There are alternative religions, just like there are alternative foundations for math. Two billion people agree on Christianity. Two billion on Islam. A similarly large number on Buddhism. There are obscure religions with a small number of followers, just like there are obscure math theories.
Furthermore, religion can be very effective. It can successfully prevent governments from overruling the laws of nature. It can also be effective at motivating individuals and stimulate their survival instinct. It can motivate individuals to maintain faith in life and in the future and keep reproducing from generation to generation. — Tarskian
Dunning-Kruger is about people who think that they know but in fact they don't. Since atheism requires omniscience while faith in God does not, doesn't Dunning-Kruger rather describe atheists and not religious people? — Tarskian
The quesion we are addressing is - is there good reason to belive in god the way there are good reasons to believe in math? — Tom Storm
Religion all over the world behaves like a political party - theism being incidental to its machinations — Tom Storm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandate_of_Heaven
The Mandate of Heaven (Chinese: 天命; pinyin: Tiānmìng; Wade–Giles: T'ien1-ming4; lit. 'Heaven's command') is a Chinese political ideology that was used in Ancient China and Imperial China to legitimize the rule of the king or emperor of China.[1] According to this doctrine, Heaven (天, Tian) bestows its mandate[a] on a virtuous ruler. This ruler, the Son of Heaven, was the supreme universal monarch, who ruled Tianxia (天下; "all under heaven", the world).[3] If a ruler was overthrown, this was interpreted as an indication that the ruler was unworthy and had lost the mandate.[4]
We do not say there is no god, that would be making a positive claim. — Tom Storm
For many, atheism is about belief not knowledge. — Tom Storm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gettier_problem
The JTB account holds that knowledge is equivalent to justified true belief; if all three conditions (justification, truth, and belief) are met of a given claim, then we have knowledge of that claim.
There are three possibilities concerning the belief in God: true, false, indeterminate. Religion believes it is true. Atheism believes that it is false. Agnosticism is indeterminate. — Tarskian
To be clear: Atheism is not a disbelief in gods or a denial of gods; it is a lack of belief in gods.
There is no knowledge without belief. Furthermore, at the foundationalist core of knowledge you always find necessarily unjustifiable beliefs. Rejecting the foundation of unjustifiable beliefs amounts to rejecting the entire edifice of knowledge. If you can't have faith, you cannot know either. — Tarskian
Gödel has proved the existence of a Godlike entity from higher-order modal logic. — Tarskian
Atheism is defined as a positive claim. — Tarskian
Yes, it can be but that formulation is not popular – though it's formerly my preferred position (while quite reasonable, it's too narrow in scope):Atheism isdefined asa positive claim. — Tarskian
:smirk:We still can't demonstrate that there are any gods. We can demonstrate that math works. — Tom Storm
I'm not a foundationalist. — Tom Storm
Yes, it can be but that formulation is not popular – though it's formerly my preferred position (while quite reasonable, it's too narrow in scope): — 180 Proof
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atheism
Atheism, in the broadest sense, is an absence of belief in the existence of deities. Less broadly, atheism is a rejection of the belief that any deities exist. In an even narrower sense, atheism is specifically the position that there are no deities.
We still can't demonstrate that there are any gods. We can demonstrate that math works. We seem unable to get past this point. — Tom Storm
In that case, you will need to reject mathematics as it is staunchly foundationalist, i.e. axiomatic. Since science is not viable without math, you will also need to reject science. — Tarskian
What you are doing, is comparing apples to oranges. — Tarskian
Ok,Can anyone prove a god, I enjoy debates and wish to see the arguments posed in favour of the existence of a god. — CallMeDirac
We accept science and math because they work — Tom Storm
My point is that math demonstrates its utility — Tom Storm
If the difference between faith and reason isn't obvious to people — ssu
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foundationalism
Identifying the alternatives as either circular reasoning or infinite regress, and thus exhibiting the regress problem, Aristotle made foundationalism his own clear choice, positing basic beliefs underpinning others.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_belief
Beliefs therefore fall into two categories:
- Beliefs that are properly basic, in that they do not depend upon justification of other beliefs, but on something outside the realm of belief (a "non-doxastic justification").
- Beliefs that derive from one or more basic beliefs, and therefore depend on the basic beliefs for their validity.
What is there about religion that does not work? — Tarskian
Religion also demonstrates its utility. The government fears us more than the result of its elections. So, the tool achieves its goal. — Tarskian
You see, when the Taliban unceremoniously deported NATO from Kabul airport, they achieved something that nobody else was able to do. Or do you think that you can do that too? — Tarskian
Math axioms can be shown to work. — Tom Storm
Religion cannot demonstrate gods. — Tom Storm
I would call that evidence of religion's disfunction. — Tom Storm
Or do you think the supposed truths held by Marxists — Tom Storm
We know that people can be galvanized by deception and undemonstrated beliefs. — Tom Storm
In my opinion, the difference between "absence of belief" and "disbelief" is just language engineering. — Tarskian
I.e. you can't tell the difference between ~b(G) and b(~G)? :pray:In my opinion, the difference between "absence of belief" and "disbelief" is just ... — Tarskian
This is only so for someone who (analogously) cannot differentiate 'nonassent from dissent' or 'remaining silent from spoken denial' or 'indifference from rejection'.It implies that the position could also be indeterminate.
Right, there's no "need" for the muddle confusing you, Tarskian. Consider –Why would there be a need to create that ambiguous overlap between atheism and agnosticism?
More precisely +1, 0, -1 (true, unknown, not true).In terms of logic, we have: yes, no, maybe. — Tarskian
the difference between ~b(G) and b(~G) — 180 Proof
not belief("God exists")
belief("God does not exist")
True, False, Not-True — 180 Proof
Proof only exists in mathematics, which is never about the physical universe. Therefore, it is impossible to prove anything "concrete". That is not how proof works. — Tarskian
We don’t prove existence ... We might be able to prove a god wouldn’t struggle, or a god wouldn’t need sleep, but we can’t prove that struggle-free, always awake god exists. — Fire Ologist
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%B6del%27s_ontological_proof
Gödel's ontological proof is a formal argument by the mathematician Kurt Gödel (1906–1978) for the existence of God.
The proof[8][10] uses modal logic, which distinguishes between necessary truths and contingent truths.
Most criticism of Gödel's proof is aimed at its axioms.
What do you mean by the term "existence"? — 180 Proof
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Existential_quantification
Existential quantification
In predicate logic, an existential quantification is a type of quantifier, a logical constant which is interpreted as "there exists", "there is at least one", or "for some". It is usually denoted by the logical operator symbol ∃, which, when used together with a predicate variable, is called an existential quantifier ("∃x" or "∃(x)" or "(∃x)").
Or do you think the supposed truths held by Marxists
— Tom Storm
Marxism has collapsed. Some religions are unsustainable. Nobody urges you to choose one of those. — Tarskian
the Taliban unceremoniously deported NATO from Kabul airport, they achieved something that nobody else was able to do. Or do you think that you can do that too? — Tarskian
No, they can't. There is no justification for axioms. If an axiom can be justified, it is not a legitimate axiom.
Religion cannot demonstrate gods.
— Tom Storm
Math cannot demonstrate its axioms either. — Tarskian
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