What don't you accept about his proof? It's valid. — Shwah
You can't deny a God-like being doesn't exist if you accept his proof is the point and the op is about atheism.
Also I'm clearly not interested in talking about my religion with you lol — Shwah
In any case, the validity is in a God-like being and that's the baseline here. — Shwah
"mental ideality" is intentional, that is, always about non-mental reality (i.e. consciousness of what transcends consciousness); otherwise, exclusive concern with "mental ideality" lacks substantive (i.e. non-arbitrary) content and spirals into masturbatory solipsism. — 180 Proof
Only when the strangeness of beings oppresses us does it arouse and evoke wonder. Only on the ground of wonder-the manifestness of the nothing-does the "why?" loom before us. Only because the "why" is possible as such can we in a definite way inquire into grounds and ground things. Only because we can question and ground things is the destiny of our existence placed in the hands of the researcher.” — Joshs
What? Those hairless apes that immediately cooked their own planet? — apokrisis
That's my entire stock of knowledge about chewing. — Cuthbert
Await my friend. The so eagerly looked for truth will be revealed once and for all. — EugeneW
His worldview seems to be similar to my own Enformationism, in which Information (meaningful relationships) is the Ontological Primitive. However, I locate that "primitive" in the mind of the Programmer, not in the multiple minds of her avatars or creatures. — Gnomon
Hence the ubiquity of relativism and subjectivism which is all-pervasive in modern philosophy. — Wayfarer
The anxiety over contingency is nonetheless a valid anxiety because without some necessary being - such as God - the drive towards the intelligibility of the universe, which is the foundational drive of science, hits a brick wall with existence itself, which remains radically unintelligible, without explanation, unless it is related in some way to necessary being. — Neil Ormerod, The Metaphysical Muddle of Lawrence Krauss
But as I understand it the theory of relativity supersedes Newtonian physics in some respects, but it doesn't overturn it, as Copernican theory overturned Ptolmaic cosmology. It just showed that Newtonian laws have a limited range of applicability. — Wayfarer
Reading them, one gets the impression that they want very much to leave this world. — Constance
Well, that does put a damper on going to the state fair, and everything else, really. What survives? The question insinuates itself into every corner of existence, into language itself, then the self itself. At this point, you're either mentally ill, or you're enlightened. — Constance
Were they not, if they were even slightly different, society as we know it would collapse. — Agent Smith
I still feel there's a deep issue behind all of this with regards to contingency and necessity. It seems to me when it is said that laws could have been otherwise, that this distinction is being lost. But of course it's a very big question. — Wayfarer
I'd be interested in some examples. — Wayfarer
It baffles me why you want to think of things this way. — Daemon
To respond automatically is to respond without understanding. — Daemon
Perhaps nothing is necessary. Reality is overrated. Why is the film industry a multi-billion dollar enterprise? — Agent Smith
It seems that whatever I think of, I can position myself apart from it, in an act of reflection. This reflective self is always NOT the role being played. But cannot be observed or even conceived. — Constance
But it can be approached phonologically in the analysis of the structure of experience. If you want to go there, it does get interesting. Let me know. — Constance
That's why your "criticisms thereof" are not "ingested". They may be food-for-physical-belly, but not nourishment-for-metaphysical-thought. Your error is what Popper called the "Demarcation Problem". Hence, you are shooting at pseudo-science, and hitting thin air. — Gnomon
The intensity of withdrawal? Not many would talk like this around here. — Constance
I watched a snail crawl along the edge of a straight razor. This is my dream; this is my nightmare.
but at the fringe of intelligible thought itself: metaphysics. — Constance
this nostalgia should not be historically conceived. — Constance
there is that "childhood sense of adventure" Kierkegaard talks about in The Concept of Anxiety — Constance
There is something to the nothing, but here, one has left analysis. Now the matter turns of the revelatory. — Constance
Awareness: factually informed condition; cognizance. — Galuchat
Scientific laws exist where logical necessity meets physical causation. — Wayfarer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_law
Science distinguishes a law or theory from facts. Calling a law a fact is ambiguous, an overstatement, or an equivocation. The nature of scientific laws has been much discussed in philosophy, but in essence scientific laws are simply empirical conclusions reached by scientific method; they are intended to be neither laden with ontological commitments nor statements of logical absolutes.
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Laws differ from scientific theories in that they do not posit a mechanism or explanation of phenomena: they are merely distillations of the results of repeated observation. As such, the applicability of a law is limited to circumstances resembling those already observed, and the law may be found to be false when extrapolated.
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Like theories and hypotheses, laws make predictions; specifically, they predict that new observations will conform to the given law. Laws can be falsified if they are found in contradiction with new data.
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The fact that laws have never been observed to be violated does not preclude testing them at increased accuracy or in new kinds of conditions to confirm whether they continue to hold, or whether they break, and what can be discovered in the process. It is always possible for laws to be invalidated or proven to have limitations, by repeatable experimental evidence, should any be observed. Well-established laws have indeed been invalidated in some special cases, but the new formulations created to explain the discrepancies generalize upon, rather than overthrow, the originals. That is, the invalidated laws have been found to be only close approximations, to which other terms or factors must be added to cover previously unaccounted-for conditions, e.g. very large or very small scales of time or space, enormous speeds or masses, etc. Thus, rather than unchanging knowledge, physical laws are better viewed as a series of improving and more precise generalizations.
I enjoy metaphors, but if misused, they result in category error and/or the fallacy of misplaced concreteness (reification). — Galuchat
Science may be true or false (just because that's the nature of verbal and mathematical language), whereas; awareness is always true. — Galuchat
It's impossible not to notice! Great! It was clear immediately you like language. Words are the closest to miracles! Oh wonderful words! Keep them symbols coming buddy! Paint you black on white art on my screen. — EugeneW
Men are simple folk. Women, no, they remind me of Rube Goldberg machines, they do! — Agent Smith
I wonder why we're hell bent on finding linear correlations. — Agent Smith
We're not close. We're are on top of each other! That's exactly how I have put it. The mound side though seems to roar its tail in the dark. The dark side of the medal. — EugeneW
Coin or con? — EugeneW
As the accuracy of measurement increases, do we have to switch between theories like it was done in your example with Mercury's precession? — Agent Smith
The outside world is as private (public) as the inside world is public (private). Both are as public as private. Mutually knibbling, gnawing, and biting each other. — EugeneW
Nonphysicalism hanging by a thread. It's the last stand. Do or die! — Agent Smith
Genes? — Agent Smith
I thought I made the case for our private experiences being similar (enough for government work) or even exactly identical. — Agent Smith