.
Luke K:
The fact that innumerable mindless atoms blindly following physical laws can all come together and work towards the same, purposeful end, and give rise to intelligent self-consciousness is a kind of evidence.
Yes, it is. It’s evidence that blind laws can give rise to intelligence.
It’s not evidence for what you seem to think that it is: a disembodied intelligence made it all happen.
The computer analogy fails because computers don’t occur naturally, and computers don’t arise through natural selection acting on many generations of small computers.
ddarko:
we believe tons of things that do not have empirical evidence. Logical axioms, the fact that other beings exist apart from me and they are not a figment of my imagination etc. Therefore, not all truths need empirical backing. We believe in logical axioms since its truth is a necessity.
“A disembodied intelligence exists” is not an axiom. It is a
category error to try to place it there. It is a claim about the world outside of our heads, and we have developed a time-tested process of determining whether or not such claims are likely to be true: the use of evidence and reason.
If God does not exist, nothing really matters including whether you believe in the truth or lies.
Say that I’m walking down the street and a bus is coming down the road. The statement “A bus is coming down the road” is true. In that situation, whether or not a god exists, it makes a huge difference to me whether or not I believe the truth.
Sure, ultimately, in the big picture, it doesn’t matter whether I’m hit by a bus – which is I suppose where you’re going with this weird argument – but it matters tremendously to me, which is the whole point of bothering to figure out whether my beliefs are true or not.
And if you’re going to turn around and say something even more ridiculous, like, “Oh, well, it matters to you, but it doesn’t
truly matter – ‘truly matter’ here defined as something random that I’m making up because I don’t understand what the word ‘matters’ actually means when it’s used by real people”…then there’s no point in talking further.
Even atheist have to implicitly assume that he exists in their daily lives.
Are you just making this stuff up as you go along?
Thirdly, Christians believe that Christ was resurrected and our church fathers did indeed see him after that. Thus God has given us proof of his existence.
And believers in Krishna think that Krishna appeared to Arjuna, and it was recorded in the Bhagavad Gita. So I guess Krishna has given us proof of his existence as well.
Oh, wait a minute. You mean that ancient stories written down generations after events supposedly took place are
completely insufficient to demonstrate that violations of natural laws happened?
MindOverMatter2:
You don’t seem to have the capacity to understand metaphysical truths.
So is that a completely and total evasion of a simple question? I’ll quote it again for you: “How did you come to this metaphysical knowledge of god? If you have evidence of it, then we can talk about how good your evidence is, and we’re right back to square one. If you have no evidence, then you don’t have knowledge of it at all.”
Yeah, if I were in your position, I’d want to back down from addressing that question too.