↪Rank Amateur
Honestly.....hell no I can’t grasp the fact of one dimension. But I don’t have any problem grasping the concept of one; the problem comes with assigning an object to it. It’s easy to say...a point in space exists necessarily because lines are a succession of points and lines in space are possible. But from conceiving a point to giving the conditions necessary for a point’s reality as an object, is impossible. Same for infinite gravity. It’s easy to think all the gravity there could ever be, but trying to do any more with the conception than that, gets you all mixed up in illusions and contradictions. — Mww
I for one am not going to commit to thinking science is eventually going to discover the cause of the Universe. I’m more inclined to think there are some things humans are just plain not equipped to learn. — Mww
If you believe anything beyond what's probable, then that's faith. But if you can't help it because of the circumstances, then importantly, that's different to a conscious decision to have faith regardless. The one is unreasonable through habit, not our fault, we can't help it. The other is unreasonable through choice, our fault, we can do otherwise. — S
Only issue I have with that is, is just probable enough to eliminate it being faith. In that sky diving example, if the probability of the chute opening was .51, would you jump because it was probable it would open, if it was .99 would you? Where exactly between those two does reason end and faith begin?
Kind of why I like faith is where a 100% commitment is required, like jumping out of the plane, where the actual outcome is a matter of some probability.
So, putting it in our discussion, if one wants to commit to it that 100% that God is not, while the current state of affairs is there is some unknown probability that either God is or God is not, part of your belief is based on faith. — Rank Amateur
You're looking for an easy target, and I am not one. I wouldn't consciously commit 100% to anything whatsoever, unless I thought that it was 100% certain. That's not the case with regards to anything that you've confronted me with, so you can't rightly accuse me of having faith. — S
So, would it be fair to say then, that you believe there is some chance, there is such a thing as God? — Rank Amateur
I spelled it out. They have different premises. One argument proceeds from the premise that there are human experiences to the conclusion that there is a universe. The other proceeds from the premise that there is a universe to the conclusion of God. Do you, or do you not, recognize that this is a "logical difference"? — Metaphysician Undercover
What....can’t a point be thought of as located on any one axis of a Cartesian system? Only a geometric figure requires two dimensions; lines and points can be conceived as having but one, because if you spin a line as if you were looking at it end-on it shouldn’t just disappear, so you could think of it as seeing a point. Conceptually speaking. — Mww
By the definition in your argument - a supernatural entity or being - sure. Unless I become aware of a contradiction, I will think that there's a chance, however slim, as per logical possibility. It's also possible that unicorns and goblins and space tea pots actually exist, provided we don't rule that out by defining them as fictional. Possibilities and remote probabilities are trivial in this context.
This is basic shit. I'm not unreasonable. I've never been a strong atheist, except where there's a contradiction ruling out the existence of God. — S
Close enough- good with that. — Rank Amateur
If you say, God is. That is a faith based position, if you say God is not, that is a faith based position, If you say maybe either way, it is not a faith based position. Your last was you prefer, probably very strongly prefer the God is not, but allow the possibility God is, that is a maybe, and not faith based. — Rank Amateur
That's not a logical difference. Logically, both are simply that x implies the necessity of y. — Terrapin Station
every time you acknowledge the possibility of the counter position — Rank Amateur
you spent 3 days fighting it wasn't even reasonable, never mind a real possibility — Rank Amateur
Different elements are logically different, by the law of identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
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