Because I expect it's not to most theists, who are not theists because they were convinced by faulty metaphysical arguments that there must exist some boring piece of metaphysical machinery to enable the existence of the ordinary universe, — Pfhorrest
objectively true that I’m conscious. I suspect like kaarl you’re conflating epistemology with ontology. Just because you don’t know for sure what’s going on in my mind doesn’t mean there’s no truth about it. — Pfhorrest
I agree that that is a reasonable definition. But the atheists will shoot holes in it with hippopotami, or flying spaghetti monsters. All you have to do to make them ineffectual is add the word necessary, so;To start with, the definition of God as the source of all contingent things is sufficient for 'belief in God' and sufficient for a simple definition of God.
Quite.As for pure atheism, I don't think it can be defended. We are not in a position to say 'God does not exist'. Such a position, I believe, cannot be defended. Ultimately, agnosticism is the only non theist position.
If we're talking about the nature of your own conscious existence is that not a metaphysical truth? — 3017amen
an objective one, in that any claim about it is either right or wrong, — Pfhorrest
In other words, what kind of truth's do those things represent (?). — 3017amen
I'm not sure (and I'm not sure if you're sure) whether you're talking about the fact that you have those states of mind, or a moral evaluation of the contents of those states of mind.
In either case, yes there is an objective right or wrong evaluation of them, that may or may not be practical to figure out, or in practice accessible to anyone but yourself. — Pfhorrest
Wait a minute, I thought you said you're sure that objectivity can explain those things that exist? — 3017amen
There are objective answers to questions about those things. Where have I ever said otherwise? — Pfhorrest
Asking why you have all those mental states is a psychological mental question. I don’t know the full psychological answer to them, especially because each answer would involve particulars about your life that I don’t know — Pfhorrest
But that doesn’t mean the answers to them aren’t objective, i.e. there is one correct answer that everyone should give to the questions about you, even if the answers about themselves are different, even if they don’t know the answers about you, etc. — Pfhorrest
To start with, the definition of God as the source of all contingent things is sufficient for 'belief in God' and sufficient for a simple definition of God. — EnPassant
dont think we can describe anything accurately, but even if we did, we would be talking about a correct/right description, and not a correct/right answer or evaluation. What does a right answer even mean or look like, in terms of love like you ask, anyway??? — Pussycat
Great. I'll wait for your answers to those questions about the nature of those things we are parsing. — 3017amen
Wait a minute I don't understand. I thought you said you knew everything objectively? — 3017amen
But would that not suggest omnipotence of some sort? — 3017amen
Objectivity doesnt have to do with right or wrong, it just means descriptive. — Pussycat
What is each contingent thing has as its source some other contingent thing, such that there are no non-contingent things? What then is God? — Pfhorrest
I'm saying that in order to establish an eternal source it is only necessary to argue that that source/substance must exist. Thereafter it is possible to argue that that substance is mind because the universe is mind-like. It is such because it is mathematical. See also The Fine Tuning Argument. Before talking about God it is easier to establish the existence of a necessary substance and work forward from there and ask questions such as:If the Big Bang turns out to be the source of all contingent things, and is not a person or in any way at all like a mythical deity, just some impersonal cosmic event, would you call that "God"? I don't think many would. — Pfhorrest
No. See last answer.What I'm getting at here is whether you're okay with the notion of a God that is not a person, that doesn't have thoughts or feelings or wills, that can't hear prayers or issue commands, or judge souls after death, etc. It's just some thing that kicked off existence, and nothing more. Is that really enough to count as "God" to you? — Pfhorrest
Must it? [be contingent] Explain. — Pfhorrest
which is why theism is untenable on any rational or empirical basis, and so is only held as a matter of faith — Enai De A Lukal
They reasoned, in brief, that God is unknowable. — tim wood
The claim, then, that God exists is for oh, so many reasons an exhibition of ignorance at the very best. — tim wood
Objective" just means "without bias": correct or incorrect without regard to any point of view. (But not without regard to the contents of the state of affairs being evaluated: who or what you're talking about, when and where they are, etc, can make a difference in what is correct or incorrect to say about them. But whatever is correct to say about them, is correct for everyone to say about them, and incorrect for anyone to say contrary). — Pfhorrest
No, it doesn't. It's the "know" that has to be qualified. Clearly to know something as something that it isn't is not knowing that thing.Faith also teaches that it is possible to know God. So 'unknowable' must be qualified. — EnPassant
It's not my argument. And no one claims you cannot know God completely. The argument is that "God" as defined/understood cannot be known at all. For a thing to exist it must have predicates. That is, if God exists there must be some set of sentences starting with "God is" that can be meaningfully completed. But each is also a limitation.Claiming that God exists and claiming that God is (completely) knowable are not the same thing. — EnPassant
How many times to I have to tell you that there being an answer doesn't mean anyone knows the answer?
I don't know the answers to those things. But there are answers. Because to assume otherwise is simply not to try to answer them. — Pfhorrest
Unknown" doesn't mean "neither right nor wrong". — Pfhorrest
Things can be true, but not known. — Pfhorrest
But ultimately this process of deconstruction cannot go on forever, there must be a necessary substance to keep contingent realities in existence. — EnPassant
Can something that is objective be, at the same time, incorrect?
Is there such thing as "without bias"? — Pussycat
Interesting. I think we are making progress. Do you have examples of existential things that are true but are unknown? Let's take the Will for example. It seems like it is true you have a Will, yet the nature of such is unknown correct? — 3017amen
can’t tell you that something in particular is true but unknown, because I would have to know that it is true to tell you that. — Pfhorrest
Are you sure? Let's see, common sense says you have a will to live. So it is true you have a will. — 3017amen
But the nature of your will (how it really works, it's design, it's origin aka : the-thing-in-itself) is unknown. — 3017amen
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