for we know that most primitive cultures believe in such a "being" or "beings" — Manuel
If by God you are speaking about a "personal creator", by this you mean a being that has the power to give life to people? If that's what is being argued, then I do not think it is a strong argument. — Manuel
If you mean that there is "personal creator" of some higher being who created the universe. — Manuel
Back to the problem of my father, yes, you are correct, I do not know with 100% accuracy that he is my father. I have plenty of evidence to suggest that he is, but pictures of me being a baby could be faked, maybe the baby in the picture is not me, etc.
Given the options I have, then I opt to believe that my father is my real father with, say, 99% accuracy. Hence, I have no good reason to be agnostic about this issue, because what my father is, is much better defined than God, or a higher being. — Manuel
Primitive cultures believe thunders are caused by a god's will. We know today it is not the case. — Lionino
I don't understand this. — Lionino
let's take a universalist generic theist: "I believe a personal creator beyond the universe exists — Lionino
In my understanding, this concept is of a mind (so it is personal), it is outside of space and time (and by that of course I am excluding hippie distortions like "the universe is god", not to be confused with Spinoza's pantheism), and it is the cause of the world we see — I think my rendition of the concept is minimal to all theistic religions. — Lionino
My point is simple, this insistence on agnosticism applies not just to the God question but to most questions. Yet we reply to most questions with "yes" or "no". There are those that reply "I don't know", surely, but we don't say the people that said "no" are being unreasonable, especially when "yes" would be more unreasonable then. That much says that you are applying a special ad hoc epistemic standard to God. — Lionino
From B and D, when we ask someone whether they believe in God they should say yes or no, the uncertainty of the topic is already implied, stating whether you are an agnostic theist/atheit is redundant, and any gnostic theist/atheist has an almost impossible-to-meet burden of proof, so I say the gnostics here are either lying or confused. The agnostic label should be reserved for those who are truly divided (even if the evidence sways their mind in another direction) and prefer to suspend judgement in the await for more evidence. — Lionino
which is why I do not think they should be dismissed that easily. — Manuel
This creator is personal, meaning applies to one person, the one who believes? — Manuel
Or does this refer to people who claim a creator creates everything? — Manuel
So it's a mental concept — Manuel
If a person believes in Unicorns, but we find no unicorns in the world, then this belief is a fiction, because empirical evidence goes against such a claim.
If you speak of a being outside of space and time, how are we to verify or dismiss it? I don't know how, so I don't know if such a being exists. — Manuel
"If you speak of a being outside of space and time, how are we to verify or dismiss it?"
I don't believe in heaven, I don't believe in hell, I do not believe a person rose from the dead, etc. Those are rather specific claims, which are capable of being shown to be wrong. — Manuel
But you are asking for certainty, I cannot give you that. — Manuel
Yet we dismiss a guy sitting on clouds causing thunder. In any case, primitive societies are animists. I remember reading good psychological investigation into animism — like how we see faces on rocks and clouds even though there are no faces —, without any appeal to the actuality of those beliefs. — Lionino
You are changing your terms. Empirical evidence doesn't go against the unicorn, there is a lack of empirical evidence for the unicorn. Likewise, there is a lack of evidence for a being outside of space and time. — Lionino
Are you sure there is no heaven? It is outside of space and time as we know, too. — Lionino
You can't give me certainty. So let's just say we are agnostic about everything and call it a day. Deal? — Lionino
How do you know there is no evidence for something outside space and time? — Manuel
Ha, now I think this is semantic. — Manuel
The Christian tradition posits a person who raised from the dead and said there was a heaven. In this world, I do not know of any cases in which a dead person has come back to life after several days. — Manuel
I don't reach certainty, but if you like, I'd say I think there is a 99.9% chance that heaven does not exist. — Manuel
Now you are working with degrees of certainty and, by that standard, agnosticism, in practice, doesn't really exist — a claim that I set to prove in this post — Lionino
But if forced between certainty and agnosticism, I think agnosticism is a safer bet. — Manuel
Well, the first half of that is debatable, but let's save that for another time. You seem to have agreed on an agnostic position.Ok, so we don't know anything for sure, not just the matter of whether there is a God. — Lionino
For me, both theism and atheism are irrational, even if they are empirical claims. Which leaves agnosticism as the only rational position. — Ludwig V
I remember that discussion. Thanks for the reminder.There are four words we can use to adequately, discreetly and clearly delineate the four positions of relevance — AmadeusD
Practicing a religion could gain you divine favor in the afterlife. — Scarecow
That means that the proposition that God exists is not empirical, but is a principle of interpretation. — Ludwig V
Well, I was accepting the widespread belief that the issue is empirical and trying to think through the consequences. I hope I demonstrated that, as at present conducted, the debate will not be resolved, because the two sides talk past each other. On that assumption, agnosticism is the only rational possibility.That there really is possible 'evidence' for God which is 'true' regardless of how any particular human sees it? — AmadeusD
I don't quite understand what you mean. What could I do to bring matters to a head?I don't know why we would somehow attribute an ontological free lunch to the concept of God simply to avoid having to resolve the issue. — AmadeusD
as at present conducted, the debate will not be resolved, because the two sides talk past each other. On that assumption, agnosticism is the only rational possibility. — Ludwig V
If God did turn up in some way, I would have a great many unanswerable questions to discuss with them. — Ludwig V
My actual position is that the concept of God is incoherent, which means that I can neither assert not deny that such a person exists — Ludwig V
Atheism, then, would be the adoption of the non-existence of God as an axiom — Ludwig V
What could I do to bring matters to a head? — Ludwig V
Yes. The trouble is that believers wouldn't buy that. They think that God is real, so the problem is to discover and describe him/her/it.Perfectly reasonable, IMO. It does seem to exist by definition, rather than anything else (conceptually). — AmadeusD
I was thinking what might persuade me to think that a religion was rational. If someone posited God as an axiom, and thought through the consequences for their life and lived accordingly, that would be rational, wouldn't it? Then, if religion was rational, atheism could posit (or just not posit) the axiom but still be rational, if they thought through the consequences and live accordingly. However, if both ended up living the same sort of life, it would follow that the axiom was unnecessary and could be abandoned. That would be a rational approach to religion. Not altogether implausible.I don't quite understand why this would be the case? — AmadeusD
"Can't be bothered" as opposed to "Don't know". I'm sure there are people, perhaps many, who are like that. They'll go with the crowd in the end.think this the case for a lot of agnostics - they can just leave off the issue entirely by claiming that looking for the evidence is a fools errand. — AmadeusD
Yes. A lot of philosophers are very bothered by that, as well.it boiled down to just not liking uncertainty. I think this the case for a lot of agnostics - they can just leave off the issue entirely by claiming that looking for the evidence is a fools errand. — AmadeusD
I'm a full-blown unbeliever in any and all of the theist stories, and I will not wimp out with the "maybe there is a supernatural something somewhere" agnostic line. — Vera Mont
But isn't there something "behind" the stories that a person cannot wimp out on even if she tried? — Astrophel
Sure there is: human psychology. That subject interests me greatly in all its variety and complexity. I'm interested in mythology and anthropology. Obviously, the lure of magic, wish-fulfillment, personification of natural phenomena and all those impulses that begin with ritual and eventually culminate in huge international institutions like the RCC, is very much a part of that interest.But isn't there something "behind" the stories that a person cannot wimp out on even if she tried? — Astrophel
RCC = Roman Catholic Church?Obviously, the lure of magic, wish-fulfillment, personification of natural phenomena and all those impulses that begin with ritual and eventually culminate in huge international institutions like the RCC, is very much a part of that interest. — Vera Mont
For me, phenomena like personification and our ambivalent (or complicated?) attitude to animals is a clue. The concept of a person can be applied to things that are like people in some ways, but not others and it is particularly tempting for societies that don't have the benefit of modern science. If you think that some sort of super-human being is throwing the furniture around in heaven it is less alarming than not knowing. You can take steps to appease its wrath, which is comforting even if ineffective.But isn't there something "behind" the stories that a person cannot wimp out on even if she tried? — Astrophel
Yes; I believe it's the biggest and most powerful religious organization in history.RCC = Roman Catholic Church? — Ludwig V
Like what? — flannel jesus
But if you mean some kind of anima or spirit in the real world — Vera Mont
My internal experience.I would ask, what is it that you refer to when the matter of thoughts and feelings and intuitions arises? — Astrophel
Without intelligent makers, there would be no couches or shoes.If one is curious or envious, say, this surely is outside of the category of being a couch or a shoe. — Astrophel
I'm not really sure how that connects to the theist stories Vera was talking about. I doubt very many of them feature cars. — flannel jesus
My internal experience. — Vera Mont
Without intelligent makers, there would be no couches or shoes.
Of course some matter is alive, while most matter is inanimate. But what's that to do gods? Zebras and lemurs don't worship anything, and they do all right in what's left of their environments. Human are story-tellers. It's not likely other animals make up stories.... though I sometimes wonder whether cats, dogs and apes star in their own imaginary movies that same way humans do. — Vera Mont
I don't understand. What is the standard that comes to the general mind when [some?]one dismisses the concept of spirit? Is there some reason I should meet that putative standard?This is a question about your reference to "spirit". So when you examine your internal experience, what you find is a kind of content that really doesn't conform to the standards of existence that are generally in mind when one dismisses this concept. — Astrophel
Is there a boundary between internal and external experience? How does one discern that boundary? And these very different kinds of experience transmit different kinds of information? Can you give a neurological explanation as how that works?Put it this way: when you say you don't think there is such a thing as spirit, you implicitly draw on some standard of what the world really is that rejects the positing of spirit, and so I am assuming this standard refers to what is not your internal experience, but in your external experience. — Astrophel
Sorry. I can make no sense of that paragraph. My best guess is something like: delving into the human psyche reveals that it differs from inanimate objects. That much, I have already stipulated as self-evident. If that difference between life and non-life is supposed to be a "spirit", I accept that as a metaphor, not as a physical entity.The point really was to simply say that a human "world" when observed closely, as a scientist would observe, is found to be not a world of objects. An inquiry intent on discovery of the nature of what is "there" in one's "internal experience" will notw above all that this is nothing at all like the external counterpart of this world: the world of shoes, rocks, telephone polls, morning dew, etc. — Astrophel
That's a widely held opinion.Before there was worshipping, Gods, and all the trappings of these churchy fetishes (I like to call them), there was a basic problematic built into existence that gave rise to the worshipping and the rest. — Astrophel
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