I will post, just below this post, my (lengthy) conclusion derived from the points I've posted here so far.
So, universeness, it being your job to demolish my conclusion, proceed — ucarr
My work entails establishing a connection between atheism & solipsism, plus their two modes: monism & idealism. — ucarr
Simple counter-argument to knowing, authoritatively, with certain knowledge, God doesn’t exist.
If I say I am a swimmer, then I can prove what I am, by taking a dip in the pool.
Grammatically speaking, I am a swimmer is a verbal equation. I (subject) + (linking verb) am + (subject complement) a swimmer condenses down to I = a swimmer.
God, by definition, comprehends all existence. This is a well-defined property of God. — ucarr
According to the unrestricted comprehension principle of set theory, for any sufficiently well-defined property, there is a set of all and only the objects that have that property.
If I say, God is not, then I can prove what I know by revealing to you all existence.
This is the unrestricted comprehension principle in application.
Grammatically speaking, God is not is a verbal equation. God (subject) + (linking verb) is + (subject complement) extant not condenses down to God = extant not or
God ≠ extant.
If I know all existence, a power unique to God, then knowing there is no God means I am God.
If two things comprehend all existence, how can they be different? — ucarr
However, do your thing. — Garrett Travers
There's no indication the mother is insane in the film. Also, she already had money, and clearly wasn't trading him in to obtain more. Thatcher was a hired man. I thought the scene made it apparent that Charles was being sent away because the mother feared what the father (or step-father, perhaps) would do to him. — Ciceronianus
I always find amusement when a theistic argument is placed in an academic frame in an attempt to give it scientific credibility. Such attempts are so transparent. — universeness
Your god properties are not well-defined, as if god was omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent then it would have appeared in the center of London, New York, Paris and Washington D.C, simultaneously by now. — universeness
"Atheism" : only nature :: "solipsism" : only me.
Nothing to do with one another. — 180 Proof
↪180 Proof Right. And at least traditionally, atheism has been akin to/friendly towards materialism/realism/physicalism, whereas idealism/anti-realism has been aligned with theism, and it is idealism, not materialism, which is always in danger of slipping off into solipsism.
(after all, the core epistemological argument for idealism that calls into question the material/physical world, similarly calls into question the existence of other minds by the very same token) — Seppo
Do you think I'm a theist? If so, why? I've been examining some details of atheism. Does my exam imply pro-Theism? If so, please cite examples — ucarr
I think you're confusing abstract conceptualization with empirical verification. — ucarr
Regarding the atheist who knows there's no all-present, all-powerful, all-effectual & transcendent sentience, does not such an atheist exemplify an ideal — ucarr
No, an atheist does not believe god exists. It's not an ideal, it's an opinion. I am an atheist but I cannot prove there is no god, no-one can, but I am personally convinced as near to 100% as you can get. — universeness
I am not being idealistic, I am not aiming for perfection, I just refuse to be as duped as a theist. — universeness
I want the generations to come to be freed from religious lies. I am not too bothered about current believers. I want the next generation to be told what we KNOW or are SCIENTIFICALLY most convinced of. That is all we should teach about truth. Let them speculate further or allow their imagination to take whatever flight of fancy it may but teach them not to make policies or build civilisations based on speculation and flights of fancy. Build on what we know! — universeness
What would have happened if I refused to sign? — Cornwell1
The theist, like me, is convinced almost 100% he does exist — Cornwell1
I refuse to be duped as an atheist — Cornwell1
I tend to agree with this, but doesn't building society up by politics based on science mean giving the same power to Science as giving power to God? — Cornwell1
Oh sh** not that whole 'multiple personality stuff again....aaaaarrrggghhhhh'
Don't worry, normal service will resume soon. — universeness
No, an atheist does not believe god exists. It's not an ideal, it's an opinion. I am an atheist but I cannot prove there is no god, no-one can, but I am personally convinced as near to 100% as you can get.
I am not being idealistic, I am not aiming for perfection, I just refuse to be as duped as a theist. — universeness
To deny omniscience authoritatively means to be omniscience — ucarr
I think the word "authoritatively" is doing a lot of work there. The only way this even remotely follows is if we're supposing that one can only know something "authoritatively" if one is omniscient. But that's dubious to say the least. I know its January 29th quite authoritatively, and am most decidedly not omniscient. — Seppo
And in any case, the atheist isn't judging a being (divine or otherwise), but a concept or proposition: the concept of God/proposition that he exists. — Seppo
To deny omniscience authoritatively from an atheistic perspective is to deny that the claims of theism are true. It makes no direct claim to "knowing there isn't a god," but instead knowing that based off available information, we know that this specific god does not exist. — Cobra
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