Terrapin Station
8.6k
to be sure of being correct." — Frank Apisa
I want to focus on this first. Isn't this a reference to certainty? — Terrapin Station
No. What accrues is a burden of proof.
That is why anyone with a functioning brain would not assert, "There are no gods" or "There is at least one god."
Do not make the assertion...but if you do, don't pretend there is no burden of proof to meet. — Frank Apisa
Those were not my words...they were someone else's that I was quoting.
We do not know if gods exist or not.
We do not have a reasonable likelihood estimate in either direction. — Frank Apisa
By the way...what exactly is your position on the question? — 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
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No. What accrues is a burden of proof.
That is why anyone with a functioning brain would not assert, "There are no gods" or "There is at least one god."
Do not make the assertion...but if you do, don't pretend there is no burden of proof to meet. — Frank Apisa
Ok, but I was not talking about assertions I was talking about beliefs. If someone says I believe God exists that is not an assertion that God exists, it is a belief. So, belief only requires argument to justify. Yes, if someone say that God certainly exists I guess there is a burden of proof. — EnPassant
Those were not my words...they were someone else's that I was quoting.
Apologies, I misquoted you.
We do not know if gods exist or not.
We do not have a reasonable likelihood estimate in either direction. — Frank Apisa
I disagree. Are the arguments on either side not reasonable? A reasonable argument is not necessarily equivalent to truth but it can still be reasonable in terms of what the proponent understands. — En Passant
By the way...what exactly is your position on the question? — Frank Apisa
My position is that the human intellect is trapped in linguistics and all manner of tautologies; philosophy is almost impossible when it comes to the 'big questions'. The intellect is not capable of understanding complex ontological realities. But the mind has abilities above primitive mentalism. It is conscious of ontological reality. What is needed is a language that can express that ontological reality. Thus far religion has done so, imperfectly.
The intellect can only construct primitive truths; scientific and mathematical truths. But for ontological truths a more evolved 'higher level' language is required; art, religion, music, literature etc are examples of higher language.
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I may be wrong, but it sounds like you are effectively saying that it is not possible to prove that God(s) exist, so in essence all anyone can do is provide a convincing argument. — Maureen
No problem with making a guess about whether gods exist or not...but that is all it is...A GUESS.
We do not know which is more likely.
No problem with making a guess on which is more likely...but that is all it is...A GUESS. — Frank Apisa
But that's very obviously false. There are plenty of people who understand the arguments, yet are not convinced by them. Try again, or retract your claim. — S
EnPassant
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No problem with making a guess about whether gods exist or not...but that is all it is...A GUESS.
We do not know which is more likely.
No problem with making a guess on which is more likely...but that is all it is...A GUESS. — Frank Apisa
Theist's position on God is not a guess, it is a conviction that can be convincingly argued for. — EnPassant
Not all things that are true can be proved. If I had a thought yesterday I cannot prove it. But it is true that I had that thought.If Christians actually knew that their God exists, then they could easily provide irrefutable evidence and there would not constantly be disputes by atheists asking for said evidence. — Maureen
Do they understand them? — EnPassant
Understanding must be informed by consciousness. Spiritual truth is not an intellectual construction, it is a vision of the world as it really is. That vision includes God. — EnPassant
I am not asking for certainty. BUT the fact that I am not...does not mean I will accept a guess as being anything other than a guess. — Frank Apisa
Terrapin Station
8.6k
I am not asking for certainty. BUT the fact that I am not...does not mean I will accept a guess as being anything other than a guess. — Frank Apisa
Do you see the only options as "Either P is a guess or it's certain"? — Terrapin Station
Then what would be the difference between a belief and imaginary ideas? In my mind, "belief" is an idea about the world as it is, whereas an imaginary concepts are understood to NOT be about the world as it is. So, when someone claims a belief, are they making a claim about the world other than they have a belief? Is their belief about anything, or just something that exists in their head - like imaginary ideas?If someone says I believe God exists that is not an assertion that God exists, it is a belief. So, belief only requires argument to justify. Yes, if someone say that God certainly exists I guess there is a burden of proof. — EnPassant
Where is this coming from? — Frank Apisa
TheSageOfMainStreet
16
↪Frank Apisa
Their Loaded Question Should Fire Blanks
Even, "Do you believe in God?" begs the question. If honestly phrased, it would be "Do you believe in the existence of God?"
Supposed I asked, "Do you believe in Trump?" It would not mean, "Do you believe in the existence of Trump?" So by phrasing it in their pushy and accusatory way, they sneakily lead us towards an affirmative answer, because of course belief in God, in the literal sense as used with Trump, means that the person being interrogated has to be a supporter of God, which by theological definition has to be necessary if He exists. — TheSageOfMainStreet
Terrapin Station
8.6k
Where is this coming from? — Frank Apisa
It's just a question. Either you see things that way or you do not. — Terrapin Station
True, but the kinds of evidence that can be tested and shared are simple or primitive truths. Science is primitive. Matter is primitive. The atheists are making a mistake in trying to force ontological matters into the primitive framework of matter and explain them in material terms. It is this kind of thing that leads to absurd attempts to explain everything - including ontological matters - in terms of 'survival advantage'.Once you have evidence that can be tested by others and others test it and get the same results, then it becomes a theory, or more than a belief. It becomes knowledge. — Harry Hindu
A belief would be more akin to a hypothesis. — Harry Hindu
TheSageOfMainStreet
17
↪Frank Apisa
Since "Nice Guys Finish Last," I'd Rather Be Naughty
How about the non-existence of a similarly desired benefactor, Santa Claus? Is that a guess? Because his existence or non-existence can both be called "guesses," do we give equal credence to greedy children?
I actually fell for Pascal's Inquisition-fear nonsense when a Hawk used it about a missile system, "If I am right, it will save us from incineration by the Soviets; if I am wrong, it will only waste a tiny portion of the budget." — TheSageOfMainStreet
So that (your question) is binary?
Ya mean there are no other choices? — Frank Apisa
Terrapin Station
8.6k
So that (your question) is binary?
Ya mean there are no other choices? — Frank Apisa
Correct. Otherwise, what would you suggest as a third option? — Terrapin Station
Not sure if you are kidding with me...or just not thinking for the moment.
Let the P of your question be "Will science find a cure for most cancers during the next two decades?"
For an answer of "YES" try these out:
Either it is certain...or it is an estimate.
Either it is certain...or it is an informed opinion.
Either it is certain...or it is a wish.
Either it is certain...or it is an approximation.
Either it is certain...or it is close enough to certain for government work.
Either it is certain...or it is not. — Frank Apisa
Terrapin Station
8.6k
Not sure if you are kidding with me...or just not thinking for the moment.
Let the P of your question be "Will science find a cure for most cancers during the next two decades?"
For an answer of "YES" try these out:
Either it is certain...or it is an estimate.
Either it is certain...or it is an informed opinion.
Either it is certain...or it is a wish.
Either it is certain...or it is an approximation.
Either it is certain...or it is close enough to certain for government work.
Either it is certain...or it is not. — Frank Apisa
Say what?
I'm not saying that it's a fact that either something is x or y.
I'm asking you if it's the case that you use the term "guess" so that either something is certain or it's a guess. Either you use the term that way or you do not use the term that way. (or if you think there's a third option aside from either it being the case that you use the term that way or you do not use the term that way, you could explain what the third option is maybe) — Terrapin Station
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