Even a reason that doesn’t make sense, is refutable, or self-contradictory, is still a reason. — Mww
A self-contradictory belief cannot be considered reasonable by any standard. — Janus
You seems to be conflating 'having reasons' with 'reasonable'. — Janus
Common usage. I keep forgetting what constitutes philosophy is these days — Mww
You are losing the distinction between truth and belief. — Janus
A belief doesn't have to be true to be warranted
...and it doesn't have to be warranted to be true, even if, according to the traditional JBT model, it has to be warranted to be knowledge.
How can a belief contradict itself? — Mww
Not at all. All belief presupposes truth. — creativesoul
I'm pointing out the difference between being reasonable and being warranted.The former is satisfied by coherency alone. The latter also considers correspondence to known fact. It is when we consider that that coherency is found lacking for warrant. An argument can be both coherent and contradictory to known fact(current knowledge base). Thus, coherency alone does not warrant belief. — creativesoul
JTB talks in terms of being justified, not warranted. — creativesoul
How can a belief contradict itself? — Mww
It’s good it only seems that way. — Mww
All belief presupposes truth.
— creativesoul
Yes but not all warranted, — Janus
I think that the point of the paper was that Dawkins' ad hoc had the same justificatory ground(or lack thereof) as many of the religious arguments he was aiming at. Neither was warranted. — creativesoul
All warranted belief are belief. All belief presupposes truth. Ergo...
All belief presupposes truth, warranted belief notwithstanding. — creativesoul
...beliefs presuppose truth (are considered truth-apt...
Being truth-apt has nothing to do with the presupposition of truth within belief and/or our statements. — creativesoul
Naturalism excludes God as a matter of principle. The mistake is to then believe that science has disproved the substance of such a belief, when in practice it has simply excluded it. — Wayfarer
You know that when Lemaître initially published his 'Hypothesis of the Primeval Atom', it was widely resisted for a long time because it seemed to suggest a creation from nothing. — Wayfarer
If you genuinely think all beliefs that are held for any reasons whatsoever are reasonable I don't know what else to to say. — Janus
Has any philosophy ever solved any problems? — Mww
I solve my problems; philosophy just sets a proper stage for looking at them. — Mww
Some philosophers concerned themselves with problems actually encountered in living and provided reasonable solutions to them, I think. — Ciceronianus the White
If religious stories are taken to be allegories that profess metaphorical truths then I think the difficulty disappears — Janus
Ultimately, theism is not a theory about some purported being that either exists or doesn't exist, and about which science might have something to say. It's a theory about the nature of reality itself, not about some purported super-engineer or director which might or might not exist. The fact that justification is cast in these pseudo-empirical terms is an indicator of a deep misconception about the nature of the question. — Wayfarer
The conclusion Kenny is working towards is agnosticism. But with this piece, from the second page, he seems to be assuming the virtue of the middle path between credulity and scepticism - to be assuming agnosticism.
SO arguably the article is an exercise in question begging; he assumes his conclusion. But isn't it reasonable to seek this middle ground, rather than to believe without warrant? — Banno
I agree with most of the sentiments about God here, especially yours, Wayfarer. But the way you guys speak about it gives me the impression of downplaying. — DoppyTheElv
Think...of the double standard that many contemporary academic philosophers apply to arguments for God’s existence. Any other idea in philosophy, no matter how insane – for example, that the material world is an illusion, that consciousness does not really exist, that infanticide and euthanasia are defensible, that the distinction between the sexes is a mere social construct, that it might be morally wrong to have children, and so on and on – is treated as “worthy of discussion,” something we must at least hear out with respect even if we suspect we will not be convinced. But if a philosopher gives an argument for God’s existence, then in at least many academic circles, every eyebrow is immediately raised, every eye rolls, and it’s smirks all around – as if such a philosopher had just passed gas, or proposed wearing a tinfoil hat to protect against mindreading. — Ed Feser
t I find it much more attractive to follow where you believe the path leads while knowing and understanding your shortcomings. Your credulity and scepticism. Instead of throwing your hands in the air and saying, I don't know, in order to be completely out of the danger zone and taking the diplomatic route. — DoppyTheElv
But I'm quite sure that while they are contentious and far from proof, they can be plausible and elicit faith. — DoppyTheElv
Talking about theism as poetry and allegory also seems wrong to me. Poetry without a doubt is a beautiful way to portray reality, but in the end it is nothing more than sugarcoating reality with romanticism. I feel like you take away the entire idea of theism by admitting that it has no grasp on reality in the end. — DoppyTheElv
You are yet to explain what you think the difference between warranted belief and reasonable belief is. Perhaps an example of a belief that you think is reasonable, and yet is not warranted, would help. — Janus
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