180 Proof
1.5k
Or does your evasion of the question mean that you don't have any evidence or argument for these assertions?
— Enai De A Lukal
C'mon Frank Apisa show your "evidence or arguments" him/her like you showed me. :razz: — 180 Proof
Enai De A Lukal
175
↪Frank Apisa
If you think I am wrong...easy enough to show me to be wrong.
I asked you a question, which you didn't answer. I'll ask again. What is your evidence/arguments for the following assertions-
There is NO way to KNOW if there is at least one god...or if there are none.
There is NO way to KNOW if it is more probable that there is at least one god than that there are none...,or vice versa.
One CANNOT get to any of those things through reason...or logic...or science...or math.
Or does your evasion of the question mean that you don't have any evidence or argument for these assertions? — Enai De A Lukal
substantivalism
77
I do not know if gods exist or not;
I see no reason to suspect gods CANNOT EXIST (that the existence of gods is impossible);
I see no reason to suspect that gods MUST EXIST (that at least one god is needed to explain existence);
I do not see enough unambiguous evidence upon which to base a meaningful guess in either direction...
...so I don't.
— Frank Apisa
The first is direct personal admittance of ignorance and the latter comments a form of epistemologically successful deduction on your part. A respectable position to hold and for others rather frustrating as to hold any one position (theist, atheist, ignostic, agnostic) there must be a clear definition of the terms involved including the word god here. If such a concept proved to be incoherent then we would all be atheist, if it merely rebranded meaning wise to another readily existent thing/concept (universe) then perhaps we are all theistic, and if it falls along the line of a deistic/classical conception of god then an agnostic position would be perhaps most favored. In lieu of these situations we are all ignostics. — substantivalism
jorndoe
985
You zoomed in on the wrong word, ↪Frank Apisa. :) — jorndoe
180 Proof
1.5k
↪Frank Apisa :rofl: — 180 Proof
jorndoe
984
Not on the question "Are there any gods or are there no gods."
— Frank Apisa
And hence, by your line of thinking, neither on ...
The Matrix (or Bostrom's thing perhaps)
Solipsism
Dream thought experiments
Intangible hobs that can control the weather
Applewhite's trans-dimensional super-beings
...
But that's fine I guess. — jorndoe
Economists are full of shit
180 Proof
1.5k
↪Frank Apisa :lol: — 180 Proof
Enai De A Lukal
170
↪Frank Apisa
There is NO way to KNOW if there is at least one god...or if there are none.
There is NO way to KNOW if it is more probable that there is at least one god than that there are none...,or vice versa.
One CANNOT get to any of those things through reason...or logic...or science...or math.
And your evidence/argument for these assertions is... ? — Enai De A Lukal
And obviously there is middle ground between knowledge and "blind guessing". — Enai
You should also consider answering jorndoe's question about other entities whose existence is dubious- surely you don't take this same agnostic position with respect to dragons and underpants gnomes and so on? And if not, why the special pleading wrt theistic deities but not other fictional entities?
180 Proof
1.5k
↪Frank Apisa Projection on this forum, Frank, is pathetic. In these many months you've not so much as scuffed one of my arguments while I've blown down your infantile "I know nothing" houses of cards every time with barely a whisper. Like the Donald, you seem to forget there is, in this case, reams of written evidence (mine, others & yours) of your incorrigible (or disingenous) confusions & non sequiturs. You're the one "guessing" (gassing), sir. :mask: — 180 Proof
180 Proof
1.5k
But make sure you don't tangle ass with someone who can actually show you to be the blind guesser you are.
— Frank Apisa
Well, you're definitely not one of them, ... so I'm still waiting. :victory: :smirk: — 180 Proof
But there is no reasoning or logic invo[lv]ed...just guesswork.
— Frank Apisa
Like a broken record you keep repeating this "guesswork" with "no reasoning or logic involved", but repetition doesn't make it so and only reminds me/us that your 'agnostic confusion' is not even false. Rodeo clownin' you has become a guilty pleasure, Frank. :sweat: — 180 Proof
Banno
8.7k
Look up the definition of a word in the dictionary.
Then look up the definition of each of the words in that definition.
Iterate.
Given that there are a finite number of words in the dictionary, the process will eventually lead to repetition.
If one's goal were to understand a word, one might suppose that one must first understand the words in its definition. But this process is circular.
There must, therefore, be a way of understanding a word that is not given by providing its definition.
Now this seems quite obvious; and yet so many begin their discussion with "let's first define our terms". — Banno
Banno
8.7k
I gave it.
— Frank Apisa
Where? I must have missed it — Banno
EricH
165
I am NOT talking about anything “supernatural.
— Frank Apisa
I could be missing something here, but your definition of the word "god" does not correspond with the definition used by pretty much every other human being on this planet.
Maybe some of the pantheists out here would agree with you - but not being a pantheist I can't speak for them. — EricH
Banno
8.7k
↪Frank Apisa
...so, where is there a coherent presentation of what it is to be God? — Banno
Banno
8.7k
↪Frank Apisa
...so, where is there a coherent presentation of what it is to be God? — Banno
180 Proof
1.5k
↪Frank Apisa :sweat: :ok:
If you see something IRRATIONAL ...
I do not know if gods exist or not;
I see no reason to suspect gods CANNOT EXIST (that the existence of gods is impossible);
I see no reason to suspect that gods MUST EXIST (that at least one god is needed to explain existence);
I do not see enough unambiguous evidence upon which to base a meaningful guess in either direction...
...so I don't.
— Frank Apisa
Try to "reason", Frank, then you might "know or "see" ... https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/391861 — 180 Proof
jorndoe
975
Of course not.
— Frank Apisa
What about, say, The Matrix (or Bostrom's thing perhaps)? Solipsism? Dream thought experiments? Intangible hobs that can control the weather? (Heck, Applewhite's trans-dimensional super-beings?)
With the garage dragon, Sagan alluded to a simple back-pedal-procedure by which existential claims can be (counter)evidence-immunized. Seems rife in religious apologetics, reducing their epistemics to being on par with the above, despite their continuous insistence on existential claims.
It takes ... something to unabatedly continue declaring such claims true. (And thoroughly declaring agnosticism in such matters doesn't seem quite right.) — jorndoe
Banno
8.6k
↪Frank Apisa So you would be happily agnostic as to the existence of, say, four-sided triangles? — Banno
180 Proof
1.5k
If you want to discuss this issue, let's do so.
— Frank Apisa
We've already discussed it for months now. We don't even disagree actually because your assertions are incoherent (not even false) and don't address my arguments substantively. It'd help 'our discussion' if you'd carefully read what I've written on this topic (here and elsewhere) and respond accordingly, but you haven't and still won't (or can't). I now only respond to your 'agnostic confusion' in order to edify - provoke - others who might be as confused, though not as incorrigibly, as you clearly are, Frank. — 180 Proof
Banno
8.6k
↪Frank Apisa
I agree, in the absence of evidence there is no reason to claim that god exists; nor any reason to suppose that he does not.
But I don't think we need stop at that. We can ask if there is a coherent notion of god.
This, of course, puts the ball in the theists court; it is up to them to present a description of god that is consistent and tenable. But we can go a step further and say that if an agnostic is going to claim that god is possible, then they also should be able to present an account of what god is, that is consistent and tenable.
And in the absence of such an account, atheism seems the reasonable conclusion. — Banno
180 Proof
1.5k
Oddly worded comment. Give it another try and I'll respond.
— Frank Apisa
But you already have! Thanks, Frank. :smirk: — 180 Proof
#1:
What do I mean when I use the word “god” ...?
I mean an entity of agency…something that existed BEFORE this thing we humans call the universe came into being…and which caused or helped to cause it to “come into being.”
Well, in so far as the universe's earliest measurable era had a planck radius and was an acausal quantum event (i.e. a random vacuum fluctuation re: Noether's Theorem, Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, Hartle-Hawking No Boundary, etc), causal agency such as "creator g/G" does not obtain. Evidence of "creation" - higher than minimal entropy - must be observable (directly or indirectly) like every other events / physical transformations in the universe and yet there is no such evidence whatsoever; therefore, this entails that there is no - never was a - "creator g/G". Theism - Abrahamic, Vedic, Greco-Roman, Norse, etc - is not true. — 180 Proof
I am NOT talking about anything “supernatural.” Anything that exists…is, by definition, a part of existence. If ghosts or spirit beings exist, but we humans cannot sense them in any way…they are part of what exists and are a part of nature.
It doesn't matter whether or not g/G is "supernatural" but whether or not any such g/G is defined as intervening - causing changes - in nature; and if so, because nature is scienfically observable and therefore changes in nature are scientifically observable, then the claims of believers or scriptures that some g/G has intervened - caused changes - in nature entails observable (direct or indirect) evidence - and yet there is none whatsoever. — 180 Proof
Again, theism is not true. — 180 proof
180 Proof
1.5k
I have several "definitions" (explanations of what I mean when I use the word...) "god."
— Frank Apisa
Just (say) three will do. Don't be coy, Frank, do tell. — 180 Proof
jorndoe
973
Is this comment directed to the word "define" or to the word "god?" It started as though to the former...but ended as though to the latter
— Frank Apisa
Both. And...
dictionaries truly do not "define" words (my sense of "define") but rather tell us how the word is most often used
— Frank Apisa — jorndoe
jorndoe
972
I'm interested in what you mean by "define."
— Frank Apisa
I suppose, defining x could be predicating x that x is (uniquely) identifiable?
Otherwise, the only option may be to show x (which would be existential proof at least).
In the case here, x is used in so many ways as to become contradictory, unidentifiable, unshowable or just anything/whatever. — jorndoe
substantivalism
75
I'm interested in what you mean by "define."
How do YOU define...define?
It is difficult to define something if your impressions of what define means differs from mine, for instance.
— Frank Apisa
Are you being jokey/sarcastic, pedantic, or really wondering about the grammatical/language/philosophy that goes into a proper definition? Though, if you have been following the frustrating conversation this person seems to want to not either give up understandable definition of what he means by god or propose a definition which we have words that specifically already describe said concept; consciousness, emotions, wonder, existence, reality, universe, etc. You can call these things god but that doesn't change the concepts its being substituted name wise for. — substantivalism
You're playing a semantics game like calling the universe god and not defining what you mean by god or merely just having the word "god" be a place holder for other terms. Maybe when I say god I mean that chair across from me but that is both useless and meaningless to do, so why are you doing it? — substantivalism
Basically there is an intelligence to collectives that is not possessed by any specific individual but is derived from the interaction of their personal guesses/ perceptions. — Benj96
Benj96
171
Has it been tested?
— Frank Apisa
It has. Numerous times with replicable results — Benj96
Due to probability a player is just as likely to overestimate as to underestimate the quantity in the jar. And due to this the more players that player, even if they are all wrong, the more accurate the calculation of the real answer gets. I find this remarkable. It's as if by understanding a simple rule of maths you can transform a whole lot of wrong into a single piece of right. — Benj96
Enai De A Lukal
155
↪DoppyTheElv not sure which quote you're referring to (Hume or 180 Proof), but yes, that's the gist of it- facts are contingent, existence claims are claims of fact, and anything that can be by the same token can not be. So as Hume says, there is an "evident absurdity" in an a priori argument purporting to establish an existence claim- a claim of fact- because such an effort is doomed to failure by its very nature. As far as logic and deductive arguments go, you can only get out what you put in, and so any argument with purely a priori or definitional premises but a factual conclusion (like that some X exists) is bound to be invalid. And so it is with e.g. the ontological argument for the existence of God. — Enai De A Lukal
Then, of course, there's also Tom Lehrer's The Vatican Rag.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pvhYqeGp_Do — Ciceronianus the White
Kev
45
↪Outlander Absolutely. When you remove the floating abstractions (namely the concept of capital) it's pretty hard to argue against capitalism. — Kev
Banno
8.6k
...neither of us would feel comfortable with eating meat on Good Friday.
— Frank Apisa
Indeed, ritual runs deep. So on Good Friday I make a point of eating a roast leg and watching Life of Brian. — Banno
Banno
8.6k
↪Ciceronianus the White ↪180 Proof ↪Frank Apisa
Perhaps we might all agree on the excellence of the philosophical contemplations of the apostates of the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church? — Banno
Ciceronianus the White
1.1k
↪Frank Apisa
I made my bones, so to speak, in a Church where the mass was said in Latin. I was a wine-pouring, patin-holding participant in the great Latin rite, and chanted away in that language with the best of them. I refer to the pallid, monotonous, grotesquely banal ceremony and liturgy which replaced it. — Ciceronianus the White
Ciceronianus the White
1.1k
↪180 Proof
When believing in a doctrine comes to require not only an effort, but one that demands acceptance of unsubstantiated assumptions and the repeated performance of uninspiring ceremonies, it's hard to remain a believer. I'm just saying. — Ciceronianus the White