Cookie182
Individui Superiore
I'm deservingLet's just ban anybody who isn't:
me
Kwayera
Iron
moll.
Graney
jb nc
Rafy
zimmermanguy
Schroe
NTB
Shakespeare
Exphate
Kfunk.
Agreed?
I'm deservingLet's just ban anybody who isn't:
me
Kwayera
Iron
moll.
Graney
jb nc
Rafy
zimmermanguy
Schroe
NTB
Shakespeare
Exphate
Kfunk.
Agreed?
No you're not.I'm deserving
Do any posts have a point then? Isn't this thread simply an expression of people's thoughts? If you’re attacking the logical elements of my thread in relation to it's strength's as a philosophical argument, then I am quite happy for you to do so- I expect there to be errors, given that I wrote it on the spot. Please provide a sensible deconstruction and rebuttal. Otherwise, if your just criticising for the sake of your ego- then I will have to question whether this a valid, mature discussion.Does this post have a unique point, or was it just a basic refutation of religious traditions, an explination of how non-physical phenomena are observed only by some and yet another explination of burden of proof?
Holy shit Iron, did you just state Pascal's Wager?I hear your criticism, Cookie, but from where i'm standing, a fraction of a percentage of doubt is enough to run on the God side with. You stick to what we know and that's admirable, but I think that the God question rests on propositions that we could never hope to know with certainty on earth. It is necessarily and simply beyond our human inventions of understanding
Well I appreciate that and will work on it refining it, but two brains are better then one. As an atheist yourself, perhaps you would like to extend on the logical points I made (you can disregard stuff of course) and perhaps we can derive at a conclusion. I guess you are right; I never set out to say a lot, perhaps only on the matter of the Burden of Proof. Which, after reading your post, has come to my attention that it has already been extensively discussed. At this moment though, I have to continue with uni work, but I will subsequently return...It had no conclusion. It had an introduction to engage my interest (which it did) and multiple logical and eloquently expressed points. However, it did not have either a conclusion or a segue to tie the points together. It was all over the place.
EDIT: It also did not answer, refute or advance and basic statement. It appeared to be just a collection of your random thoughts on the vast topic of religion.
I can see your point there Iron, in some way your argument would have to suggest that biologically we can never have 100 percent certainty? Because, if we did have 100 percent certainty in what we know (which is what we see), then religion would never have been invented in the first place. That proposes a problem for my argument doesn't it lol. However, we could simply say that when religious thought first began- humans lacked any formalised knowledge or mechanism such as the modern scientific method, and hence any unexplained phenomena was directly linked to the "supernatural". Something which would seem futile these days with the amount of previously "supernatural" occurrences over the past subsequently being explained by science, as scientific thought continues to grow.I hear your criticism, Cookie, but from where i'm standing, a fraction of a percentage of doubt is enough to run on the God side with. You stick to what we know and that's admirable, but I think that the God question rests on propositions that we could never hope to know with certainty on earth. It is necessarily and simply beyond our human inventions of understanding. That's not to say that we should embrace a lack of knowledge and seek to preserve all mystery - indeed, the advancement of knowledge is a good and beautiful search for truth - but I think that it's your side who is jumping to the conclusion that there is no rule behind the rule
The context of what I was talking about is propositions put by man, resolved through man's reason etc. As I see it, you first must settle the God question, which is essentially a 'toss of the coin', depending on various factors. The second question is one of religious history and I quickly conceed the difficulty of proving this ahead of other contesting truths regarding religion. But I dont claim to know God's mind on this, I only claim that living a life devoted to loving your neighbour and honouring the universal moral code attached to this (dont steal, kill, covet, fornicate etc) is essentially the path all good people can agree on.Edit: The fundamental flaw though I see in what you said was "the God question rests on propositions that we could never hope to know with certainty on earth". Surely, as a devout Christian you hold 100 percent certainty. This certainty encompasses that the Bible is the word of God and that his Son, Yeshua of Nazareth, came to Earth and died as humanity's savior. If you held even a small, fractioned percentage of doubt regarding this, then by my definition, you would be Agnostic. Therefore, this refutes your first statement- as for you, there is no intrinsic, human doubt in regards to the God question as your very belief in the preposition of Christianity shows that such knowledge is not beyond "human inventions of understanding" as by definition, Christianity, as an organised school of spiritual thought is a human invention.
In response to that, I'd say that the only rule we are accepting is that any hypothesis needs testing. The rules of physics before us at the waterfall, explaining why the water actually flows or falls, the chemistry behind it's makeup etc all came through hypothesis's and qualitative/quantitative testing until a viable, rational and reasonable (beyond any doubt) conclusion was made. At that point, the only rule we adhere to is that we are animals and our perceptional 'reality' is comprised through the input signals to our brain through our five senses. The atheist and the theist are of the same biological makeup- they both observe the same phenomena. Hence, the only rule being proposed is by the theist- that a sixth, supernatural sense exists. The fundamental flaw is not the proposition- it is as valid as the proposition of gravity was when it was first made. The flaw is that this thought is instantly recognised as a rule when it is simply still a hypothesis. A hypothesis, that in general terms we may have been created by a higher power. A hypothesis that begs for physical proof and one that even the scientist can not deny (and why would they, as this level of thought still upholds the logical method) may one day be proven.but I think that it's your side who is jumping to the conclusion that there is no rule behind the rule
See I find that a non-sensical and irrational statement of reasoning. If you were on a criminal trial- and the judge took a leap of faith (despite no evidence) that you were guilty- a movement purely based on the phenomena your labeling intuition , then you would instantly appeal- given that you’re an intelligent, rational member of this species. Then why have double standards of reasoning- why make an exception for religion? Subsequently, it is an arrogant leap then. An insult to the evolution of man's intellectual development. The greatest arrogance that lies in religion is the blind will to accept what you’re ‘told’ and not even entertain other schools of thought or criticism. Science constantly grows- through rigorous intellectual attacks, religion remains stagnant. As you said previously to Christina in this thread- there is little room within the Catholic Church for “dissent”- it embraces an “authoritarian” standpoint- it’s simply absolute. Now I can't tell you God does not exist- it certainly is an acceptable hypothesis to entertain alone (and by all means, undertake some scientific research into the area) but I can tell you, that until at least one piece of evidence arises, you do not have a rational reason to presume his existence if your going to follow logically structured human thinking. This places you in a quite a paradox.Sure, I dont claim that the spiritual sense is a rule adhering to the standards of man's scientific method. It's something that can only be sorted out by the individual. I mean, we believe that belief in a God does require a leap of faith as an act of good faith to prove our love. It makes sense to me that the rules are rigged to avoid proof of the divine. It's a test of will
The predicted response- but this leads to an ad infinitum argument on your behalf. But before that, how can anything be 'reasoned' to be beyond reason ? Lol you can name "atrocities" which utilised science- but science itself is not the ideology , it is simply an explanatory tool. Scientific methods have created everything we know- ancient armies learned the 'science' behind making swords- this made them weapons, it didn't make them kill with it. That would have been ideology spurred through religion- inquisition, the Crusades etc.I dont accept the attempts to paint religion as against reason; as I have said, science is a great thing and, when finding its purpose through the foundational concession that God exists, it has been of enormous benifit to human life. When it strays from Truth, all sorts of dark, perverted science is spurted, like the atomic bomb and cloning. However, religion is better thought of as being simply above or beyond reason - not opposed to it, but an ally in its search for truth and meaning
It's hardly a double-standard, or arrogance. We claim all the rules of logic, reason and science, we accept that our understanding of reality has progressed more fully over time. The point is that God is the apex of all reason and Truth - he is the end point, the reason why we have any reasons to begin with. Our creation is One and it is good! What is the point of all reason if it cannot lead to the God question? What is the basis of any truth at all, if there is no over-arching truth to bind them?See I find that a non-sensical and irrational statement of reasoning. If you were on a criminal trial- and the judge took a leap of faith (despite no evidence) that you were guilty- a movement purely based on the phenomena your labeling intuition , then you would instantly appeal- given that you’re an intelligent, rational member of this species. Then why have double standards of reasoning- why make an exception for religion? Subsequently, it is an arrogant leap then. An insult to the evolution of man's intellectual development. The greatest arrogance that lies in religion is the blind will to accept what you’re ‘told’ and not even entertain other schools of thought or criticism. Science constantly grows- through rigorous intellectual attacks, religion remains stagnant. As you said previously to Christina in this thread- there is little room within the Catholic Church for “dissent”- it embraces an “authoritarian” standpoint- it’s simply absolute. Now I can't tell you God does not exist- it certainly is an acceptable hypothesis to entertain alone (and by all means, undertake some scientific research into the area) but I can tell you, that until at least one piece of evidence arises, you do not have a rational reason to presume his existence if your going to follow logically structured human thinking. This places you in a quite a paradox.
I feel that you are ignoring my posts.The predicted response- ....