Sapiens
Polymathematician
Unsupported and absurd claims, which (if true) would be supernatural.Jesus actually rose from the dead. He isn't imaginary.
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Unsupported and absurd claims, which (if true) would be supernatural.Jesus actually rose from the dead. He isn't imaginary.
Unsupported and absurd claims, which (if true) would be supernatural.
What is 'supernatural' may be imagined, but you also imagine lots of things that aren't supernatural so the terms are not interchangeable.Paraphrasing my dictionary, ‘(the) supernatural’ means ‘things that cannot in principle be explained according to the laws of nature.'
‘Nature’ is the place beyond the lens of your eye, where everything with objective existence is found, the same thing as the realm of the physical sciences.
The same thing as ‘reality’, indeed.
Out there in reality we find no gods, spirits, ghosts, souls, demons, familiars, vampires, fairies, not even the headmistress of Hogwarts.
And we can give no useful meaning to the idea ‘outside reality’ – by definition there’s no such real place. so there can only be an imaginary one.
What have I missed?
What real things cannot in principle be explained by the laws of nature? Imaginary things, fine, but real things?
And where is ‘outside of reality’ except in the imagination?
What are the laws of nature? List them.Paraphrasing my dictionary, ‘(the) supernatural’ means ‘things that cannot in principle be explained according to the laws of nature.'
No, because there is nothing to actually suggest or indicate some supernatural creator.in other words, 'supernatural' by this definition, is a box you want to be able to check, aint it?
That is the key word. Of course there are things we can't explain right now and just don't really know (biogenesis being a great example that many Creationists take liberties to fallaciously insist science and evolution answer that question), and there have always been things we couldn't presently explain in the past, but we have explanations now (bacteria, viruses, and mental disorders probably being great examples of this).There are somethings we can't explain, at least yet.
How can you argue this when the presence of a supernatural being has not been objectively established?But arguably the phenomena of creative intelligence is quite literally supernatural, in that it very specifically transcends natural processes, ( 'Is this object natural or artificial' ?)
What evidence can you provide of this?Jesus actually rose from the dead. He isn't imaginary.
Circular reasoning.Read the entire New Testament. Plenty of eyewitness testimony there.
The universe is freaky enough that you really don't need the supernatural.
Still, the imagination does give it some royal zing to it all and people do like a good scare once in awhile.
No, because there is nothing to actually suggest or indicate some supernatural creator.
How can you argue this when the presence of a supernatural being has not been objectively established?
No, the difference is where I see a series of natural events even beyond the beginning of this universe, you stop at the beginning of this universe and assume and insert supernatural causes beyond that.The difference being, only one belief asserts the paradox of natural laws being naturally created by.. those very same laws
No, the difference is where I see a series of natural events even beyond the beginning of this universe, you stop at the beginning of this universe and assume and insert supernatural causes beyond that.
Maybe. But maybe the laws of nature are the product of relationships within the elements of nature in our universe.One step after the other First find these laws and then try to get behind them. Maybe they are of a nature that needs no further laws? Who knows? They are out of the laws of nature (by definition).
Paraphrasing my dictionary, ‘(the) supernatural’ means ‘things that cannot in principle be explained according to the laws of nature.'
‘Nature’ is the place beyond the lens of your eye, where everything with objective existence is found, the same thing as the realm of the physical sciences.
The same thing as ‘reality’, indeed.
Out there in reality we find no gods, spirits, ghosts, souls, demons, familiars, vampires, fairies, not even the headmistress of Hogwarts.
And we can give no useful meaning to the idea ‘outside reality’ – by definition there’s no such real place. so there can only be an imaginary one.
What have I missed?
What real things cannot in principle be explained by the laws of nature? Imaginary things, fine, but real things?
And where is ‘outside of reality’ except in the imagination?
Who says it 'transcends natural processes'?arguably the phenomena of creative intelligence is quite literally supernatural, in that it very specifically transcends natural processes, ( 'Is this object natural or artificial' ?)
We could only say that if we presently knew everything that natural laws are capable of. But of course we don't or we would no longer need research.It can achieve what natural laws alone never can, which gives it the unique power of explanation
I didn't make such a leap.In my opinion you've made an unwarranted jump from "the supernatural cannot be discerned by the same means of inquiry we use to discern the natural" to "the supernatural does not exist and is imaginary".
Do we have any evidence that the supernatural can be discerned at all? Or that it ever has been?If the supernatural cannot be discerned by the same means of inquiry as we use to discern the natural, then I think the implication is that the supernatural cannot be said to be real in the same sense in which we might say the natural is real.
Anything one can say about the existence of the supernatural would be equally true of the existence of Duckburg, would it not?Which means, of course, that even if we could somehow know it was real, we would not know what we meant by "real". That could be a rather embarrassing position to take, don't you think?
That story is found in the NT, where there are six accounts of it. None of those accounts is by an eye-witness, or is contemporary within 20 years, or is independent. All six accounts contradict the other five in various important ways.Jesus actually rose from the dead. He isn't imaginary.
The emphasis in on in principle, not on 'explainable'.Well paraphrasing your paraphrasing of your dictionary "supernatural" means "things that cannot in principle be explained according to the laws of nature".
Not really much of a paraphrase so much as added emphasis.
Explainable in principle, yes.By your definition something needs to be explainable according to the laws of nature in order to disqualify it from being "supernatural".
Potentially infinite? What's your evidence for that?Thus, despite the fact that the laws of nature are potentially unlimited
You misunderstand. This is where, as I said, the emphasis is on in principle.if there is no one who knows the laws of nature required to explain an existing phenomenon, then it cannot be explained by the laws of nature as there is no one to explain it.
Let me see: we observe consistencies of behavior in aspects of the material universe and by observation we express those consistencies as well-founded formulae of general application, called 'laws'. Or something like that. (Though like all conclusions of physics, they're empirical / inductive and hence tentative, so my own preference would be to call them something less emphatic than laws ─ maybe 'rules'.)What are the laws of nature? List them.
I address this with my favorite hypothesis: that the existence of Everything is due to the existence of energy; and that spacetime is a property of energy so that spacetime exists because energy does, not vice versa. Hence the laws of nature would be properties of energy in the particular circumstances of our universe.we certainly haven't established any natural mechanism that created the universe either.
The difference being, only one belief asserts the paradox of natural laws being naturally created by.. those very same laws