I've given one: God punishes those who believe in him with eternal suffering in hell — Michael
In this case, a "positive" phrasing of "God doesn't exist" could be something like "only the natural world exists" — Michael
God, by definition, doesn't do that. If you're going to change the definitions then it's pointless to argue. — TheMadFool
God, by definition, doesn't do that. If you're going to change the definitions then it's pointless to argue. — TheMadFool
The difference is purely abstract and when someone asserts that fairies exist, both persons, A and B, will demand for evidence. I mean that agnosticism and atheism are more closely related than, agnosticism and theism. So, it becomes reasonable to state the default truth value of any proposition is false. — TheMadFool
God, by definition, doesn't do that. If you're going to change the definitions then it's pointless to argue. — TheMadFool
Of course I made it clear, and you haven't shown I haven't. Feel free to try and do so at any time.↪Thanatos Sand You did not make it clear at all. Am I to assume the former?
How do you define God? God could be defined by his/her/its actions as well for example. We call the being whose son Jesus is God. — BlueBanana
The crux is that there may exist a psychopomp who punishes those who believe in him – or any other God or gods – with eternal hell. — Michael
This is ridiculously poor reasoning. You're concluding that the default epistemic stance for any claim is that it is false based on a supposed behavioral similarity between two types of people when it comes to a single claim? — Terrapin Station
Wait. Now you're deciding which empirical option is the case by definition?? — Terrapin Station
Yes, but that's just being very imaginative. Please read my definition of God in my response to BlueBanana (above). I think my definition is true to the general conception of the term ''God''. — TheMadFool
Well, your version of God is in stark opposition to what people think of when they hear ''God''. My argument is about the latter. — TheMadFool
Well, your version of God is in stark opposition to what people think of when they hear ''God''. My argument is about the latter. — TheMadFool
Again, irrelevant. Your wager is a false dichotomy, as I've shown. As a rationale for believing in God, it fails. — Michael
Well your definition isn't how people generally define God either. It's what people generally think but not what is generally used as a definition. — BlueBanana
Either God exists or he doesn't. Either you believe or you don't. Dichotomy is unavoidable except, of course, in trivial or irrelevant ways. — TheMadFool
5. The matrix should have more columns: the many Gods objection. If Pascal is really right that reason can decide nothing here, then it would seem that various other theistic hypotheses are also live options. Pascal presumably had in mind the Catholic conception of God — let us suppose that this is the God who either ‘exists’ or ‘does not exist’. By excluded middle, this is a partition. The objection, then, is that the partition is not sufficiently fine-grained, and the ‘(Catholic) God does not exist’ column really subdivides into various other theistic hypotheses. The objection could equally run that Pascal's argument ‘proves too much’: by parallel reasoning we can ‘show’ that rationality requires believing in various incompatible theistic hypotheses. As Diderot (1746) puts the point: “An Imam could reason just as well this way”.
Since then, the point has been presented again and refined in various ways. Mackie 1982 writes, “the church within which alone salvation is to be found is not necessarily the Church of Rome, but perhaps that of the Anabaptists or the Mormons or the Muslim Sunnis or the worshippers of Kali or of Odin” (203). Cargile 1966 shows just how easy it is to multiply theistic hypotheses: for each real number x, consider the God who prefers contemplating x more than any other activity. It seems, then, that such ‘alternative gods’ are a dime a dozen — or aleph one, for that matter.
Again, irrelevant. Your wager is a false dichotomy, as I've shown. As a rationale for believing in God, it fails.
— Michael
Either God exists or he doesn't. Either you believe or you don't. Dichotomy is unavoidable except, of course, in trivial or irrelevant ways.
Believe God = heaven and Not believe God = hell are not essential features of religion???!!! — TheMadFool
You can't choose 1 because you need good reasons for believing something to be true. — TheMadFool
Of course I made it clear, and you haven't shown I haven't. Feel free to try and do so at any time. — Thanatos Sand
one can only have external thoughts of someone else since someone else is always external to themselves. — Thanatos Sand
You perceive something externally when it is external to you. — Thanatos Sand
If you want to talk religion and ghosts and spirits, go talk to someone else. — Thanatos Sand
And the human body is not external to the human mind as the human mind is not separate from the human brain/human body. — Thanatos Sand
The human body perceives information; the human mind/brain is the part of the human body that evaluates and records it. — Thanatos Sand
Of course I made it clear, and you haven't shown I haven't. Feel free to try and do so at any time.
one can only have external thoughts of someone else since someone else is always external to themselves.
— Thanatos Sand
Neither option is incompatible with that statement so no.
The rest of the comments are outside the timeframe where you've claimed to have made the question clear or are not directly related. If you disagree, reply with the quotation where you state your view. Your comments also include general disagreement with me, which I think you think implies either option, but it doesn't.
Either you by perceiving externally refer to perceiving external information regardless of whether it is perceived internally or externally, or you're claiming that there's no difference in how internal and external pieces of information are experienced by the human mind. You've made it clear that you think external things are always perceived externally and internal ones internally, but that doesn't imply either one.
Back to the body being external and other subjects:
If you want to talk religion and ghosts and spirits, go talk to someone else.
— Thanatos Sand
If you don't want to discuss with people you disagree with, why use internet forums?
And the human body is not external to the human mind as the human mind is not separate from the human brain/human body.
— Thanatos Sand
Similarly to how consciousness (strong AI) can't be created by algorithms, it can't be created by matter and energy.
The human body perceives information; the human mind/brain is the part of the human body that evaluates and records it.
— Thanatos Sand
You didn't respond to my binocular argument. Information is either brought to brain from outside it, so that the information is external to the brain, and there's no difference between it being brought via the nerves or a binocular or wires in your head, or it's created within your mind/brain so it's internal.
So, you can't show my statement was unclear. — Thanatos Sand
Only clueless people think people making statements have a responsibility to prove their clarity. Smart people know it is on the onus of the critic to show how the statement is not unclear. — Thanatos Sand
That nothing comment you made didn't counter my correct statement in any way. So, "yes." — Thanatos Sand
This is incoherent nonsense made even moreso by its lack of sufficient syntax. — Thanatos Sand
I said I didn't want to talk religion, ghosts, and spirits in this discussion. — Thanatos Sand
The human mind is not the same as A.I.s. It's cute you think they are. — Thanatos Sand
I didn't respond because it was goofy nonsense like the goofy nonsense you repeated about it. Eyes are part of the body, binoculars are not. It's very odd you don't get that. — Thanatos Sand
So, Ciao, as I said above, I have no interest in addressing your nonsense any further, so I won't be reading or responding to your posts on this thread. — Thanatos Sand
There's an infinite number of propositions that have terrible consequences if they are true and we dont believe them, how absurd it would be to consider them all. — PeterPants
Everyone is agnostic about God — PeterPants
Please demonstrate that not believing in god = eternal torment. — PeterPants
He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God. — King James Bible
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