Guy Threepwood
Mighty Pirate
We're covering old ground now.
I just don't see good reason to believe in gods.
Likewise, I see no good reason to believe in spontaneous universe creating mechanisms
I appreciate the discussion though!
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We're covering old ground now.
I just don't see good reason to believe in gods.
And that is exactly where the problem lies. The false dichotomy between being dead sure and believing.
Not being sure, does not entail belief. Knowing something, for instance, does not entail believing in what we know and neither being sure of what we know.
For instance, I know that the speed of light in vacuum is constant. I also know that apples fall down when they leave their tree and don't ever fly away to the moon. I do not believe it. I know it. Yet, I am not 100% sure that this is the case. I never checked all apples, after all.
Same with god. My level of knowledge that He does not exist does not require belief. I know HE does not exist, in the same way I know there are no violations of the apple falling to the ground scenario.
Am I absolutely certain about my knowledge? Nope.
But being agnostic about God existence would be as odd as being agnostic about the existence of apples flying to the moon when they are ripe. At least from my vantage point.
Ciao
- viole
Kilgore has no opinion on whether gods exist, which means that he/she doesn't hold the belief that any god/gods exists. That makes Kilgore an atheist.So you think there's a 50/50% chance either way? Not even so much as 51/49 towards atheism?
Occam's razor wouldn't suggest any such thing. The only thing we know of that writes is human. The very existence of writing would be evidence that a human was there. We've never had any evidence that waves could randomly write messages. Thus the simplest explanation is that a human wrote that message.
The simplest explanation in one scenario is not always the simplest explanation in another.
If you see 'HELP' spelled out on a deserted island beach, no evidence of anyone ever being there..
Occams razor suggests the random action of the waves washed them up that way, the most obvious, simple, apparent explanation at hand, no extra presumption required.
But do you think this is the best explanation? why not?
This sums it up. Were not talking cars, watches or words here so all these examples are mute. Heck before the discovery of background radiation even the idea that the universe was created was presumptuous before that and other discoveries. Even then it's not a creation ex nhilo.The best explanation would be that some human familiar with the English language wrote it. Nobody rational would suggest that a god wrote it would they?
Kilgore has no opinion on whether gods exist, which means that he/she doesn't hold the belief that any god/gods exists. That makes Kilgore an atheist.
No, that's not what I am saying, 1137.I can't call a dishonest position dishonest? If I post about evolution on a creationism forum, and all the creationist go nuts telling me how I'm wrong, does that really show that evolution is wrong? This is exactly what you're saying here.
Well, as you apparently don't lean towards a godless universe, in philosophical terms you are simply not an atheist. Now I get why atheists pretend they're agnostic, but why is an agnostic pretending he's atheist?
Ok, good luck with that.
I don't make an assessment of odds. I do note that godless models of the universe that include no gods agree very closely with observations.That the universe is likely without gods.
I'd agree there, we live in a world with the phenomena of both natural mechanisms and creative intelligence. Which one we apply as the simplest explanation depends on the frame of reference right?,
and we simply don't have one for how universes are 'usually' created.
So invoking the possibility of ID is not an extra assumption, but forbidding it is adding an extra unfounded restriction
1137, here's the deal.I he finds gods as likely as no gods, how the hell could you delude yourself into thinking he's an atheist?
Been seeing this one a lot. We have a box but don't know what, if anything, is in it. Or we have a jar of something, but don't know if there's an odd or even amount. Supposedly, the theist position is a claim to know exactly what's in the box, or a claim to know there's an odd or even amount of things in the jar. The atheist, on the other hand, simply does not know what is in the box, or does not know if the items are even or odd.
This analogy doesn't really match the actual philosophy. Yes, gnostic theism claims to know exactly what's in the box, but theism in general simply believes *something* is in the box. However the atheist is not convinced anything is in the box, that it's likely empty. For the atheist to simply be unsure what's in the box would first require them the accept something is in it, basically an acceptance that gods exist, but no certainty on which gods or their nature. Likewise, atheists aren't arguing about whether there are an even or odd amount of gods/things in the jar, they're arguing that the jar seems empty.
Why does the minor difference matter? Atheists try to use these examples to show atheism as simply not taking a stance, rather than a belief in emptiness. This is dishonest, a twist on the position to make it seem it is not a belief. The analogy also ignores agnosticism, in order to make it seem that atheism and agnosticism are identical in the examples. Just more dishonesty, what else can be expected!
I am a little surprised that no one has yet addressed the misconceptions in this post.And that is exactly where the problem lies. The false dichotomy between being dead sure and believing.
Not being sure, does not entail belief. Knowing something, for instance, does not entail believing in what we know and neither being sure of what we know.
For instance, I know that the speed of light in vacuum is constant. I also know that apples fall down when they leave their tree and don't ever fly away to the moon. I do not believe it. I know it. Yet, I am not 100% sure that this is the case. I never checked all apples, after all.
Same with god. My level of knowledge that He does not exist does not require belief. I know HE does not exist, in the same way I know there are no violations of the apple falling to the ground scenario.
Am I absolutely certain about my knowledge? Nope.
But being agnostic about God existence would be as odd as being agnostic about the existence of apples flying to the moon when they are ripe. At least from my vantage point.
Ciao
- viole
I don't see where he said that either is equally likely. I think that you are putting words in his mouth.I he finds gods as likely as no gods, how the hell could you delude yourself into thinking he's an atheist?
I am an atheist. I don't have a single belief that derives from it. Not one. I have two beliefs that support it: That I need a reason to believe something before I believe it, and that no adequate reason to believe in a god exists. Therefore, I don't.
Not to appear flip, but the analogy is apt: My atheism is just like my avampirisim and aleprechaunism. No beliefs derive from any of them. They are all merely a "No" answer to the questions, "Do you believe in a god or gods, vampires, or leprechauns."
I'm a skeptic. I neither believe that the box is empty or not. I have no reason to believe either even thought I believe that one must be correct.
That's an interesting argument-- we don't have experience with how universes are created so who's to say what is usual and what's not?I'd agree there, we live in a world with the phenomena of both natural mechanisms and creative intelligence. Which one we apply as the simplest explanation depends on the frame of reference right?,
and we simply don't have one for how universes are 'usually' created.
So invoking the possibility of ID is not an extra assumption, but forbidding it is adding an extra unfounded restriction
That's an interesting argument-- we don't have experience with how universes are created so who's to say what is usual and what's not?
Spontaneous generation and ID could be just as likely.
And that may well be true.
Occam's razor would have us choose spontaneous generation since that does involve one less piece of complexity-- namely, the ID.
But Occam's razor isn't the end all or be all of truth. It's more of a general rule of thumb: and we all know what rules are good for: Breaking!
You are forcing a category where none exists. If we are binary, it is either true or false. No blanks, no question marks, no I don't know. Just a person entertaining two mutually exclusive ideas simultaneously.The existence of the thing itself is a binary matter.
Our position on the existence of the thing can be one of three states:
- I assert that the thing exists
- I assert that the thing does not exist, or
- I make no assertions about the existence or non-existence of the thing.
Ok, I confess I'm having trouble wrapping my mind around this.I don't have enough information to apply a probability either way. Do you understand that not knowing something doesn't imply that you think there is a 50/50 probability?