See, that's what I was talking about. That's the controversial assumption: that in both cases, it's a well-established rational inference; and the controversial and disputed implication is that giving an answer to one commits one to giving that same answer to the other, lest one be guilty of applying a double standard. It's a trap. You pretend that it's just a simple question with no strings attached, but myself and others can see through that quite easily. — Sapientia
I want to know why you aren't satisfied with the answers already given, here and elsewhere — Sapientia
Do you deny that it was? Are you saying there was no controversial assumption behind asking the question? It wasn't set up like a a trap so that you could pounce on the answer you were expecting by claiming that it implies something that is controversial and disputed? — Sapientia
Exactly. Just because some things are designed does not make all things designed. — darthbarracuda
Simple and loaded — Sapientia
That someone is experimenting on test subjects. — Noblosh
A bunch of pelicans just flew by in an orderly pattern. I'm off the coast. :) — Mongrel
Okay, well, pretending to not know what watches and similar artifacts are and how they are made, I'd make no assumptions about where it must have come from, especially not with respect to assuming that something sentient made it. That wouldn't be justified, because I'd have no experience base for concluding that. — Terrapin Station
Magnets create much more orderly order than conscious beings — mcdoodle
Again, do you want me to answer where I'd pretend to not know what watches are and how they're made? — Terrapin Station
Also called 'An act of God'. Thus a tidy room is a sign of the absence of God, and the presence of fairies, or some other anal retentive being — unenlightened
Order is not defined as resulting from the actions of a conscious agency — Noblosh
Why wouldn't order be a sufficient reason to deduce "not God" in that case — Terrapin Station
The answer is simple: sin. They don't want to give up their sinful lifestyle. — lambda
In which case a tidy room is unsurprising to the extent of being inevitable. Don't tell my kids. — unenlightened
According to logic*. I don't have to come up with a counterargument if your argument is fallacious. — Noblosh
If we're using this definition, humans and some other organisms would fall into the category of "God". — Harry Hindu
Actually no. Observations have shown that organization out of chaos is the result of the application of energy, not conscious agency. — Harry Hindu
There isn't order in the universe. — Harry Hindu
Non sequitur: Affirming the consequent. — Noblosh
Order isn't sufficient evidence that someone was responsible for the room. it's bizarre that you'd think it is. — Terrapin Station
My first thought was - clearly no one lives here (because living is a messy business). Creation is clearly a messy business, and God is not so neurotic as to tidy away all the unused galaxies, as anyone with a telescope can see. There's crap all over the place. Cleanliness is a very long way from Godliness — unenlightened
It's a problem because it requires that the person presenting the argument either
1. accepts that the argument implies a contradiction, or
2. provides some work-around for which no argument has been given, for example: God is eternal. — Mongrel
With the Earth, trees, etc. there's zero evidence that anyone makes them. The evidence rather suggests that they're made entirely by natural/not-person-made phenomena. — Terrapin Station
I'll have to challenge the basic premise as laid out in the OP — anonymous66
If not, then who created him — Mongrel
Suppose I gave you $1. Does that mean I also thereby gave you the number 1? — Nagase
But 0 is not <nothing>, it is something — Nagase
for any x not equal to 0, there is no z such that 0*z=x. But so what? How is this a problem? — Nagase
It's the timing that really strikes me as odd though. Pundits were bandying that imminent war with North Korea could be possible last week, so what could entice Rodman to choose now of all times to head over for another visit? — VagabondSpectre
Would you use a woolly hat to hammer in a nail? — andrewk
Because it's just an example of fiction writing. — Terrapin Station