Cap'n MacDougal
Member
What is the reader supposed to conclude from your statements.
I don't know that the reader is supposed to conclude anything. I'm simply sharing my thoughts on the subject. You're free to conclude whatever you like!
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
What is the reader supposed to conclude from your statements.
Can you convince me that I'm incorrect in my theism?
Very well stated! But do you know where you goofed? On the ''reality based people'' part; /that is a false argument/; it calls into question your otherwise sound logic and conclusions. But, at least you gave it a try; and no, you didn't really repeat much, your argument is probably the best one presented on the thread, imo.
I don't know; if you want to generalize, you can of course. Though, ''non-theistic'' to me, could mean many things, so it just doesn't seem like a good counterpoint, as a generality. *shrugs*
I wouldn't generalize, at all. If I wanted to 'describe' that idea, I might say agnostic.
I understood what you meant, however the idea is not very useful as an argument. If you were arguing something much more specific, then I might use the same ''idea'', but it only works within parameters.
On a personal level I don't totally doubt myself. But its within reason. I'm talking about the context of a debate here. If I wanted to get you to believe in a concept I would never expect my personal subjective experience to mean jack ****. Even on this I don't believe anecdotal evidence is worth anything either.Your comment is unclear, so of course it isn't obvious what you mean. Are you saying that you don't believe any of your own experiences?
A good example was a guy saying that he only ever saw cases where pedophiles went after little boys. I showed him he was wrong at every single turn with the actual statistics. His entire anecdotal evidence based argument was ****. There is a possibility that the anecdotal evidence could match the truth but it isn't actually evidence of the truth. Now what you may be referring to would be the usage of anecdotal evidence that has to do with strengthen or giving examples. I started this paragraph with an anecdote specifically to highlight this point. The anecdote isn't the force in the argument. It was used as a tool to help get my original point across. But as far as evidence it isn't.This doesn't seem to be the case upon observing public discourse and various conversations on various topics. We use personal anecdotes all the time in debates. Why do you say the don't mean anything in debates?
Are you perhaps saying that personal experiences doesn't mean anything in debate because you are assuming that the person means for their personal experience to somehow generalize across the entire world? That's an assumption that should not be made. Often, it seems that people simply want to be heard and understood and they're not making statements intended to be taken as some sort of universal truth. There are cases where what you are suggesting here is appropriate, but there are other times such data are unnecessary (or impossible to obtain) depending on what is really being said by the speaker. Religious experiences are more like arts. Quantifying the arts misses their intent. Each unique painting tells a beautiful story, and converting everything to numbers and data points eclipses that. In part because of this, I find challenges to "prove" religion to be absurd. Particularly for my own, which has never been about making matter-of-fact proclamations in the first place. Possibly neither here nor there, though.
Except that, subjective experiences can mean something. You are talking about a situation where I am basically assuming that your subjective experiences, or what you make of them ,are pretty much worthless. OK, in some debate formats, this might apply, however,, unless the format is very strict, then they only apply at a certain level of believability. Although it becomes ''subjective'', it also becomes personal, hence our subjective experiences, vary. So, it ''goes both ways''. Someone stating that there is no deity because x, y, or z, is no more (inherently) credible than anything else.
//in other words, we create our own objective parameters. //this is why these words ''subjective, ''objective'', are a tad useless in many debates.
I am an agnostic atheist.I can, and do, consider those arguments.
You seem to be taking yourself back to a purely subjective way of determining anything...this seems like you are ''breaking your own rules'', here. Because, on the one hand, you say that the subjective argument is garbage, then, on the other, you cannot except other arguments /because they are necessarily subjective/. This essentially leaves you with no argument, a type of agnosticism, basically.
Can you convince me that I'm incorrect in my theism?
It is any debate of any kind for me. How do I know you aren't lying? How do I know you aren't crazy? How do I know you aren't mistaken? There is nothing rooted in fact to help us get to the point where we can get rid of these questions.
So everything just poofed into existence?
This is like me asking you to convince me that my belief in the invisible man with 4-arms is lunacy... You can't do it.
In this scenario, I have to provide no evidence whatsoever for my invisible man with 4 arms, yet you somehow have to disprove the existence of the the invisible man with 4 arms.
How exactly would you go about doing that?
What i find amusing is that the folks who are responding to the OP like you did here are actually giving more criteria to refute than the OP didCan you convince me there isn't a notoriously evasive squirrel names Lars on the planet Mars? Here is the thing though, I'm not going to tell you anything about Lars at all. .
What i find amusing is that the folks who are responding to the OP like you did here are actually giving more criteria to refute than the OP did
because the refutations are a direct response to the claims being made.What i find amusing is that the folks who are responding to the OP like you did here are actually giving more criteria to refute than the OP did
because the refutations are a direct response to the claims being made.
true, but ''refutation'' is largely meaningless without credibility anyway.