Antidote
155
Hey Frank, hows it going ? — Antidote
180 Proof
1.6k
↪Frank Apisa I can't answer my own question because my question does not apply to my position on theism - UNLIKE YOU, I am not claiming to be an agnostic - and, in fact, questions your self-professed "agnosticism"; therefore, THE ONLY RELEVANT ANSWER TO MY QUESTION IS YOURS, Frank, but apparently, thus far, YOU are either too frightened or too ignorant or too disingenous to answer.
Let me rephrase this QUESTION TO YOU ABOUT YOUR POSITION in a way that anyone who's not even as 'smart' as YOU could easily answer:
Given that (your) "agnosticism" is A TRUTH-CLAIM, tell me/us what makes (your) "agnosticism" TRUE. — 180 Proof
Hippyhead
130
Think about what you just wrote there...especially the wording used in the last sentence.
— Frank Apisa
I've already been thinking about it for over 20 years. Your turn! :-)
— Hippyhead
No offense, but you've not actually addressed my claim at all, but just further fueled the Agnostic Holy War against the theist and atheist infidels. :-) — Hippyhead
Hippyhead
130
Much better if everyone simply acknowledge that we do not know how "all this" came about
— Frank Apisa
Agreed, much better philosophically, but seen as much worse by all those whose personal identity depends on them having an answer which is superior to somebody else's answer. So let's address that agenda, given that it tends to dominate philosophy forums.
The theist gets to pretend they are superior to atheists, and atheists get to pretend they are superior to theists. In both cases, the pretender can only position themselves above a limited number of people.
The agnostic however can pretend they are superior to BOTH theists AND atheists. From a purely ego calculation point of view, which is what's underway most of the time on philosophy forums, the agnostic position is clearly more logical, as it delivers the fantasy superiority experience much more efficiently. — Hippyhead
Hippyhead
127
If it doesn't model reality we throw it out and if it does we keep it.
— substantivalism
Now you're getting it. The "does god exist" question doesn't model reality very well. — Hippyhead
The vast majority of the time that question seeks a simple yes/no answer. The example of space illustrates that reality is rather more complicated than such a simplistic yes/no, exists or not paradigm. And so, if we're not going to throw the god question out, it should at least receive as much critical scrutiny as the competing answers. — Hippyhead
Or, we of course have the option to continue to endlessly repeat the same old arguments for another 500 years in order to arrive at a destination we already inhabit.
3017amen
2.2k
Obviously you are not able to answer your own question...and this has upset you. Just leave it be. No need to torture yourself.
— Frank Apisa
180 is a lot like his avatar. He gets upset easily. LOL — 3017amen
180 Proof
1.6k
↪Frank Apisa Okay. Just checking. You're only able to repeat yourself like a dumb parrot and thereby, also like a dumb parrot, unable to explain whatever that is you're parroting. So it's reasonable, even fair, to conclude, Frank, that what you call "my agnosticism" is wholly subjective just like e.g. babytalk or glossalalia. As I've said many times: if I can't engage in informative dialectic, then I seek only to expose and not bother trying to persuade :point: Your stuffed parrot's showing, Mr. Apisa. :sweat: — 180 Proof
jorndoe
1k
There are gods for all occasions. Most people, past and present, disbelieve/d the vast majority of them or never heard of them; they never show anyway, and sure aren't shown.
That leaves vague nebulous generic broad sketchy indeterminate definitions (because there are only definitions left), which evade epistemics, often enough by design.
Most have elements of personification imposed upon them, a bit like fossilized animism (and perhaps a bit like "seeing faces in the clouds" if you will).
Epistemic evasion just means we fall back on religious faith and faith alone, incidentally something of which there are many examples, those kinds of existential claims are easy enough to come up with anyway.
Does that warrant worship? Obsession? — jorndoe
180 Proof
1.6k
↪Frank Apisa I understand what you've written over and over ad nauseam, Frank. I'm asking a straight-forward question which you either can or can't answer (or will show why it's not a valid question): Is there an objective - more-or-other-than-subjective - correlate, or formulation, of your agnosticism?
If so, tell me/us what that is. — 180 Proof
You are having such a difficult time understanding ignosticism and likewise probably in trying to understand meta-philosophy (another field of study) if you ever get to it. The question "does god exist?" doesn't make any sense until you define god in a coherent manner then the discussion can continue from there. This is really simple. I'm not claiming it is inherently meaningless only that until you define the term in question coherently nothing of real substance can be said on it and ignosticism in compasses that. When did I claim or give the bias that the question is always or inherently meaningless no matter what? — substantivalism
Stop being so upset about this "personal" attack on you or your position i've only been noting that there is another position perhaps preferable to your own. If you would define god then I could note whether i'm an atheist, theist, or agnostic (weak/strong) on it. — substantivalism
Marchesk
3.6k
↪Frank Apisa I should have specified in terms of funding and global reach. — Marchesk
substantivalism
86
No. I won't even respond, because I know you cannot.
No so-called philosophers before 1900 identified as ignostics.
Nobody on the planet identified as ignostic before the mid-1950's.
No one should now. It is a cop-out...not a position.
The concept that gods exist is a valid one to consider...just as the concept that there are no gods is a valid one to consider.
If you do not want to do it...why are you engaging in a thread titled the way this one is?
— Frank Apisa
What is this god you speak of? If its the universe were all theists, if its a square circle were all atheists, if it's a deistic variety by definition it's unknowable so were all strong agnostics, and you haven't given a definition to me that you personally would like to discuss so i'm an ignostic right now. Remember you cannot speak for every theist on what they mean by god only you can do that for yourself and personal investigation. Also, why wouldn't I. . . I love discussing the monotheistic god of christianity and its properties such as omnipotence which is tricky to define.
You did stay true to your word to bury me beneath you Argumentum ad populum. — substantivalism
substantivalism
85
Yes, most philosophers.
Philosophers have been around for 2500 years. Name two from before 1900 who claimed they were ignostic.
— Frank Apisa
If I cannot will you bury me with an Argumentum ad populum? — substantivalism
Ignosticism, in my opinion, is of no value...and seems for an evasion than a position. It certainly is not the position MOST (hardly any) of the philosophers of the last 2500 years would take.
Here is my agnosticism:
I do not know if gods exist or not;
I see no reason to suspect gods CANNOT EXIST (that the existence of gods is impossible);
I see no reason to suspect that gods MUST EXIST (that at least one god is needed to explain existence);
I do not see enough unambiguous evidence upon which to base a meaningful guess in either direction...
...so I don't.
I feel it has value. For those who don't, I respect their opinion.
— Frank Apisa
Most philosophers? — substantivalism
But some have taken on a form of ignosticism that is similar but perhaps more extreme, non-cognitivism. It exists and has value. . . despite you saying it doesn't? — substantivalism
apokrisis
4.7k
. Most aircraft carriers will be totally destroyed during the first hours of any major new confrontation
— Frank Apisa
Full on nuclear war is different issue. The question here is about the global projection of power to run a world system.
And the US wouldn’t have continued to invest in supercarriers if they were as vulnerable as all that. — apokrisis
180 Proof
1.6k
Here is my agnosticism [ ... ]
— Frank Apisa
Is there an objective - more-or-other-than-subjective - correlate, or formulation, of your agnosticism? — 180 Proof
apokrisis
4.7k
↪Frank Apisa Navies and bases spell empires. A big army is good for beating up a geographic neighbour. Projecting power globally is about bases and carriers.
Until the UK started getting back into the game, only the US had a fleet of Nimitz and Ford class super-carriers. And the US has its global network of bases to match.
China and India are an order of magnitude behind in these terms.
The US could downsize drastically and still be a huge regional power. The real question is why would it even care about being the world policeman these days?
And the problem is also that power has shifted in ways that no-one could take its place. The thought of stepping into America’s shoes as the global cop also makes no sense if you are a China or an India.
The US experience shows that bases and carriers topple regimes but don’t build stable allies, or even reliable dictatorships. Warfare has adapted to the times and become asymmetric. Most of the world has also moved from developing to developed. Old school colonial empires can’t function anymore.
So the US certainly has the big stick military power. The flip side of this is that no one is going to rule the world - turn it into its well run colonial empire again - just by owning a big stick.
So the measures of might have changed along with the state of the world. Military power still counts. Yet forging regional communities of interest is what matters for successful statesmanship in a post-colonial, post-cold war, setting. — apokrisis
Then I would wonder why there is a field of philosophy (meta-philosophy) that even discusses the primary reason to study philosophy or if it does actually say anything about reality in general, is it the the same as art? Ignosticism is the most reasonable position to take given its not indulging in the god discussion but questioning whether there is even one to be had at all. Is the definition of god that you propose viable of a coherent answer or investigation? Not the equivalent of "I deem the question to be not-important so let's just disregard it" but more "what are you talking about? I don't understand what you are remaining ignorant towards?".
Given at least that agnosticism is a statement about your knowledge towards the god debate given you already acknowledge its not art and warrants an objective answer. . . that it's not nonsense. — substantivalism
Plus the US military remains the largest in the world. — Marchesk
EricH
186
↪Frank Apisa
Here was your #1 definition of the word "god" from several days ago. I have highlighted the important passage:
What do I mean when I use the word “god” in questions like “Do you think it more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one?”
I mean an entity of agency…something that existed BEFORE this thing we humans call the universe came into being…and which caused or helped to cause it to “come into being.”
I am NOT talking about anything “supernatural.” Anything that exists…is, by definition, a part of existence. If ghosts or spirit beings exist, but we humans cannot sense them in any way…they are part of what exists and are a part of nature.
— Frank Apisa
And here is your latest definition.
Supernatural is normally defined as "(of a manifestation or e — EricH
EricH
185
↪Frank Apisa
Can you at least acknowledge the possibility that we humans, the dominant species on this nondescript rock circling this nondescript sun in this nondescript galaxy...
...MAY NOT KNOIW EVERYTHING THERE IS TO KNOW ABOUT REALITY?
— Frank Apisa
Sigh. I have answered that question multiple times in the affirmative. I'll repeat myself yet again. You have explicitly rejected the notion of the supernatural. When you use the word "god(s)" you are referring to some natural phenomena which - as you put it - — EricH
That's fine. Given your definition, I'm agreeing with you. We're ants - and we must be humble and acknowledge and respect our limitations.
Our only real sticking point is your use of the word "god(s)" to describe a natural phenomena, since to the rest of humanity, the definition of the word "god(s)" includes some supernatural component. — EricH
Now if you could get any significant percentage of the world's population to switch over to your definition? I will tip my metaphorical hat to you - AND - I will switch to your definition. But until that time I will continue to use the word "god(s)" as the rest of humanity does. — EricH
But as a plain language person I am using the phrase "physical existence" in the same way that the average person on the street would use it. The universe as we know it is composed of atoms, sub-atomic particles that join together to form stars, planets, tables, cats on mats, people, etc — EricH
EricH
181
Nor to Christians or Jews, for instance. You do not wrestle with "a hypothetical entity...that (has) no material existence." Genesis 32: 24-29
Jesus is considered GOD by many Christians. He was not "a hypothetical entity...that (has) no material existence."
— Frank Apisa
Red herring here. While the character God in the Bible may sometimes manifest itself in the physical world - it's essence is non material. God "existed" before there was a material world. When you die, you soul goes to heaven (non physical realm) or hell (again non-physical).
You don't have to take my word for it. Ask any religious Jew, Christian, or Muslim.
And you have explicitly rejected this notion. — EricH
Very jaded view there
— Frank Apisa
Jaded? Not in the slightest. Try humble. — EricH
But to pretty much every other person on this little planet of ours, the word "god(s)" refers to a hypothetical entity or entities that have no material existence. — EricH
Yes - and a lot of time & energy wasted - and countless millions of lives destroyed. If the most intelligent people who have ever lived cannot agree on even the most rudimentary issues, then it's time to move on - we do not have the language tools nor the mental capacity to even know if we are asking the right question(s).
We are the ants. Our job is to keep our little anthill clean & well maintained.
Or put differently, A man's got to know his limitations :smile: — EricH
EricH
179
As example, one key assumption is that a god either exists or not, one or the other. When we examine most of reality, space, we see it does not comply with such a simplistic paradigm.
— Hippyhead
The paradigm does not fail due to any aspect/property of the physical universe. To religious people, the word "god" refers to something that does not physically exist. "God" "exists" outside of the universe (I put the words in quotes to emphasize that the notion makes on sense).
Once you are "outside" the physical universe, you are also outside reason & logic. All religious conversation is a form of poetry. Poetry can be beautiful, it can influence people to do great and/or terrible things, but poetic language is useless for logical analysis.
I have no beef against religious people per se. I have good friends and relatives who are deeply religious - and I can see that it provides them with a great source of comfort and helps them structure their lives. And if all religious people choose to let others live their own lives, I would not have a problem with it.
But around the world there are countless millions of people who are convinced that the rest of the world must follow their religion - if necessary by force. I am very fortunate that I live in a time & place where these forces seem to be on the wane - but I cannot let my guard down. And - as you have correctly pointed out, atheism is not a sufficient defense. Ignosticism
- - - - - - - - - -
BTW - your analogy of Columbus giving up does not work - because Columbus was convinced that he HAD reached the Far East. — EricH
Banno
8.9k
↪Frank Apisa Not a bad question. Either. — Banno
Banno
8.9k
The Unraveling of America
Apocryphal has it that there is an ancient Chinese curse: may you live in interesting times.
The United States is no longer a leader among nations.
Is there something - anything - positive in this? — Banno
↪Frank Apisa, has to do with when an adult's non-naïveté or epistemic attitude demand that they take such claims into account in their lives, has to do with dis/beliefs, that their epistemic attitude and real life are consistent. By the way, I thought there were some overlaps with your non-committal agnosticism and the existential/universal propositions, or maybe I misread. — jorndoe
jorndoe
1k
You get to the bus stop in the morning, wondering if you're late, so you ask someone already there.
In one scenario they respond "sorry, you missed it by a few minutes".
In another scenario they respond "sorry, it landed and flew off already".
Anyone with active gray matter and good sense would likely believe the former and dismiss the latter.
But, hey, given proportional and relevant evidence, you might believe that the bus is flying.
Anecdotes are both the most common and the weakest kind of evidence.
So, down here on Earth in real life, what's the difference? (@Frank Apisa? Punshhh?) — jorndoe
tim wood
4.9k
↪Frank Apisa I hope you find that gap you're hoping to find your god in. I think when you do, it will be just for you alone. And done. Do us both a favor and don't reply. — tim wood
tim wood
4.9k
...is merely sharing a blind guess.
— Frank Apisa
And that is exactly what it is not. But you don't get that. It's that lack of discernment, with your NJ persona, that makes you unreachable. At least you have company. — tim wood
180 Proof
1.5k
↪Frank Apisa :yawn: — 180 Proof
tim wood
4.9k
↪Frank Apisa Your whole argument as I understand it is that the existence of X is unknown, therefore X could be or X might not be. But many things could be substituted for X. If you like g/God(s), for example, then with equal justice and likelihood there could be anti-g/God(s), or anything else.
As it sits, then, a useless exercise of almost logic. The details matter, and that devolves to defining existence, knowledge, even likelihood and possibility. The only force left to you is a claim of belief, which I, at least, do not challenge. And you're correct, you can oink your way into the parlor if you choose, but there it's just particularly clear that you're a pig. — tim wood
Hippyhead
31
One side or the other almost certainly is correct.
— Frank Apisa
Oh dear, sorry, can't vote for that one. Seems much more likely to me that nobody has the question right, let alone any answer. — Hippyhead
tim wood
4.9k
↪Frank Apisa You confuse - conflate may be the better word - actuality with likelihood. To paraphrase someone, there's the known, the unknown, the unknowable, and that that cannot be known. You're positing the latter two as knowable and that which can be known. As to private and personal theology, you can believe what you like - and that's been acknowledged repeatedly. But like pigs and parlors and camels and tents, you want in where you do not belong. And that's a failure in your thinking. Believe what you like; is not that enough? — tim wood
A good philosophy professor will not tell you what to think, but will instead feed you questions that cause you to do your own thinking. Art, and religion, can be like that. — Hippyhead
Allow me an AMEN!On issues of such enormous scale as addressed by the God concept, if you're persuaded you know the difference between fact and fiction, you haven't fully grown up yet. Instead, you've just migrated from one fantasy knowing story to another. — Hippyhead