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Planty_Business
Guest
Agreed, which is why I acknowledged the fact that philosophical and logical proofs are sufficient for certain concepts beyond the purview of science.Why is it an inherently contradictory concept?
Also, to say that only those that are scientifically testable are true is itself not scientifically testable.
I deny the possibility of God’s existence on the grounds that God, defined as specifically as Christians define the concept, is a demonstrably (through logic and philosophy) incoherent concept. It would be nigh impossible to prove that a deist god does not exist, but the Christian God has such a specific definition that if even one logical hole were found in the attributes of such a God, it would be disproven. I can’t be bothered to do the research on reasons for atheism that you should be doing as a participant in this debate. You know why I find the God concept contradictory and I know why you find metaphysical naturalism contradictory.If you presuppose the possibility of the supernatural, on what grounds do you deny the possibility of God’s existence?
This is a complete non sequitir. Did you quote the wrong passage from my post? What does my statement that reality does not conform to the will of humans (unless humans actually act on that will, of course) have anything to do with my metaphysical materialism?But that is only because you think matter is all there is. Which cannot be proven to be true. So you are actually espousing an ism incapable of being proven to be true as well.
benedictus2, do you realize the fact that the claim that God exists is a truth claim? That is to say, if I am to be expected to believe your claim that God exists, you must first demonstrate why God’s existence is the truth. If I cannot be the judge of any theist’s reasons for belief in God, how am I supposed to come to the conclusion that God exists in the first place? I would gladly give God the respect he is due if 1) he existed and 2) he actually earned that respect.Now that is downright absurd. Whether a Supernatural Being is in your court or not does not depend on your criteria. Because after all, if it is indeed the case that He is a Supreme Being, puts Him beyond your purview and therefore outside of everyone’s court.
It’s statements like these that make me wonder if theists like you are even actually interested in a rational debate, or if you just want to throw around ad hominems all day. Stop acting like a child, and drop the emotional terms if you want me to take your position seriously.Well if that is not the most arrogant and stupid statements I have ever read.
Once again, we could do without the childish terms here - seriously, “itsy, bitsy, tiny bit”?In case you are unaware, there is another jury of humanity who has determined that God exists. What makes you think that you speak for humanity - you itsy, bitsy tiny bit of humanity?
At any rate, yes, I acknowledge the fact that many other humans have reached a “guilty of existing” verdict. That does not make them part of a different jury, nor does it make my verdict false. I do not claim to speak for humanity, thank you very much, any more than a single member of a jury claims to speak for the entire jury before a unanimous verdict is reached.
My objection is that the fact that the universe is fine-tuned for the development of intelligent life is not sufficient grounds for concluding that God exists. Multiverse theory could just as easily explain this fact, but the problem is that neither theory is falsifiable or testable. They are both just arguments from ignorance.So what is your objection then to the teleological proofs? They’re considered logical proofs of God.