If it helps, perhaps I can provide an example that might put things into perspective (I hope). Islam is a fairly new religion, and before it became mainstream there was essentially no "Allah", or at least none to speak of — Maureen
Simply put, there should at the very least have been some knowledge or recognition of Allah even in the absence of the Islamic religion in the event that he actually does exist — Maureen
You're being ridiculous. I'm not evangelizing. That's libel, and you're just being an ass. — Noah Te Stroete
Everyone just started to be baffled and attack my claim that theism, is and deserves to be in the table of philosophy. — SethRy
And my arguments have nothing to do with evangelisation, I don't want to evangelise any of you. But the pursuit of truth requires argument, and as far as I know that is all I am providing. — SethRy
To add, I think theism is just moved by perspectives that acclaim labeling us as delusional, or beliefs being unjustified - and I will expect people to affirm that into its as-a-matter-of-factness. — SethRy
...if someone wants to assert "they are not unknown" or that "they know GOD"...
...they bear the burden of proof. — Frank Apisa
The flaws, such as they are, are only secondary items that arise when ontological realities are translated into intellectual/philosophical/theological terms. The core belief in the spiritual reality of the world can be coherently argued for.No, theism is held under the same scrutiny as everything else, so when theists provide flawed or illogical arguments, it's pointed out. — Christoffer
Noah Te Stroete
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↪Frank Apisa
You didn’t understand his position that God is not accessed through empirical observation but through subjective experience, which by definition cannot be properly relayed between individuals. — Noah Te Stroete
The flaws, such as they are, are only secondary items that arise when ontological realities are translated into intellectual/philosophical/theological terms. The core belief in the spiritual reality of the world can be coherently argued for. — EnPassant
EnPassant
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...if someone wants to assert "they are not unknown" or that "they know GOD"...
...they bear the burden of proof. — Frank Apisa
Why? It is not question of proof either way. It is a question of providing the most convincing arguments. That is all that can be done. — EnPassant
EnPassant
85
No, theism is held under the same scrutiny as everything else, so when theists provide flawed or illogical arguments, it's pointed out. — Christoffer
The flaws, such as they are, are only secondary items that arise when ontological realities are translated into intellectual/philosophical/theological terms. The core belief in the spiritual reality of the world can be coherently argued for. — EnPassant
I guess that is fair to say that I am not doing a good job proving God's existence, for my arguments, although not yet proven in this thread, are illogical, incoherent, and delusional. — SethRy
Is this going to get a proper response or not? You changed the subject to a different argument, and instead of addressing the logical problem, you just saw it as a personal attack and responded in kind. — S
Yet you have the nerve to suggest that you're in pursuit of the truth. Don't you think that it's immoral to lie? — S
You changed the subject to a different argument, and instead of addressing the logical problem, you just saw it as a personal attack and responded in kind. And then when I question why you responded in this way, instead of responding properly, I just get more personal attacks. — S
Terrapin Station
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I guess that is fair to say that I am not doing a good job proving God's existence, for my arguments, although not yet proven in this thread, are illogical, incoherent, and delusional. — SethRy
"Proof" is a red herring on both sides. How about just giving compelling reasons for belief? — Terrapin Station
You seem to be thinking that a case can be made that one side or the other is more likely. — Frank Apisa
ok...
I remember adding an argument of Anselm? and no, just because two arguments are used to support each other does not mean I am being selectively biased, they both agree with each other and by far is logically consistent, so I do not see how that is wrong — unless of course, you'd care to explain to me how that's the case. — SethRy
I assumed you started to evaluate theism as an affirmed fallacy in every logical way possible, and these are not ad hominem fallacies, I only point out the emotions that are demonstrated without the addressing of the defectives of my arguments. — SethRy
Terrapin Station
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You seem to be thinking that a case can be made that one side or the other is more likely. — Frank Apisa
No. I'm not saying anything about likelihood. Empirical claims are not provable. To wonder if we've proved some empirical claim, or to ask for proof, is to commit a category error. And even in the realms where proofs are pertinent--mathematics and logic, proofs are simply a matter of whether something follows from the rules of the system in question, as we've constructed the system.
There are reasons to believe one thing over another. We can simply talk about those reasons. This has nothing to do with "guessing." You seem focused on certainty (which is why you'd use the term "guess" in counterdistinction to it), which is a complete waste of time. — Terrapin Station
BUT...there also is no way to assign likelihood to whether there are gods or not. — Frank Apisa
But the burden does accrue. — Frank Apisa
The core blind guesses in the spiritual reality of the world can be coherently argued for. — Frank Apisa
Just as you realize there is no "proof" one way or the other...you should realize there is no "more likely" one way or the other. — Frank Apisa
Terrapin Station
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BUT...there also is no way to assign likelihood to whether there are gods or not. — Frank Apisa
I agree with you on that, because of what "likelihood" is, and considering that I'm a frequentist. I don't buy Bayesian probability.
Nevertheless, it's easy to know there are no gods. That's not a "guess," and it doesn't have anything to do with probability. — Terrapin Station
But "there are no gods" is nothing more than a blind guess. — Frank Apisa
EnPassant
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But the burden does accrue. — Frank Apisa
How can a burden of proof arise if neither side can prove their position? What accrues is a responsibility to present a persuasive argument. — EnPassant
The core blind guesses in the spiritual reality of the world can be coherently argued for. — Frank Apisa
Blind guesses? It is neither delusion nor blind guesses. It is an assertion that can be argued for.
EnPassant
87
Just as you realize there is no "proof" one way or the other...you should realize there is no "more likely" one way or the other. — Frank Apisa
It is not about what is more likely because it is not about chance, it is about what is real. Why would it be about 'blind guessing'? It is about which argument is more persuasive and has the greatest explanatory — EnPassant
Terrapin Station
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But "there are no gods" is nothing more than a blind guess. — Frank Apisa
No, it's not. Repeating that like a mantra doesn't make it so. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
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It is a blind guess. — Frank Apisa — Terrapin Station
Yeah, it really is.
I am at a loss as to why you think not.
How can it be anything but a blind guess? — Frank Apisa
Terrapin Station
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Yeah, it really is.
I am at a loss as to why you think not.
How can it be anything but a blind guess? — Frank Apisa
How would you defining guessing. where you're distinguishing it from other things? — Terrapin Station
I have absolutely no idea of what you were attempting to ask me here. — Frank Apisa
Terrapin Station
8.6k
I have absolutely no idea of what you were attempting to ask me here. — Frank Apisa
You have no idea what I'm asking when I ask how you'd define guessing? lol — Terrapin Station
to be sure of being correct." — Frank Apisa
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