What would you do if it were proven...?

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Because I already pointed out the absurdity of your original answer…
I didn’t think you did. I thought you were just complaining. Either way though, I do not see what is so objectionable about doing your own research. I do not understand why you think I should explain it to you instead.
 
I didn’t think you did. I thought you were just complaining. Either way though, I do not see what is so objectionable about doing your own research. I do not understand why you think I should explain it to you instead.
One more time:

I asked you: “Existence precedes Essence” [Sartre’s slogan] means “God is immanent and transcendent” [definitely NOT what Sartre’s slogan means]?

The answer: No, warp, it doesn’t mean that. Clearly, it doesn’t. For you to just insist that it does and to tell me to do my own research on the subject is the height of absurdity (never mind your mixing in of the ridiculous assertion that I don’t understand the words making up your bizarre assertion). If you don’t understand why you ought to explain statements like this, you really don’t understand the basic purpose of philosophical dialogue, and you should not be giving “Catholic philosophy” (or any form of “Thomism”) a bad name by pretending to participate in this philosophy forum under that aegis. I pointed this out, essentially, before, and you retreated to the claim that you’re just a redneck from west Kansas, etc. I hope you won’t do that again.
 
OK, not sure what you’re saying here. Are you trying to indicate that it could not be proven to your satisfaction that God doesn’t exist?
Yes, Candide. This is another basic principle of philosophy.

One cannot prove something’s non-existence. It’s a nonsensical request.

It’s like saying: prove to me that a pebble with does not exist.

One would have to know the universe in its entirety to prove this–one would have to know every rock, every nook and cranny, in every place from here to eternity to say that this pebble does not exist.

And, if one knew the universe in its entirety, one would, naturally, be God, eh? And thus, proving that said pebble does not exist, in the end, proves that God exists. 😃
 
One more time:

I asked you: “Existence precedes Essence” [Sartre’s slogan] means “God is immanent and transcendent” [definitely NOT what Sartre’s slogan means]…?
As we aren’t talking about Sartre, that explains your confusion. I told you Mulla Sadr, and Existential Thomism. Not Sartre. Sartre missed the invention of that concept by a thousand years. You must be a first or second year philosophy student. Too bad you were so rude, condescending and insulting to everyone. It would be a lot less embarrassing for you to be exposed like this if you had treated everyone better.
 
Yes, Candide. This is another basic principle of philosophy.

One cannot prove something’s non-existence. It’s a nonsensical request.
That is not a basic principle of philosophy. If that is on your list of basic philosophical principles, I’m curious how it got there.
It’s like saying: prove to me that a pebble with does not exist.
One would have to know the universe in its entirety to prove this–one would have to know every rock, every nook and cranny, in every place from here to eternity to say that this pebble does not exist.
And, if one knew the universe in its entirety, one would, naturally, be God, eh? And thus, proving that said pebble does not exist, in the end, proves that God exists. 😃
Many philosophers would say that Ockham’s razor is a basic philosophical principle. If you ask me to prove that a pebble that is made of horn of unicorn, and is a tiny replica of the Sistine Chapel, and which migrates to Mexico every year following the lead of the monarch butterflies, does not in fact exist anywhere in the universe, I’ll just point out that even though I am not God, there is more than sufficient reason to believe that such an entity indeed does not exist (anywhere in the universe). And if you happen to be sane, I won’t need to get into lengthy explanations of why that is the case.

As an aside, does your signature mean that you have four dancing daughters? Just so you know it doesn’t go unappreciated, my 2-y-o son always gets a kick out seeing it.
 
As we aren’t talking about Sartre, that explains your confusion. I told you Mulla Sadr, and Existential Thomism. Not Sartre. Sartre missed the invention of that concept by a thousand years. You must be a first or second year philosophy student. Too bad you were so rude, condescending and insulting to everyone. It would be a lot less embarrassing for you to be exposed like this if you had treated everyone better.
LOL! You’re SUCH an ignoramus, seriously. I must be a first or second year philosophy student - riiigght! LOL! I still say you’re better than those other jokers though. 👍 Let’s just say I know enough about philosophy to know that Mulla Sadr is not a household name among contemporary philosophers, whereas everyone knows that the slogan you mentioned is Sartre’s. In any case, your response still does nothing to explain the synonymy which you claim obtains between the two statements in question. And again: If you don’t understand why you ought to explain claims like that, you really don’t understand the basic purpose of philosophical dialogue, and you should not be giving “Catholic philosophy” (or any form of “Thomism”) a bad name by pretending to participate in this philosophy forum under that aegis. In any case, I’m curious as to whether you’ve ever actually read St. Thomas - what have you read? Meanwhile, I’ll do some research and get back to you. 👍
 
LOL! You’re SUCH an ignoramus, seriously.
Says the guy who doesn’t know the difference between Sartre and Sadr. After he was told.
I must be a first or second year philosophy student - riiigght! LOL! I still say you’re better than those other jokers though. 👍 Let’s just say I know enough about philosophy to know that Mulla Sadr is not a household name among contemporary philosophers, whereas everyone knows that the slogan you mentioned is Sartre’s.
You’re full of it. I told you Mulla Sadr back when you asked where I getting it from. You just didn’t pay attention.
In any case, your response still does nothing to explain the synonymy which you claim obtains between the two statements in question. And again: If you don’t understand why you ought to explain claims like that, you really don’t understand the basic purpose of philosophical dialogue, and you should not be giving “Catholic philosophy” (or any form of “Thomism”) a bad name by pretending to participate in this philosophy forum under that aegis.
Says the guy that doesn’t know Sadr from Sartre. How you can mumble such condescension with your foot in your mouth amazes me.
In any case, I’m curious as to whether you’ve ever actually read St. Thomas - what have you read? Meanwhile, I’ll do some research and get back to you. 👍
I haven’t read anything. No need to get back to me. I am uninterested in your opinion.
 
Says the guy who doesn’t know the difference between Sartre and Sadr. After he was told.
Again, what an ignoramus you are! I never said anything that would justify your thinking that I don’t know the difference between these two. Get a grip, man! I’m guessing I’ve hurt your ego and that’s why you’re spouting such silliness, but you have to try to get beyond a fixation on your ego if you’re actually interested in a real philosophical discussion.
You’re full of it. I told you Mulla Sadr back when you asked where I getting it from. You just didn’t pay attention.
Let’s take it from a guy who actually has a legitimate claim to know something about Mulla Sadra (Sadra, not Sadr), Sajjad Rizvi, author of the Stanford Enc. article on Mulla Sadra:
plato.stanford.edu/entries/mulla-sadra/
Knowledge is a process that develops through making judgements. The term judgment is a technical concept in Islamic epistemologies to describe the analysis of a proposition in which one ascertains whether it holds true and whether it describes something that exists. Judgements are therefore closely linked to the discernment of existence.
Knowledge develops and is corroborated through the Aristotelian science of demonstration (apodeixis).
Philosophy requires analysis and demonstration. The rehearsal of ideas, adhering to past authority and conjecture (imperfect and rhetorical forms of argument) do not constitute philosophical reasoning.
Please read the last bit I bolded for you carefully, oh great student of Mulla Sadra.
Says the guy that doesn’t know Sadr from Sartre. How you can mumble such condescension with your foot in your mouth amazes me.
Again, don’t be such a hypocritical donkey. Again: I never said anything that would justify your thinking that I don’t know the difference between these two. (Like I really thought that Sadr was an alternate spelling of Sartre, and that Jean-Paul was actually a Mulla?!? Good grief! I may have under-estimated your ability to actually believe your own BS. Sorry!)
I haven’t read anything. No need to get back to me. I am uninterested in your opinion.
Not surprising.
 
Since all religious belief systems frequently seem to contradict one other, they cannot be all true, as truth cannot deny the truth. And finding the truth with all the contradictions among the religious belief systems is no simple matter. But of all the religious belief systems in the world, Christianity is the only one I know that is based on evidence such as the fulfillment of prophecies, the eyewitness accounts (Gospels) of the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus; and also the eyewitness accounts of His miracles. No other religious belief system in the world has that kind of evidence about its founder. Therefore, if a set of religious beliefs are to be the true one, then the religious beliefs of Christianity is logically it.
Indeed. Christianity is the only religion that could be proven false, clearly and definitively, by one piece of evidence. That is, if the bones of Christ were ever found, Christianity would be done! finished! kaput! destroyed!

2000 years of people searching…and still…nothing. 🤷
 
Again, what an ignoramus you are!..
When you stated.
I asked you: “Existence precedes Essence” [Sartre’s slogan] means “God is immanent and transcendent” [definitely NOT what Sartre’s slogan means]…?
You clearly confused the philosophy of Sartre for the for the metaphysics of Mulla Sadr, after I had specifically told you that Mulla Sadr was the philosopher I was referring to. His name is Ṣadr ad-Dīn Muḥammad Shīrāzī, that is also in the Stanford article you quoted. In that quote I saw nothing that recommends that I do your research for you. You ask what a certain philosophical concept was, not for me to justify its conclusions. Doing your own research will give you a better understanding of the differences between the various branches of philosophy.
 
Indeed. Christianity is the only religion that could be proven false, clearly and definitively, by one piece of evidence. That is, if the bones of Christ were ever found, Christianity would be done! finished! kaput! destroyed!

2000 years of people searching…and still…nothing. 🤷
Even if bones were discovered how could it be proved they were those of Jesus? DNA tests seem out of the question…
 
When you stated.

I asked you: “Existence precedes Essence” [Sartre’s slogan] means “God is immanent and transcendent” [definitely NOT what Sartre’s slogan means]…?
You clearly confused the philosophy of Sartre for the for the metaphysics of Mulla Sadr, after I had specifically told you that Mulla Sadr was the philosopher I was referring to.
No, I clearly did not clearly fall prey to any such confusion. You are clearly mistaken. I merely pointed out that Sartre’s slogan is in fact Sartre’s slogan, and that his slogan is clearly *not *semantically equivalent to “God is immanent and transcendent,” i.e., that’s simply not what it means, and this is true regardless of who says it. In other words, it simply does not follow from what I wrote that I thought that Jean-Paul Sartre was Mulla Sadr(a). Your ridiculously arrogant accusation here is based on a non sequitur. If you think it is not, please explain how your argument does actually follow.
His name is Ṣadr ad-Dīn Muḥammad Shīrāzī, that is also in the Stanford article you quoted.
That’s right, and having done my due diligence on google it appears that the only time he is ever referred to as Mulla Sadr is…by you!
In that quote I saw nothing that recommends that I do your research for you. You ask what a certain philosophical concept was, not for me to justify its conclusions. Doing your own research will give you a better understanding of the differences between the various branches of philosophy.
Let me be clear that I like you and I say this to you as a brother in Christ, but honestly, that is an idiotic position. First, I never asked you to do my research for me (I would strongly advise against anyone asking you to do their research for them). Second, think about what it implies about your purpose of posting here: you are here to announce arcane-sounding, unreferenced philosophical ‘concepts’ (and let’s be honest: the way you use them, they’re just slogans, not concepts) and if anyone asks you to explain what your so-called ‘concepts’ mean, you just invoke the name ‘Mulla Sadr’ (or the term ‘Existential Thomism’) and tell him to go do his own research? Obviously such appeals to authority and refusals to demonstrate the coherence of your position completely contradict the philosophical spirit of Mulla Sadra, at least so far as Rizvi summarizes it:
Knowledge is a process that develops through making judgements. The term judgment is a technical concept in Islamic epistemologies to describe the analysis of a proposition in which one ascertains whether it holds true and whether it describes something that exists. Judgements are therefore closely linked to the discernment of existence.
Knowledge develops and is corroborated through the Aristotelian science of demonstration (apodeixis).

Philosophy requires analysis and demonstration. The rehearsal of ideas, adhering to past authority and conjecture (imperfect and rhetorical forms of argument) do not constitute philosophical reasoning.
Please
read that bolded bit a few times and think about the adherence to past authority (which authorities, in any case, you seem not to understand) and to conjecture which constitute the substance of your reponses here.

More generally, if you’re so in love with Mulla Sadra’s wonderful existentialist philosophy, why don’t you want to discuss it? (I think it seems very interesting and very much worth discussing.) It’s like a Christian telling a non-Christian that Jesus is the savior and that the whole point of life is to know and love and become like him, then when the non-Christian expresses interest and asks for more information about Jesus, you just tell her to google it. Seriously: what the… 🤷…is with that kind of attitude?

Maybe you could/should ask yourself: what would Mulla Sadra do? 😛
 
For one thing, I might withdraw my membership to CAF! (Or maybe not.) It’s hard to know how one might react to unexpected major news or in emergency situations. Most likely, I would be somewhat depressed at first. But then perhaps I would begin to question whether my mind was able to understand correctly the full-proof argument against the existence of G-d and start looking for loopholes in the logic of the argument and in my interpretation of it. In other words, I would attempt to second guess my own reasoning process. If that didn’t help, I might tell myself that faith in G-d’s existence is not solely or mainly based on reason anyway, so I could perhaps still be content with faith despite reasoning to the contrary. If that too failed, I’d like to think I wouldn’t change much in my behavior toward other people (and animals), still trying the best I can to be kind and caring.
Hi meltzerboy, this seems like a reasonable endpoint to expect and quite a likely route for a theist to end up there. Thanks for writing.
 
No, I clearly did not
You clearly confused Sartre for Sadr. Not the men, the philosophies. We all saw you do it. You thought I was referring to Sartre after I had clearly stated Mulla Sadr. That’s why the phrases did not match up, you mistook Sartre for Sadr.
That’s right, and having done my due diligence on google it appears that the only time he is ever referred to as Mulla Sadr is…by you!
Yeah, me and his Momma. Ṣadr ad-Dīn Muḥammad Shīrāzī
…you are here to announce arcane-sounding, unreferenced philosophical ‘concepts’ (and let’s be honest: the way you use them, they’re just slogans, not concepts)
They are standard metaphysical concepts known throughout the world for thousands of years now. You just didn’t know what they meant because you are just arguing as you look things up on Google.
and if anyone asks you to explain what your so-called ‘concepts’ mean, you just invoke the name ‘Mulla Sadr’ (or the term ‘Existential Thomism’) and tell him to go do his own research?..
Not everyone. Just you. If I want to argue with Google I’ll call up the Adsense folks.
 
On ‘judging’ what food you prefer, I would say that is just tasting and deciding which you prefer. It is not properly speaking a judgment, unless you are making your decision on the basis of some kind of conceptual deliberation. This is a matter of how to use the word ‘judgment’ - you could propose to use it in some other way, such that thermometers make judgments, for example (some philosophers have made this suggestion), but that is not a kind of ‘judgment’ that I have any interest in discussing.
I’d agree that thermometers do not judge in a sense I’d call meaningful. But there again I’d say that was with my point rather than against it. By which I mean that a thermometer is totally objective. All it can do is represent the temperature it is exposed to. I’d say this is not a judgement but simply a measurement.

Just to be sure we’re talking about the same thing here, I looked up the definition of judgement of Webster. There are several there, the one I think applies in this discussion is*

“4 a : the process of forming an opinion or evaluation by discerning and comparing b : an opinion or estimate so formed”

Does that seem like an appropriate definition to use? If not, would you care to offer a different one? Personally I suspect that the way we are using the word may be different.*
I understand the connotations of ‘judgment’ that you’re referring to here, the kind implied in a phrase like “you’ll have to use your judgment on that one.” But in referring to a judgment I am just talking about the act of making some inference, proceeding from premises to a conclusion. This is indeed always subjective, in that only ‘subjects’ make inferences, but also always aims at objectivity.
Ok, I’m still not convinced that judgements do always aim at objectivity. For example if the premises are all knowingly subjective then surely the judgement is entirely subjective?*

So other example, why is this piece of art “better” than that one. Our judgement may consider use of light, vibrancy, accuracy of form etc. But another person seeing those same things will conclude completely differently. In this case the premises are based on real (and identifiable)databut are all subjective in themselves.
Indeed, it is about having an objective perspective, that is, a perspective that is not hermetically sealed but which is open to the views of others and committed to seeking ways of understanding that do not simply contradict the views of others but which understands and synthesizes these other views. Any perspective which did not seek this kind of objectivity would literally be that of a crazy person, who is simply out of touch with reality, floating along in her own private universe.*
Ok, but surely in that case we all have an objective perspective? Since none of us live in the manner described. But that would leave us with any individuals views being “objective” no? Surely this rather degrades the meaning of objective?
But if what you believe is true, restriction to that single true viewpoint is simply the necessary condition of correctly understanding reality. So you may not mean to, but you still seem to be simply dismissing the possibility that a religion might teach the actual truth. (Believing what is true is not ‘closed-minded’ in any interesting sense of the term.)
Ahhh, I think this may be the source of the difference. I said that enforcing a restriction to single opinion on yourself tends to lead to closed mindedness, not that it is in itself an act of closed mindedness. Clearly we all believe our opinions are true / justified. Otherwise we wouldn’t hold them.*

However, where we say “if I’m wrong about X then my life is ruined / pointless” then whether we like it or not our brains will bias us (in assessment of information / evidence) towards believing that which doesn’t cause such problems. I’m sure you are as aware of this affect as I am. This is why it leads to closed mindedness, because if information is presented which would cause a major negative impact the brain wants to reject it as a self preservation mechanism. Rejecting valid information on the basis of a pre-existing viewpoint is (to me at least) closed minded.*
I don’t think this is a very interesting point. I don’t think many people would “kill themselves over it,” but the ‘it’ in question is not a general one, i.e., the issue is not the general issue of changing one’s mind. For the posters you are talking about, they are making a specific counter-factual claim about the objective worth of life in the absence of a particular reality (God)…
Ok, but this still carries the affect I mentioned above. The “it can’t be true, that would be a disaster” affect.

For example, as I have said, if someone proved to my satisfaction that God existed, I’d believe he exists. If necessary based on what I discovered I’d make adjustments to my life. If I thought it’d ruin my life, or cause me to kill myself then I think that would make it very difficult to make an unbiased assessment of the evidence.
…so your attempt to address the essence of what they have said in such general terms really misses the point of what they have tried to say to you.
Agree I wrote that rather poorly, hopefully I’ve explained my view more clearly now?
Again, I think you’re missing the point: this isn’t about people imposing limits on themselves; it’s about how people understand reality to objectively be.
But it is about people imposing limits on themselves. If someone just said “I believe in God”. Then that’s fair enough. What has been the subject here is quite different.*
 
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