Fundamental laws of logic have no rule over faith-based cognitions, the prime example being transferring the being of some supernatural necessity from phenomenal to ideal.
— Mww
Yeah, you could've stopped at, "Fundamental laws of logic have no rule over faith-based cognitions". No example necessary. I completely get it. Faith has no restrictions and can permit absurdity. It's the worst possible way to approach the stuff of philosophy. It is anathema to it. — S
Whether A is different from B is a logical judgement. — Metaphysician Undercover
The ones doing true science, the ones who are actually constantly in search of real answers are the ones never happy with the answers they get, but also, they do not take things with questionable logic as answers to anything. Just because scientists don't know something, doesn't mean they accept wild fantasies before finding the true answers. — Christoffer
It's also wrong to say that science is wrong all the time and build on correction. Answers in science that are proven theories are proven theories and they build new theories on top of them. This is why the unification theory is so hard since you can't erase the proven theories of either side, you need to find a theory that combines them all. — Christoffer
This requires there to be proof in the first place. Questionable logic that is based on assumptions and fallacies does not count and all arguments so far, for any supernatural beings, have failed to reach that level of deduction. — Christoffer
but be careful what you accept as proven theories. — Rank Amateur
The rock thing was pure metaphor. — Rank Amateur
You don't know what logic is. Learn 101 level stuff like that first. — Terrapin Station
for the noseeum argument against the existence of God. — Rank Amateur
The point is that "different" has a definite meaning. — Metaphysician Undercover
I’m not sure it has a meaning. Or at least a cogent one. Different is a relational condition. We never describe “different”; we describe a relational discrepancy and label it a difference. The logical inference is the preview of judgement, true, an act of reason, but all that does is quantify the discrepancy by deducing that the properties for A are not the same as the properties for B. And THAT is all we can say about “difference”. — Mww
And I believe this expression of faith as faith, though it leaves unexplained/undefined the word "is," is unassailable. Of course those who hold unassailable faith pay a price, that they not mix or conflate their unassailable with things assailable, the penalty being confronted with the assailability of their faith. Pig in the parlor, pastor in the pigpen. Neither works, though both fine in themselves, for themselves, as themselves, by themselves.I, as a matter of faith, believe God is. — Rank Amateur
I’m saying I don’t even need the word “different” to understand relational dissimilarities; it’s just an instance where language mitigates confusion. When I’m working stuff out in my head “difference” is never brought to my attention, even while I’m busy cognizing relative judgements. Still, in a dialogue, the word “different” and it’s variations is used in order to show the participants understand there is in fact some relational disparity between them. — Mww
AJJ constructed his syllogism based on the definitions intrinsic to a favored discipline, and even if the form of the logical argument is valid in the holding to its definitions, the premises are not known to be true, which makes the conclusion unsound (the Universe exists necessarily because a timeless eternal thing created it).
TS, on the other hand, has constructed a logically valid syllogism where the major premise is indeed true, and from which the conclusion is sound (the Universe exists necessarily because we’re in it). — Mww
You say (pg15) logic is what makes this timeless eternal thing necessary and if one skips the logic, the principle of necessity is negated in both A and B. I disagree, insofar as it is merely the definitions grounding the logical argument A, re: “posited to exist timelessly and eternally”, which make the thing ipso facto necessary, and that is henceforth incorporated into the argument, and in B it is the absolute impossibility otherwise which grounds the principle of necessity. — Mww
See the.......er.....difference? — Mww
You would only say that they are different if you were seeing them as different. — Metaphysician Undercover
By definition, yes; what I believe is irrelevant. — Mww
B.) And that if it doesn't exist in the universe, then it must not exist at all?
.......No. B does not follow from A necessarily. Complete knowledge of the Universe as effect does not give any conception of its cause. — Mww
C.) And if it's not a fact, then we can't rightly say that anything conflicts with it as a fact?
.........That which is not a fact can be conflicted, but only by another fact. That which is not a fact cannot be conflicted by a faith-based proposition. To whit: that I am having breakfast tomorrow is not a fact, and you cannot conflict with that by supposing I am going to when tomorrow gets here. But you sure can after tomorrow gets here and I do or do not get my breakfast. — Mww
Absolfreakin’lutely. You’d make a fine Kantian, I must say.
“......I cannot even make the assumption (...) of God (...) if I do not deprive speculative reason of its pretensions to transcendent insight. For to arrive at these, it must make use of principles which, in fact, extend only to the objects of possible experience, and which cannot be applied to objects beyond this sphere without converting them into phenomena, and thus rendering the practical extension of pure reason impossible. I must, therefore, abolish knowledge, to make room for belief....” — Mww
scientific fact says no such thing. Scientific fact says they do not know. What is the consensus scientific view, is the universe is finite and had a beginning. — Rank Amateur
faith would conflict with what's reasonable to believe — S
And jerks like me keep offering up "rocks" with God written on it, and you pick it up, look at it, turn it around and then throw it away... — Rank Amateur
...the noseeum argument against the existence of God. — Rank Amateur
Is it important that there be an objective meaning to life? — emancipate
What would the implications be if life did have objective meaning? — emancipate
Explain — Mww
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