Is that what you think? That the blue elephant isn't blue if your book says it's pink?If it is part of a coherent belief system then it is not only meaningful but also true.
What exactly do you mean by "God", such that if we detect a phenomenon we can determine whether or not its cause is "God"?I see. So electrons exist because you can detect their effects and, by extension, them. I'm sure Christians will argue that God can be detected through his effects. So what's the difference?
I said that if you use the correspondence definition of 'truth', as I do, then it follows that correspondence is the test for 'truth'.You claim that correspondence logically follows from the correspondence theory of truth.
There's no circularity. It satisfies the definition of an X so it's an X.Even if that is true, that only means that you have engaged in circular reasoning. Why should I accept your definition of truth?
No, I specifically pointed out to you that I made no such claim. I pointed out that it's a concept, a definition, not a statement about reaIity. I said that 'truth is correspondence with reality' IF you use that definition (as I and many people do).You claim that the statement "Truth corresponds to reality" is true.
Everything Jesus does and says is Jesus, you say? Show me how that's useful as a definition. Show me the process by which it assesses S:Freetown is the capital of Liberia for truth or falsity.As for the definition of truth, I have already quoted from the Christian holy text. Jesus is truth, according to Christian theology. Everything he says and does is true.
On the evidence we presently have and as we presently interpret it, the earth has been spherical (close enough) since its formation, about 4.5 bn years ago; life arose maybe 3.8 bn years ago; H sap sap appears probably not more than 200,000 years ago, nor less than 70,000 years ago; Yahweh, god of the bible, appears in the southern Judea region about 1500 BCE; the earliest books of the bible may use material from around 1000 BCE.Genesis 1:9-10
>>And God said, Let the waters under the heaven be gathered together unto one place, and let the dry land appear: and it was so.
>>And God called the dry land Earth; and the gathering together of the waters called he Seas: and God saw that it was good.
So now you claim that the Earth was a sphere. Yet the text itself defines Earth as the dry land. By definition, that's what it is.
All these things have been determined on the basis of examinable evidence and repeatable experiment. On my definition, S: the earth is about 4.5 bn years old is true, ie has a body of facts which constitute its S'.
So you want to hide behind your book of folk tales instead of looking at the elephant to see whether it's pink or blue?So you want to hide behind your definition of truth while denying Tanakh's definition of Earth.
*chuckle*That's what we call "special pleading" in the logic business, a discipline you know nothing about.
Oh dear, do I have to tell you that 'looking' is shorthand for gathering (through the senses) information including information via our instruments?You just said that electrons exist. The question of whether they exist cannot be resolved by looking.
You can look upon electrons by looking at anything composed of atoms that's in your range of view, though they're too small for you to make out. Or you can look upon them using instruments: >here< is a lab image of a hydrogen atom, complete with single electron.No one can look upon an electron. Electrons are a useful fiction that science dabbles in -- nothing more.
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