Sheldon
Veteran Member
there is no proof that will EVER be sufficient for those who have no eyes to see or ears to hear
Sigh, another no true Scotsman fallacy.
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there is no proof that will EVER be sufficient for those who have no eyes to see or ears to hear
No true ScotsmanNo true Scotsman fallacy, you really need to look up what that means, unless you're content to make irrational assertions like that of course, which is your choice.
No true ScotsmanSigh, another no true Scotsman fallacy.
I suggest you use the mind God gave you for thinking.
It is not demonstrably true, but it is true..... Religious truth cannot be demonstrated, at least not to everybody.
Eyes to See, Ears to Hear and Hearts to Understand
I can and do know, with my seeing eyes and my heart and my mind.
But there is no proof that will EVER be sufficient for those who have no eyes to see or ears to hear and that is why it can never be considered factual knowledge.... it is spiritual knowledge.
Only if they have eyes to see and ears to hear will they recognize it as the truth. If you don't see it you don't see it.
There are no shoulds, you either recognize the truth or you don't.
What is the counterexample that was excluded improperly?
Religious truth cannot be demonstrated, at least not to everybody.
I was not making a logical argument so there were no premise or conclusions.I agree.
Do not let it be said, @Trailblazer, that you never commit logical fallacies.
This is a begging the question fallacy because you are assuming your conclusion (that God exists and gave us the ability to reason) as one of your premises.
An opinion is no different from what you have.So it's just opinion then. (Remember, we've already established that belief is a subset of opinion.)
It's true that religion would be more convincing to nonbelievers if there were not so many religions with different beliefs, but that is unavoidable, since we cannot suddenly make all the religions unite into one religion so that there is agreement on one Truth. The uniting of religions under one common banner will happen in the future, as I explained to my friend @Nimos in this post #33, but it won't happen any time soon.it would be a lot more convincing if there weren't so many different "truths" out there.
When it comes to objective facts, there is only one truth. The only time we get multiple different truths is when it's a subjective opinion.
I was not making a logical argument so there were no premise or conclusions.
Even if I was making a logical argument it would not be begging the question because the premise that God exists and created us with a rational mind does not lack support just because it is unproven.
Begs the question is a term that comes from formal logic. It's a translation of the Latin phrase petitio principii, and it's used to mean that someone has made a conclusion based on a premise that lacks support.
Begging the question - Wikipedia
It does not matter if God gave you a mind and the ability to reason. You STILL have a mind and the ability to reason even if there is no God, so my original point still stands.
An opinion is no different from what you have.
Trailblazer said: I suggest you use the mind God gave you for thinking.While I agree that your argument was not logical, you were most certainly using an argument that used premises and conclusions.
Yes, it does lack support, because by your own admission, supernatural claims can not be supported. You are using your conclusion (that God exists) as one of your premises (that God made people's brains).
I do not see that you have presented any such evidence... What would it be evidence for?You still think it's an opinion when I have testable and verifiable evidence that has been tested and verified?
It's true that religion would be more convincing to nonbelievers if there were not so many religions with different beliefs, but that is unavoidable, since we cannot suddenly make all the religions unite into one religion so that there is agreement on one Truth. The uniting of religions under one common banner will happen in the future, as I explained to my friend @Nimos in this post #33, but it won't happen any time soon.
Trailblazer said: I suggest you use the mind God gave you for thinking.
I believe that God created you with a mind so you should use it. I am not asserting anything so there is no premise or conclusion so there is no logical fallacy.
I do not see that you have presented any such evidence... What would it be evidence for?
It is not a claim, it is a belief. Claims can be proven, beliefs cannot be proven.Cool story. Let me know when it happens. Honestly, your claim here is about as convincing as this: Clip from: Road to Europe
I use the mind that developed through evolution. God did not literally give me a mind, God set the process of evolution in motion and let it roll. At some point during the process of evolution God instilled man with a rational soul, which distinguishes man from the other animals. It is our rational soul that allows humans to think and do things that other animals cannot do. That is a belief, not a claim.Then perhaps you should use the mind evolution by means of natural selection with no intervention by a deity of any description gave you for thinking.
Scientific facts MUST be measurable and testable in order to be proven true.It would be evidence for the claim that what is true MUST be measurable and testable. How Do We Know What Is True? | RealClearScience