he problem is with the nature of philosophy not with my statement describing the incompatible nature of supernatural assumptions. — Nickolasgaspar
We either have evidence for a natural mechanism or have zero evidence for a natural mechanism. This is the true dichotomy. — Nickolasgaspar
In order for the supernatural to be part the discussion, you will first need to demonstrating the existence of the supernatural. — Nickolasgaspar
Logic dictates that you need to have evidence for your claim( the supernatural). The lack of evidence for an other claim doesn't automatically render yours the answer. — Nickolasgaspar
On in particular got my hackles up - "The eternal soul (Vitalism): was Darwin wrong?" It is not primarily a religious thread and I found it really useful. — T Clark
No the problem is with the opinion expressed by your statement. Clearly when the assumption of the supernatural is necessitated by a combination of the evidence, the definition of "natural", and logic, then philosophers ought to assume the supernatural. Your opinion is that philosophy should stop short of assuming the supernatural, even if the supernatural is necessitated by the logic. That's why your opinion is faulty. — Metaphysician Undercover
-No when lacking evidence for a natural mechanism, means that we ....lack evidence for a natural mechanism. It doesn't mean that we have evidence for the supernatural!You left out evidence for something which has no natural mechanism. — Metaphysician Undercover
Declaring something you made up or don't understand non natural is not a good way to prove the supernatural.This is not true. All that is required is evidence of something which is not natural. This effectively demonstrates the necessity for the supernatural to be part of the discussion. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sorry but we have no evidence of anything not natural. We have natural processes that we understand and natural processes that we don't understand.As I said, evidence that there is something which is not natural, is evidence of the supernatural. — Metaphysician Undercover
- "The eternal soul (Vitalism): was Darwin wrong?" It is not primarily a religious thread and I found it really useful. — T Clark
which as I mentioned before is spot on.seems to me that setting that up as a conflict between Darwin and Aristotle is misleading. — T Clark
Logic can never necessitate an ill defined unfalsifiable assumption about a realm. — Nickolasgaspar
Just because we are unable to identify the cause of a phenomenon , we rush to make up an explanation with magical properties that defy natural roles. — Nickolasgaspar
No when lacking evidence for a natural mechanism, means that we ....lack evidence for a natural mechanism. It doesn't mean that we have evidence for the supernatural! — Nickolasgaspar
-Whatlol? You are pulling my leg right? We don't have free will. We are bind by our biology and peer pressure and environmental influences etc. We have will that ins't free. We only have some really brief bursts of freedom mainly for superficial choices.
This is a theological not a philosophical concept. — Nickolasgaspar
It seems you really do not understand the nature of logic. — Metaphysician Undercover
-Really , you can demonstrate impossibility and distinquish it from personal incredulity? How would you do that???? Do you know everything there is to know about natural causes? Really?I said when we are able to determine, that it is impossible that the phenomenon could have had a "natural" cause, according to how we define "natural", then we can conclude "supernatural". I — Metaphysician Undercover
-Yes I understand that this is what you believe The question is why would you ever hold such an irrational belief!Look Nickolasgaspar, no evidence of a natural mechanism for a particular thing, is evidence of no natural mechanism for that thing, no matter how you spin it. — Metaphysician Undercover
-You DON'T KNOW that. Impossibility needs to be demonstrated not assumed.Now, when the evidence becomes such that it is impossible that there is a natural mechanism, according to accepted definition of "natural", then you can keep searching for that non-existent natural mechanism forever, which you will not find because there is no evidence of it, or you can turn around to face reality, and make an attempt to understand the supernatural. — Metaphysician Undercover
I see it's pointless to discuss philosophy with you. — Metaphysician Undercover
Really , you can demonstrate impossibility and distinquish it from personal incredulity? How would you do that???? — Nickolasgaspar
No evidence means.... no evidence, it doen't mean positive evidence or even indications for a magical realm. — Nickolasgaspar
You don't know if we have all the facts and if advances in our technology will allow new observations to produce additional facts that could support our evidence for a mechanisms. — Nickolasgaspar
There isn't anything to understand about the supernatural because it's a made up bin where magical thinkers through everything we currently don't understand in there. The supernatural is ill defined so it has no explanatory power. We don't observe or verify supernatural causation and we shouldn't use it on things we currently do not understand.
Imagine if we stopped searching for the cause of diseases because our superstitious ancestors came up with supernatural explanations like gods and theodicy,evils spirits , evil eye, cursing etc.
Again your arguments are superstitious and outdated. — Nickolasgaspar
Superstitious beliefs in the supernatural is NOT philosophy.
Philosophy should produce wise claims to assit our understanding of the world....not to point to mystery worlds we have to way to testing them...lol
The supernatural is Pseudo Philosophy. — Nickolasgaspar
We use logic to demonstrate impossibility. — Metaphysician Undercover
-No.since we have never demonstrated Y to be possible so we can not just assume it and pretend we solved the problem.No evidence of X, means no evidence of X, but no evidence of X might still be evidence of Y. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, since, we as human produce artificial things, but they are not supernatura because in order for them to exist a long line of natural processes must take place first. (i.e. QM, emergence of atoms, emergence of molecules, emergence of chemical properties, emergence of biological properties and structures, emergence of mental properties, emergence of skills through training....thus production of a artificial things (i.e. jewellery).I propose we define "natural" in the common way, as "not artificial". Do you agree that artificial things must be supernatural? — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure it is, and by the time we introduce our scientific knowledge we realize that we are not really free to make free choices.A discussion of free will is philosophy. And any hypocrite who denies oneself free will is incapable of understanding reality. So until you change your attitude, it's pointless to discuss philosophy with you. — Metaphysician Undercover
In Science Natural is every process or phenomenon that manifest in reality through verified building blocks of the physical would and or their advanced properties. — Nickolasgaspar
No, since, we as human produce artificial things, but they are not supernatura because in order for them to exist a long line of natural processes must take place first. (i.e. QM, emergence of atoms, emergence of molecules, emergence of chemical properties, emergence of biological properties and structures, emergence of mental properties, emergence of skills through training....thus production of a artificial things (i.e. jewellery). — Nickolasgaspar
In order for an artifact to be supernatural that would demand the existence of mind properties non contingent to the causal line described above somehow interacting in matter and producing the artifact. — Nickolasgaspar
Sure it is, and by the time we introduce our scientific knowledge we realize that we are not really free to make free choices.
Our biology, our peers, our given needs and circumstances limit our free will in really mundane choices. — Nickolasgaspar
Sure, the "Natural" is everything which manifests "through verified building blocks", but we still need to account for the existence of these so called "building blocks". That's what we deal with in metaphysics. If "Natural" is whatever is constructed with the building blocks, then whatever constructs the building blocks must be supernatural. Do you agree? — Metaphysician Undercover
Again declaring a natural phenomenon of cognitive deliberation "supernatural" is not evidence for the supernatural.Yes, remember I mentioned "free will". And the hypocrite that you are, chose to reject the reality of free will. — Metaphysician Undercover
-You just don't get it. You keep promoting the same Argument from Ignorance fallacy. Don't you value valid arguments at all?If it is a fact that the natural effectively restricts the supernatural, this does not necessitate the conclusion that the supernatural has been excluded. — Metaphysician Undercover
-No, how do you prove that? — Nickolasgaspar
What natural things are necessary of is irrelevant to how we establish and verify possibilities.The possibility of the supernatural must be demonstrated, not assumed. — Nickolasgaspar
-Sure, our will is a real phenomenon......declaring it "fee" is scientifically ignorant because none of our choices are really free from the system we are in. — Nickolasgaspar
You need to demonstrate that supernatural causality is real and that it is required for A. — Nickolasgaspar
Whether a supernatural explanation is relevant,that is on you do demonstrate sufficiency and necessity through objective positive evidence in favor of the supernatural...not by making arguments through the use of gaps in our epistemology. — Nickolasgaspar
Philosophical criticism and rejection of theism in no way entails social or political "hostility" to theists. — 180 Proof
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