Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Why Atheism is Rationally Deniable and a Non-Physical Agent is Rationally Acceptable

In a conversation here I allowed myself to be seduced into sharing my own reasoning regarding the probability of Atheism being valid on the one hand, and the probability of there being more than material existence in the form of molecules, atoms, and subatomic particles. This is outside the purpose of this blog, and it led directly into the usual sorts of Atheist dissembly and radical skepticism which ultimately brought the conversation to a screeching halt. I say seduced because I know full well that Atheists do not want a path to truth (there is no truth except Atheism); what they want is justification for their beliefs, regardless of how that is accomplished.

But just to get it into one place and let it be read and urinated upon in the standard fashion, here is my side of the conversation where I marched through my reasoning, which I will give a title despite its not being an edited article:


Why Atheism is Rationally Deniable and a Non-Physical Agent is Rationally Acceptable

You might not have expected an answer of this nature, but I have found that “knowledge” (if we can call it that) regarding a proposed deity requires an examination of one’s personal views on the most basic human interactions with that which he considers to be “real”. In order for us to communicate with meanings which we hold in common, I need to explain my own understandings and how they are derived. Even words such as “real” hold baggage of underlying philosophical constructs. ( I now use words such as “actual” rather than “real”).

For example, if a person insists that there can be only our universal existence, then according to this theory no proposed thing is real or can actually exist if it does not consist of mass/energy within space/time. This is Philosophical Materialism. It is a philosophical construct which places limitations on the idea of what is “real”. The implications are that existence is mass/energy only (by definition), and that knowledge comes only from evidence which is mass/energy and derived by empirical experimentation.

But Philosophical Materialism cannot produce, ever, evidence consisting of mass/energy which demonstrates that its foundational principle is either true or valid. (True and valid are different concepts in rigorous logic). So Philosophical Materialism is based on a claim which it cannot prove, using its own prescription of truth and reality. Making an immutable knowledge claim on the limits of “reality” which cannot be proven under its own requirements is both false and intellectually sloppy, unless the intent is to protect a related dogma, and then it is intellectually dishonest.

Because Philosophical Materialism cannot be accepted as an immutable fact of existence, then we are in a position of trying to evaluate what can be reasonably known and justified well enough to accept it as knowledge.

There are several issues that arise simultaneously. How do we know (are there process limitations)? What can we know (are there access limitations)? How does information qualify to be considered knowledge (are there acceptable justification procedures)?


How do we know?

There are (at least) two conflicting theories:
1. Knowledge comes only through perception. We can know only that which we can perceive. (empirical knowledge)

2 We can know that which we can deduce. (principles of hypothetical deductive logic).

What can we know?

There are three possible sources of information which might become knowledge:

1. sensory: e.g. empirical and information transfer. (material: mass/energy).

2. introspective: e.g. mathematical derivation and philosophical enquiry. (non-material).

3. genetic: e.g. heritable capabilities of the intellect: apprehension, comparison, differentiation, judgment, comprehension. I.e., we “know” how to manipulate sensory and introspective inputs into cogent meanings, and to interpret those meanings.

Objections to knowledge certainty; mutability:

Because sensory knowledge is susceptible to error, it cannot be immutable.

Because empirical knowledge is susceptible to the Induction Fallacy, it cannot be immutable.

Because information transfer is susceptible to noise and transmission error, it cannot be immutable.

Because introspection is susceptible to error, it cannot be immutable.

So, what we think we know is not immutable, it is probabilistic. Because it is probabilistic, it is subject to calculation based on evidence, based on the rules of probability. If an hypothesis is not based on randomness (coin toss), then it is based on evidence:

p [H(X) | e(X)] ~ 0 < n < 1. Which reads, the probability of an hypothesis, H, concerning an issue, X, given evidence, e, regarding X, approximates 0 < n < 1. A subject with no possibility of evidence cannot be known, even probabilistically (except to be called 0.5 as in a coin toss). But this is dependent upon how “evidence” is defined. So we will need an Evidentiary Theory. Again the purpose of this long preamble to the answer to your question is to establish whether we can agree on what the process is for determining the “rational acceptability” of a proposition, even if there is no certitude attached to it. To expand just a little, there are at least three options to consider when dealing with a new proposition: (a) Rational acceptability: can a proposition be accepted despite lacking complete certainty; if so, what criteria must it meet? (b) Rational deniability: can a proposition be denied rationally, and if so, what criteria must be used to judge failure? (c) Skeptical deniability: any proposition can be denied using a sliding scale of certainty requirements, a scale which regresses to include even axioms (a la Nietzsche). [The reader says]: ”YOU said that you now use words such as “actual” rather than “real”. Can you explain what you mean by that? More importantly, there is a common definition for what the word 'real' means; in its simplest form it contrasts with imaginary. Things that are real thus exist in reality, while things that are not real do not exist in reality; they can still exist in the form of imaginary things. What's wrong with that usage according to you? Is actuality encompassing all that exists, both real and imaginary? Am I too restrictive already by saying that things are either real OR imaginary?”

You have identified the problem with using the term “real” in a discussion which centers around the issue of physical and non-physical; the unspoken tendency is to consider that physical is tautological with real, and non-physical is tautological with imaginary. This makes the conversation impossible due to definitional problems. If one party considers it to be a truth statement that physical is the same as real and non-physical to be imaginary-only, then there remains nothing to discuss.

The use of “actual” or “actuality” is intended to relieve the confusion of statements such as “non-physical things can’t be real because only real things are real”. By comparison one can say that “non-physical things might be actual even though they are not physical”.




The following is terse based on the assumption that because it is basic and simple, it might be an insult to elaborate excessively.

Evidentiary Theory

1. Axioms.
Axioms are based on empirical observations which are verified by Reductio Ad Absurdum, i.e. seeing that the contradictory is not the case. While axioms are also probabilistic, they are of a probability which is high enough to be considered “true”.

For example, we can observe that an object cannot both exist and not exist at the same time. If we test this using the contradictory – that objects can both exist and not exist at the same time – how would the universe be if that converse were actually the case?

We can conclude that the principle is the case and that the contradictory is not the case, and that the probability of that is very high. We can use this principle in judging the validity of other propositions. It is thus an axiom.

There are three axioms called the “Laws of Thought” which are found in logic textbooks and which also were derived mathematically by Boole (”An Investigation of the Laws of Thought, On Which Are Founded The Mathematical Theories of Logic and Probability”, George Boole, 1853).

(a). The Principle of Identity/Tautology.

(b). The Principle of Non-Contradiction.

(c). The Principle of Excluded Middle.

There are other axioms, such as Cause and Effect, and together these axioms are foundational for intellectual enterprises such as logic, science, and mathematics.

2. Material Evidence

(a) Induction of observations into sets.

(b) Deduction of subset from set (hypothesis, experiment, data, interpretation, conclusion, replication).

(c) Falsifiability: the demarcation of the boundary between experimentally differentiable subjects, and those subjects not differentiable experimentally (Karl Popper: The Logic of Scientific Discovery, 1935).


3. Non-Material Evidence

(a) Subset deduction:

(IF [set K], THEN [subset k])

(b) Deductive extrapolation:

(IF [it happened here on earth], THEN [it might have happened on other similar planets]).

(c) Axiomatic validation:

IF [H(X) & axiom Y], THEN [H(X) conforms to Y].

IF [H(X) & (Law Z(X), based on axiom Y)], THEN [H(X) conforms to Law Z and axiom Y].

Again, this is terse and might require discussion.




[Reason for using “actual” rather than “real”]:

If the top sets are Possible and Not Possible,

And the subsets of Possible are Actual and Not Actual,

Then pink unicorns (the fantasy animal, as in living creature) are Not Possible (although not 100%: more on this to come).

Possible and Actual might include terabite disks in PCs, while Possible but Not Actual might include 100 terabite disks in PCs (yet to come).




There could be an infinite number of universes, each with a different set of initial conditions and working rules. We have ours, which we can know, and the principles of which are reliable at the macro level. Logic is based on observation of the conditions of existence in our universe, and consists of stable, uncontroverted principles (so far). So the principles of logic are man-made, and are based on observations of the functioning of the universe, so they are observations of natural principles.

Here are the next principles:

The inductive fallacy: induction of information into sets is commonly used to define “laws” concerning the sets. However, it cannot be said that the law is immutably True, because not all of any set of observations is complete, and some future observation might defy the original law. The standard example is the White Swan observation. At one point in time it could be said, inductively, that because every swan observed was white, that ALL swans are white (a rule or law), based on the large sample size which were observed. However, when Australia was discovered, black swans were found, and that discovery falsified the inductively determined law saying that all swans are white.

Induction can produce convincing data, but it can never be at p = 1.0.

This carries over directly into deduction, which starts with a “law” or set, and deduces a subset.

So neither induction nor deduction can produce immutable Truth. However, as you point out, very high probability can definitely be considered to confer rational acceptability of a proposition. And that is where we are headed.




First, Axiomatic Validation:

Any proposition can be validated (within the limits of inductive understanding) by the use of Reductio Ad Absurdum (RAA). If we take the contrary to an argument or proposition, and compare it to our understanding of universal actualities (the way the universe actually works), then if the contrary matches universal actualities, the argument is false; however, if the contrary does not match universal actualities ( is absurd) then the argument is valid.

Example: the contrary of the Principle of Non-Contradiction would be that in our universe an entity could both exist and not exist, simultaneously, and that a proposition could be both true and false, simultaneously. Because we do not observe this contrary, then the Principle of Non-Contradiction is rationally acceptable (within the constraints of the inductive fallacy).

Next, a little probability review:

If m = the total number of samples observed, including the next observation,

And,

If n = the number of successful or “true” observations seen in the past,

Then, p = n/m.

Because n is always smaller than m, p cannot be 1.0. In order to be 1.0, the observer must be prescient in order to know that the next, yet to be performed, observation is successful or “true”. Barring prescience, only tautology would allow p = 1.0.




OK. We now have the tools necessary for approaching hypothetical probabilities.

First let’s take the standard Atheist hypothesis:

“there is no deity”.

Reminding ourselves that probability calculations depend on prior evidence (unless random):

p [ H(X) | e(X)] = e(Xknown) / e(Xtotal)

Since a deity would exist in a non-physical realm, it is necessary to consider evidence which is gathered in that realm only, in order to avoid a Category Error. Since Atheists cannot gather evidence in the non-material realm, then no matter how many attempts they make, e(Xknown) is 0 (zero), and e(Xtotal) is the number of attempts, Nattempts:

p = (0) / Nattempts = 0.

Discussion:
What sort of non-physical evidence exists which would be necessary and sufficient to create a high probability that “there is no deity”? It would be necessary to have the ability to investigate the non-physical realm, to explore it completely in order to miss nothing, and it would be necessary to have the ability to adequately share that investigation evidence with others who would replicate the investigation. Neither is possible.

Given that there can be no physical or objective evidence concerning the non-physical existence of a deity, then the hypothesis itself is without meaning, at least evidentiarily. Hypotheses without any mechanism for verification or validation are without meaning, except as unsubstantiable opinion. So the standard Atheist hypothesis is no more than an opinion and is unsubstantiable.

Objections:
For that reason some Atheists have changed the hypothesis to be something like the following:

“There is no evidence for a deity, and the burden of proof is on the claimant”.

This is an attempt at an intellectual dodge, a deception which ignores the burden of proof for their actual claim that there is no deity. Even this new hypothesis is without meaning due to having the same evidentiary issues outlined above, and the general retreat to the Category Error.

These Atheists then claim that any personal experience is not acceptable evidence, and that if a deity exists, it must be shown to exist using evidence which can be examined and verified by any and everyone, i.e. resolving to physical evidence which is transferrable between parties (the Category Error).

Conclusion:
It is rationally acceptable to reject the Atheist hypotheses, based first on probability and second, based on logical error in the proposition.

However, this is only the general statement of the Atheist hypothesis; there are other specific Atheist claims which can be similarly analyzed (later).





Now let’s examine the basic claim for agent-causation of the universe.

The hypothesis for an existence which is outside and beyond mass / energy is this:

Part 1. Given that the universe started from some existence which was prior to the existence of mass / energy, the universe itself started as a non-physical entity.

Part 2. The initiation of the existence of the universe was not random; was not accidental; was not self-initiated, was not spontaneous.

(a) Not random: we do not observe universes randomly popping into existence.

(b) Not accidental: an accident implies an agent which has lost control.

(c) Not self-initiated: first there is no evidence that self-initiation could have occurred, much less that it did occur; second, we observe no universes self-initiating themselves (we have actual evidence of only one universe, occurring just once).

(d) Not spontaneously initiated: Spontaneous universes are not observed to be popping into existence.

Part 3. The universe was externally caused to exist, and operates on a consistent rule-based basis, even though derived from probabilistic foundations.

Part 4. The cause for the existence of the universe was prior to mass / energy, in other words, was non-physical.

Part 5. The cause was capable of producing the effect (powerful enough to create the effect).

Part 6. The cause was as ordered as the effect.

Part 7. An action which is not random, accidental, self-initiated or spontaneous can reasonably be considered to be purposeful, i.e. agent caused and intentional.


Possible Objections:

(a) Cause and Effect applies only in the frame work of time; the cause must pre-exist the effect.

Contrary: Existing before the start of time is a pre-existence which satisfies the conditions for causality.

(b) The “orderliness of the universe” exists only in our minds, which adapted to this particular universe’s particular behavior, which we see as orderly.

Contrary: If our minds are not orderly, then rationality is not possible and delusion is inherent in all perceptions. The claim that “order is not real” results in logic not being real, which is either a self-defeating, paradoxical claim, or an admission of delusion.




(c) There is no reason to think that the universe’s initiation was not random.

Contrary: No other random universes are popping into existence on a random scale or timeframe.

(d) There might be a natural cause, not yet found.

Contrary: The term “natural” refers to mass / energy existence; there was no natural existence which we know of, or can know of, which existed at the time of, or prior to, the creation of mass / energy. This claim is Scientistic, and without any basis in fact, or substance in logic.

(e) There might be an infinite number of parallel universes, of which ours is only one example.

Contrary: There is no evidence to support this conjecture. Even so, it is possible to create other conjectures such as that some other universes are not physical in nature (being without mass / energy), and might contain non-physical entities which have capabilities outside our abilities to comprehend, and which might be coincident with our universe without our ability to detect them.

Probability:
Since the contraries sufficiently refute the Objections to the hypotheses, and since no data can be taken to support or refute, then the hypotheses regarding agent causation of the universe are rationally acceptable.


The Probability of Producing a Material Effect with a Non-Material Cause:

Evidence of the human mind producing physical changes is everywhere, and has been for millennia. Let’s consider 10 trillion observations:

p [ Non-material cause & Material effect is valid] ~ [(trillions – 1) / trillions] ~ 0.9999999999999 (for 10 trilllion observations).

Objection: There are no cases of non-material causes for material events.

Contrary: When one decides to lift an arm and then does so, it is a case of a non-material cause producing a material effect. There is no initiating material cause, although there are intermediate material cause/effects involved.

Objection: The mind is material.

Contrary: All Material entities are mass, containing energy either kinetic or potential. The mind is not mass and is not a physical lump removable from the brain. Meaning has no mass. Logic has no mass. Decisions have no mass. Experiencing qualia has no mass. Concepts and concept creation have no mass. None of these can be removed as physical lumps from the brain. Also, the mind is not deterministic; mass is deterministic.

Conclusion: The concept of non-material cause / material effect is rationally acceptable.




According to Stephen Hawking (2010) the universe started as just rules, like the law of gravity, and/or the equation collapse of a rule similar to that of Schrodinger’s equation collapse in quantum theory, except on a huge scale. Those are non-mass / energy entities and are non-physical.

Some theories include that of the singularity, in which the entire universe was contained in a dimensionless point (per Brian Greene, 2004); if that were the case, then the mass components could not have existed as mass, but would have to have been something other than mass, ergo, non-material or non-physical per the understanding of the words material and physical.

I am not aware of any current physics theory that posits the pre-existence of mass before the Big Bang, but perhaps you know of one / some?

As far as the question “how do you know?” the answer is that we are establishing here a basis for knowledge which is rationally acceptable, not one which is empirically demonstrated, experimentally, replicably, falsifiably, because the empirical method applies only to material subjects which can be tested, and which could be subsequently refuted. The origin of the universe is a demonstration case for the point of opacity for empirical science, the limit beyond which current and foreseeable empiricism is blind.



Perhaps this would be an opportune point at which to discuss the limits of deductive logic. It is possible to deduce conclusions which, even though they are not knowable empirically, those conclusions – properly framed and grounded – are rationally acceptable. However, they can take us only so far, because at some point there will be a multiplication of deductions which starts to lose its accuracy. In other words, there is a danger of basing new inductions on older deductions, and starting a chain, an infinite regression, which at some point loses its probable truth value.

So the limit, my own limit, is one level of deduction. This limits the process to deism.

Theism is by definition a personal experience, initiated subjectively, fulfilled by the creating entity at its leisure, and is neither deducible nor is it refutable, including by means of empiricism. It is common for Atheists to claim that such an experience is delusion; however, that claim is skeptical deniability, and is without evidentiary support, so is not rationally acceptable.

So we are at a point where we can say that it is rationally acceptable to consider that (a) there is a high probability for the existence of a creating agent, (b) one with powers and abilities sufficient to have created (c) the universe, (d) the rules governing it, and (e) all the contents of the universe, including (f) the characteristics of those contents.

[Further, the contrary to each of the above is not rationally acceptable, either by the use of current science, the non-existence of supporting empirical evidence, or logic which is non-pyrrhonian in nature.]

Beyond that, I have no rational (deductive) evidence to provide which is not subjective in nature.



[A reminder]:
The purpose of this comment chain and for the blog itself is to demonstrate that the Atheist contention that there is no creating agent cannot be demonstrated, either physically or logically.

The intent is not to "prove there is a God". The intent is to show that Atheists, under their own system of understanding, cannot demonstrate, much less prove, that there is no creating agent. Further, their own system of understanding is both limited, probabilistic, contingent, and religiously held, to the exclusion of any other sources of understanding. Further still, they use other sources of understanding which they deny exist.




OK, then. Re: Part 1:

We should define our terminology. Remember that this discussion is about knowledge; the physical view of knowledge is empiricism, which requires observation and experimentation. Inability to observe and experiment crosses the Popper demarcation boundary for empirical knowledge. Lacking the ability to generate empirical knowledge of an entity or event renders it beyond physical knowledge, i.e. non-physical.

Physical / material: being composed of mass/energy in the context of space/time.

Non-physical / non-material: not being composed of mass/energy in the context of space/time.

A “non-“ statement is defined by what it is not, not by what it is. For example, the set [!X] includes everything which is not definitively X. Whether it is [Y] or [Q] or [H & Z] is not the point. The point is that it is not [X].

So the burden of proof is not on me to prove that something is non-material, it is on the challenger to prove that it is, in fact, material.

A large part of QM is the troubling aspect of the non-materiality of non-decohered probability waves. The concepts of QM include that the particle is not actual until it decoheres (loses some of its probabilism due to entanglement with the environment: entropy, due to observation for example). Going back to the Copenhagen understanding, the “particle” is actually a probability wave existing in a quantum field; it does not materialize until observed (Einstein denounced this, but finally accepted it). One decohering event is the observation which entangles and decoheres the probability wave.

The probability wave for a single particle encompasses the entire universe, and that encouraged Feynman to declare that the “particle” traversed all of the possible paths in the universe, in order to get to its final destination. He expressed this as a path integral including all possible paths which the particle could take. This is an analog of the all-pervasive probability wave.

(Feynman also said that if you think you understand Quantum Mechanics, then you don’t).

As for something coming from nothing, that is not a posit of either classical mechanics or QM. The posit is this: When a matter/antimatter pair appear, it is due to a local decoherence of their quantum probability wave, which permeates all of space. The local decoherence occurs due to noise in the quantum wave. In fact, if something is ever found which pops into existence from exactly nothing, then it will violate cause and effect, and all science will be suspect due to the apparent falsification of cause and effect.

OK, let’s back up and discuss exactly what we are trying to talk about here. There are several cosmological theories at the moment:





(a) The original Big Bang, occurring from a dimensionless point containing mass/energy and space/time;

(b) The Guth inflationary theory, for which the original exponential expansion was more rapid than could be accounted for considering gravity, but then gravity was determined mathematically to have a negative, repulsive force for very small and very large dimensions. But the origin before planck time is still not understood; thought to be a dimensionless point. Also not explained is why the point would have come into existence if negative gravity were present.

(c) The String Theory I which claims a minimum dimension of one planck length 10^-33 cm. for aggregation. This posits planck-sized “nuggets” floating around waiting to be jogged into universes. The inflationary theory is still used for (t= 0+) > (planck times)> (t=10^-43 sec).

(d) String Theory II, which Lee Smolin posits to be universes spawned by black holes in prior universes; the black hole at the center of our own galaxy would be the mother of another universe at the back side of the black hole, a universe which is invisible to us due to the event horizon of the black hole. The original universe, the one which started the chain of universes, is unknown, and possibly the chain is infinite. This doesn’t appear to answer the issue of negative gravity requirements, either, because black holes exist due to positive gravity – negative gravity would seem to cause them to explode back into the host universe.

(e) Other miscellaneous, lesser accepted theories.

First, none of these theories is directly observable using material techniques, and cannot fall under the ageis of empirical knowledge; the boundary for empiricism is at the light horizon of black holes, and that would be the same for the original expansion of the universe when we look back in time.

None of these explains the state of existence or origin of the proposed planck nugget, and because the dimensions of space/time are wrapped into planck length also, there is no material way in which to measure or judge it. In fact, the status of the space/time dimensions is thought to become non-coherent, possibly existing only as a “foam” (the analog for matter, the Bose-Einstein foam, has been produced at temperatures just above absolute zero).

So, there is no reason to presume that the existence within the planck nugget is the same or even similar to the existence which we term “physical” and which consists of well-defined atomic and molecular existences, especially those which are stable enough to be subjected to empirical knowledge extraction. If they are actually merely probability waves compacted into near zero space, they are non-physical. No matter what they actually are compositionally, they are non-empirical in terms of knowledge.

The example, of course, is within Quantum Theory where particles do not exist except as probability waves until they decohere, a demonstration of a non-physical existence in terms of empirical knowledge.




A quick re-read shows an error:

(d) should read:

The inflationary theory is still used for (t= 0+) < (planck times) < (t=10^-43 sec).

(arrows were reversed).





[…a response to rejection of “non-physical” concepts, and proposal of “spontaneous” occurrence of universes from nothing for no reason]:

Why would it be reasonable to assume that the entire universe exists as the same mass/energy existence we know, when it is all in a "nugget" sized 10^-33cm? Including space-time, of course.


Now, spontaneity:
First, Spontaneous means without control or reason. It means that there is no restriction on its occurrence, no limiting principle. If a truly spontaneous function existed, it would be expected to occur everywhere, all the time.

Since it does not occur everywhere, all the time, then there is some limiting principle, and it is not spontaneous.

Second, there is no space-time posited outside the universe; spontaneity is conceptually time-related.

Third, it is not observed, ever; we must accept a proposition claiming materialism without any material evidence, and without rational cause except to support a worldview/ideology.

I should be more explicit here. This thread has been about knowledge, and what we can consider to be rationally acceptable as knowledge vs. what is rationally deniable, and finally differentiating those considerations from skeptical denialism.

Skeptical denialism is rejection based on the insistence for being given absolute proof of the truth value of a given proposition. Since there is nothing which is 100% knowable under the extremist attack of pyrrhonism/solipsism, then probability comes into play for every proposition.

Probability is based on evidence, which is based on observation (unless the event is truly random). Probability is a deduction of likelihood.

The issue is: what is considered rationally acceptable when considering the origin of the universe, rather than absolute knowledge of the composition of the universe when it was compressed into a planck sized nugget.

What we know with acceptable probability is that the elements of the periodic table did not exist, nor did their components. We also know with acceptable probability that empirical, direct observation of the planck nugget by humans is not likely.

So the question becomes, what can we rationally accept as being likely, if anything? If it is posited that we can know nothing, then that needs justification. The posit here is that we can know with rational acceptability based on current science, that the material existence which we probe empirically today and which is based on elements in the periodic table did not exist within the planck-sized nugget. Nor did the sub-atomic particles exist. If we claim that they physically existed, merely in some other form, then we have stretched the meaning of “physical” beyond its normal bounds, and we have done so in order to preserve an ideology, rather than in order to search for actual facts: there are no facts to be had, only deductions of what is likely or not likely.

72 comments:

Jeremy said...

First off, thank you for elaborating so completely on your position.

Theism is a personal relationship type of deity and is not amenable to logical resolution nor is it subject to empirical investigation.

I think this admission in itself gives amble reason to dismiss theism. If something is not amenable to logical resolution nor empirical investigation the only method of obtaining knowledge of said deity seems to be "by the creating entity at its leisure".

So it would seem that until said deity gets around to enlightening me, I will remain ignorant of it's existence.

Not to descend into ridicule, but you realize you essentially just argued that your invisible friend is beyond knowing unless he chooses to introduce himself to me?

I think a touch of skepticism is justified here.

Now your true argument is the probabilistic one. I've read the argument and several large flaws have jumped out at me, but it will take some time to compose a coherent rebuttal.

A couple of off-the-top-of-my head objections/points of interest.

(e) There might be an infinite number of parallel universes, of which ours is only one example.

http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/26132/
"the first evidence of universes beyond our own."

Cool, right?

Objection: The mind is material.

Contrary: All Material entities are mass, containing energy either kinetic or potential. The mind is not mass and is not a physical lump removable from the brain.


Perhaps the brain is material, and forms the mind? I think saying the mind is not mass and cannot be removed from the brain is like saying hunger is not mass and cannot be removed from the stomach. Perhaps a sloppy analogy, but I think it gets the point across? Hunger is what stomachs do, mind is what brains do. Neither hunger nor mind is composed of "material".

Unless we recognize them both as the synergistic effect of the material arrangements of the body..? Hunger emerges from the stomach, mind emerges from the brain.

More clearly, there is amble evidence to suggest that physically manipulating the brain, changes the mind.

http://serendip.brynmawr.edu/exchange/node/1689

Since this is the case, it would it not then be a Category Error to suggest that the mind is immaterial, given that it is subject to material manipulations?

Also, the mind is not deterministic; mass is deterministic.

http://www2.units.it/etica/2009_2/MAGNI.pdf

Here is a quick example of how the brain is likely deterministic. Quite succinctly put, our choices are formed before we are conscious of them. Given that our brains are composed of mass and given that our brains create our minds, it seems an obvious deduction that our minds are deterministic. The experiments seem to reinforce this hypothesis.

Wow. Already getting way to long for a coherent discussion! No wonder people get sidetracked around here!

Jeremy said...

Wow. Way to crap all over the chess board.

Great to hear you admit you have zero interest in intellectual debate. Saves me the time typing.

Let's reiterate your stated position of theism.

Theism is a personal relationship type of deity and is not amenable to logical resolution nor is it subject to empirical investigation.

Theism is by definition a personal experience, initiated subjectively, fulfilled by the creating entity at its leisure, and is neither deducible nor is it refutable, including by means of empiricism.


I agree with this.

To accept theism as true is to accept the subjective experience of another, who claims to be in touch with the Creator of the Universe.

This person offers no reason nor evidence to substantiate his position, and in fact insists that it is the burden of the person rejecting his claim to prove empirically and conclusively (throughout every femtosecond of past, present and future) the non-existence of his deity. And wants this peer reviewed of course. A challenge he even admits is impossible. Not to mention fallacy ridden even by his own standards.

Furthermore, this person doesn't give a rat’s hairy pink ass to hear counterpoints to whatever shaky reasoning he can provide. And they are SO shaky.

Even more preposterous, this person says logic and reason supports his claim, and derides all other views as incoherent. Rejecting his claim labels you a Destructive Radical Skeptic and a Philosophical Materialist. As opposed to a Credulous Moron and a Ghost Whisperer, I suppose.

I am just restating your position. You let me know if I'm misrepresenting anything.

So to conclude, you want me to accept an absolutely nonsensical, impossible, unverifiable, unfalsifiable, extraordinary claim for ABSOLUTELY NO REASON WHATSOEVER.

Oh, but I'm not ignorant of it, I just reject it? Right cause I'm such a badass I'm just gonna ignore the creator of the fucking universe when he dials me.

What. Utter. Nonsense.

Jeremy said...

And you just deleted your posts?

Stan said...

Yes, I removed the first draft of this from the comments.

”So it would seem that until said deity gets around to enlightening me, I will remain ignorant of it's existence.”

You are not ignorant of it, you reject it. That is the (first) failure of Free Will; you very likely reject on the basis of your unfounded opinions and emotional need to be free from constraint, not on logic or material evidence. If you had logic for the non-existence of a deity you would have provided the grounded syllogistic arguments; if you had empirical, experimental, replicable and replicated, falsifiable and not falsified, hard data that is peer reviewed and published in a respected professional journal in the subject area, you would have provided it.

”Not to descend into ridicule, but you realize you essentially just argued that your invisible friend is beyond knowing unless he chooses to introduce himself to me?”

What I just argued is that a person never knows that which he chooses not to know. There is no reason for you to know that which you reject out of hand. You have just asserted willful ignorance. If there were a deity it might be good to try to understand it rather than to define a priori your personal requirements for its behavior and characteristics. You do not own a universe, and are not in control of the one which you inhabit. So making demands of any creating agent is irrational to say the least. Humility, including intellectual humility, is the antithesis of Atheist behavior; yet the pursuit of that which might be valid or true requires the suppression of personal ideology and the use of known, objective tools of logic and empirical pursuit, and the ability to accept what those things provide: intellectual humility rather than ideological hubris.

” I think a touch of skepticism is justified here.

Now your true argument is the probabilistic one. I've read the argument and several large flaws have jumped out at me, but it will take some time to compose a coherent rebuttal.”


It’s interesting that you wish to form a rebuttal here, but when it comes to proving that God or any deity does not exist, no Atheist will allow the concept of Burden of Rebuttal to be applied to himself. Mere rejectionism suffices for the Atheist in that case.

I seriously doubt your principle-driven logical capabilities, but if you care to use actual principles of logic or Empirical, experimental, replicable and replicated, falsifiable and not falsified, peer reviewed and published, hard data, then provide it. Short of that is not acceptable.

But more to the point, until you can use your own system of empirical knowledge to dredge up hard physical evidence in the form of replicable and replicated, falsifiable and not falsified, experimental empirical, peer-reviewed data that proves, empirically of course, that there is no non-physical existence, then you have nothing to present of any value in your own defense. That means that you subscribe to an ideology, blindly and without substantiation for your position: religious devotion to unprovable concepts.
(continued below)

Stan said...

”(e) There might be an infinite number of parallel universes, of which ours is only one example.

http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/26132/
"the first evidence of universes beyond our own."

Cool, right?”


This fails all the criteria of scientific knowledge. Even if the rings are accepted to exist there is no falsification possible of the multi-universe as cause theory. First, the cause cannot be observed; it is only a guess, at the expense of other possible causes. In other words it is a “Jump to Cause” Fallacy, not considering other possible causes. Second, the hypothesis cannot be tested. So it cannot be replicated; it cannot be falsified; there will be no experimental data in its defense for objective examination.

If you accept such unfalsifiable claims as evidence, then rejection of any other unfalsifiable claim is Special Pleading. If you reject other such claims then you must reject this claim also.

Here’s the thing. No amount of universes (which are not ever going to be actually visible, and which are being presupposed as the article shows) goes contrary to a non-physical existence. In fact, the infinite universe theory virtually demands (via string theory) that there exist universes which contain only dimensions outside of our three dimensions, i.e. not mass/energy. Plus there is no reason not to presume that they might overlap our dimensions without our detecting them, and there is no reason to think that they cannot contain life or agents.

And from a macro view, there is nothing about the (unfalsifiable) multiple universe theory which provides any rebuttal to the argument.

(continued below)

Stan said...

” ‘Objection: The mind is material.

Contrary: All Material entities are mass, containing energy either kinetic or potential. The mind is not mass and is not a physical lump removable from the brain.’

Perhaps the brain is material, and forms the mind?”


Under what conditions is it expected that some configuration of protons and electrons will produce sentience, logic, rational ability to examine itself, and agency outside of determinism? Can you provide such an hypothesis? The material mind is a back door claim of an effect, yet without any rational claim for a cause, much less any empirical backing. In other words, it is ideological and without rational merit.

” I think saying the mind is not mass and cannot be removed from the brain is like saying hunger is not mass and cannot be removed from the stomach. Perhaps a sloppy analogy, but I think it gets the point across? Hunger is what stomachs do, mind is what brains do. Neither hunger nor mind is composed of "material".

Unless we recognize them both as the synergistic effect of the material arrangements of the body..? Hunger emerges from the stomach, mind emerges from the brain.

More clearly, there is amble evidence to suggest that physically manipulating the brain, changes the mind.

http://serendip.brynmawr.edu/exchange/node/1689

Since this is the case, it would it not then be a Category Error to suggest that the mind is immaterial, given that it is subject to material manipulations?””


Hunger is merely a responsive signal, generated upon a predetermined set of chemical conditions. It is not operating outside the rules of physics and is fully deterministic, having no agency or sentience. There is absolutely no comparison to the mind. So the claim you make is actually a true Category Error.

And serendipity, as you appear to use it, violates determinism, and is self-defeating.

The argument that the mind is physical is without any evidence; physical qualia must be demonstrated to be physical-only and objectively observable in the full empirical mode, if the concept of a physical mind is to be given any credibility outside of ideology.

The argument that the mind is deterministic is non-coherent, unless the proponent admits that he is unable to control himself using conscious decisions and therefore nothing he does or writes has any meaning that derives from his own consciousness or will (a delusion). If the consciousness is merely informed of what the mass in the cranium has to do deterministically based on prior positions of electrons, then there is no path to intelligence available within that argument. So the argument succeeds in denying that it has an intellectual value itself (self-contradictory, paradoxical, non-coherent), and was in fact driven merely by the prior positions of electrons, which are indeterminate and contain no meaning.
(continued below)

Stan said...

” “Also, the mind is not deterministic; mass is deterministic’.

http://www2.units.it/etica/2009_2/MAGNI.pdf

Here is a quick example of how the brain is likely deterministic. Quite succinctly put, our choices are formed before we are conscious of them. Given that our brains are composed of mass and given that our brains create our minds, it seems an obvious deduction that our minds are deterministic. The experiments seem to reinforce this hypothesis.


The Libet experiment has been twisted into meanings it never actually intentionally generated. It measured a long time delay which was presumed, without evidence, to be the subconscious mind doing the work prior to informing the conscious mind. But it could more likely have been the conscious mind summoning up memory and cognitive faculties and transferring data for their manipulation before rendering a conclusion. Measuring surface skin charge variations or blood flow variations has been called the modern phrenology by Michael Shermer, skeptic, in Scientific American’s MIND magazine.

It is in no way a “given” that the brain “creates” the mind. This is a statement of ideology, made without empirical merit. The mind uses the brain just as software uses hardware; the hardware in no way creates the software. Again the idea of deterministic minds is self-defeating. That a mass composed of protons and electrons all hooked together forms a mind capable of denying itself as useful is a premise that has value only for ideology; there is no reasonable way to claim that you are deterministic while also claiming that statement to have intellectual value.

As for warping the mental process with physical intervention, that applies to the computer analogy as well. Any process, including those under external control, will malfunction or at least function differently when it has its mechanics manipulated in improper manners. Your car won’t drive straight if you monkey with the steering mechanism in certain ways. That in no way is an indicator that the mind is either physical/material or deterministic.

Again, because Atheists have Materialist requirements for their ideology, only evidence which is fully accepted Scientific knowledge, using the full empirical requirements, will be allowed as rational argumentation material, along with grounded syllogistic arguments. After all, Atheism claims to be based on logic and evidence; so that is what the Atheist must use.

Stan said...

"This person offers no reason nor evidence to substantiate his position, and in fact insists that it is the burden of the person rejecting his claim to prove empirically and conclusively (throughout every femtosecond of past, present and future) the non-existence of his deity. And wants this peer reviewed of course. A challenge he even admits is impossible. Not to mention fallacy ridden even by his own standards."

Either you, the Atheist, are full of logic and evidence, or you are not. Apparently you are not.

"So to conclude, you want me to accept an absolutely nonsensical, impossible, unverifiable, unfalsifiable, extraordinary claim for ABSOLUTELY NO REASON WHATSOEVER."

False, absolutely. Another claim without substantiation. I don't care what you accept, that is up to you and your free will which you also reject. Let's make that clear: I don't care what you choose to believe. What I care about is whether you can make a counter argument which is based in grounded rational principles or in the empirical form of evidence which your ideology demands of you.

You have not, and you cannot. So you bluster and shout instead.

Jeremy said...

"You have not, and you cannot. So you bluster and shout instead."

Let's be clear. Your original response was an intellectual abortion and my previous post was a response to that.

When someone claims they don't give a rat's ass what the response is to their claim, they abdicate any claim to rationality or intellectual humility.

You hold an ideology, and your objection to atheism is a pure "You Too" fallacy.

Atheists demand material evidence from theists to substantiate their position, so it is only valid that atheists provide the same. Correct?

Where is the evidence that atheism is true and correct?

Where are the logical premises that demonstrate the logical incoherence of a creating agent?

To claim the belief in a non-existence is to claim absolute knowledge of the entire universe. So only absolute, peer reviewed empirical evidence of every femtosecond of space and time will be sufficient to substantiate the atheist faith.

Such is impossible, hence atheism is without logic, reason and is rejected on it's own evidentiary basis.

Have I summarized your straw man
argument accurately?

What I care about is whether you can make a counter argument which is based in grounded rational principles or in the empirical form of evidence which your ideology demands of you.

Bullshit. You just deleted the post that said you don't give a rat's hairy pink asshole to hear any such response. You even took the effort to bold it just like that. You've played your hand poorly and your brain dead ideology showed. There is literally nothing that will change your mind.

You are not ignorant of it, you reject it.

No. I do not know a god exists. Hence, if one does, I am ignorant of its existence.

What I reject is your unsubstantiated claim to be in telepathic contact with the Creator of the Fucking Universe.

After all, Atheism claims to be based on logic and evidence; so that is what the Atheist must use.

Here I'll use logic and evidence.

Logic for a deity = 0
Evidence for a deity = 0

0 + 0 = 0

Therefore; god (probably ~99.9999%, and the % goes up the more specific the god claim gets) = 0.

And thus atheism is justified using it's own standards of logic and evidence.

Chris said...

The atheist position is based on an lack of evidence. That is, for them, if there was a God, he certainly wouldn't leave us any room for doubt.

Is that logically so?

Why should we regard naturalism as the default view?

Stan said...

"Let's be clear. Your original response was an intellectual abortion and my previous post was a response to that."

Yes, let's do be clear. I removed a comment which I did not intend to post, wherein I vented. Your comment has not been removed, and is presumed intentional.

”You hold an ideology, and your objection to atheism is a pure "You Too" fallacy.

Actually not. I directly charge you and all Atheists with having no principled support for your claim of logic and evidence. (No Tu Quoque involved, period). If you had logic and evidence in favor of your position, then you would use it; you haven’t and you can’t. Any claim you make to logic and evidence is false. Therefore your Atheism is a faith-based ideology.

”Atheists demand material evidence from theists to substantiate their position, so it is only valid that atheists provide the same. Correct?”

Where is the evidence that atheism is true and correct?


Yes.

”Where are the logical premises that demonstrate the logical incoherence of a creating agent?

To claim the belief in a non-existence is to claim absolute knowledge of the entire universe. So only absolute, peer reviewed empirical evidence of every femtosecond of space and time will be sufficient to substantiate the atheist faith.”


Yes. If you claim empiricism then you are bound by empirical functions.

”Such is impossible, hence atheism is without logic, reason and is rejected on it's own evidentiary basis.”

Have I summarized your straw man
argument accurately?


There is no straw man: it is a direct charge of actual issues with no intent of diverting the conversation; to the contrary, it is an attempt to hold the conversation to the exact point: the lack of reasoning inherent in Atheism and Atheists.

What I care about is whether you can make a counter argument which is based in grounded rational principles or in the empirical form of evidence which your ideology demands of you.

”Bullshit. You just deleted the post that said you don't give a rat's hairy pink asshole to hear any such response. You even took the effort to bold it just like that. You've played your hand poorly and your brain dead ideology showed. There is literally nothing that will change your mind.”

Yes. I deleted it. It was not intended for publication. I retracted it. So what? You now think you have proved something? You are merely beating a dead horse which you think you can get mileage from rather than providing either logic or empirical data. Where is your logic and data? You could have been typing it up, instead of making accusations regarding a retracted comment. Show your logic and evidence. We’ll consider the logic and the data together. You have it, right? Right??

Stan said...

” 'You are not ignorant of it, you reject it.'

No. I do not know a god exists. Hence, if one does, I am ignorant of its existence.”


You are aware of arguments which you do not counter with logic or empirical data. You are not ignorant of the concept. You reject it without logic or reason. You do not provide reasons for your rejection. Rejection is not made in ignorance; it is a positive claim about something, the existence of which is rejected.

”What I reject is your unsubstantiated claim to be in telepathic contact with the Creator of the Fucking Universe.”

I did not claim that, it is a false statement on your part; but even if it were true you have exactly no way to know whether it is true or not. Here’s why: Atheists restrict themselves to knowledge of mass/energy by accepting only material existence and therefore material data which is evaluated empirically. Empiricism is contingent and based on the induction fallacy, so it provides no truth value for any statement, including any Atheist statement. Therefore nothing you say has a truth value if it is based on your ideology of Atheo-Materialism. Having no capability of producing or accessing truth, the Atheist (you in this case) cannot judge what is true or not true. This applies first to empirical falsifiable issues, and second, applies in spades to non-empirical, non-falsifiable issues, which are those you reject.

So you have no knowldge of any of my subjective experiences; rejecting them is based on no knowledge whatsoever, and is purely ideological in the form of blind faith.

Rejection is done either for a reason or for no reason. If you cannot provide a reason which satisfies grounded logic or empirical conditions, then you have no reason. You thus are an ideologist, involved in a blind, religious faith.

”After all, Atheism claims to be based on logic and evidence; so that is what the Atheist must use.”

Here I'll use logic and evidence.

Logic for a deity = 0
Evidence for a deity = 0

0 + 0 = 0

Therefore; god (probably ~99.9999%, and the % goes up the more specific the god claim gets) = 0.

And thus atheism is justified using it's own standards of logic and evidence. .”


You make claims without any justification: but actual disciplined logic demands grounding, not floating, unjustified (and in this case unjustifiable) claims which are presupposed for no apparent reason. So this fails the simplest function of logic, not rising even to a legitimate format, much less using justifiable premises: False at every level.

I do agree with your final statement: your statement that your irrational approach actually belongs to Atheism does represent a typical Atheist understanding of what they think is “logic”: make unsubstantiated claims and call them logic just because you make them.

Logic is a specific discipline which has specific rules, which if violated demonstrate an irrational, illogical mental process. There are text books available on the web, if you are actually interested in learning logic for the pursuit of truth in your worldview.

There is a book describing the mathematical derivation of the grounding principles for logic and rational thought: George Boole’s book called "The Laws of Thought, on which are founded the Mathematical Theories of Logic and Probabilities”.

As for empiricism, it also has specific rules and specific limitations; I recommend Karl Popper’s book, the Logic of Scientific Discovery so that you can understand the actual nature of empirical knowledge generation, rather than revering science as truth.

Now: come up with actual, valid, disciplined, grounded logic, or fully empirical data for supporting your rejection, or admit that you can’t – that your belief system is not sustained by either logic or by Science, and thus is a blind belief in an unsubstantiable ideology.

And take a shot at empirically falsifying the “miracle at Lourdes” while you’re on such a roll.

Otherwise your comments have no truth value.

Martin said...

Jeremy,

Logic for a deity = 0
Evidence for a deity = 0


I'd love to see your reaction to the First Way of Aquinas.

I have yet to encounter a single atheist who even comprehends the argument, which is a necessary precondition before declaring that there is "0 evidence and logic" for theism.

Jeremy said...

"The atheist position is based on an lack of evidence. That is, for them, if there was a God, he certainly wouldn't leave us any room for doubt."

Chris, it is not even that there is a bit of room for doubt.

It is that there is absolutely no reason or evidence to accept the proposition.

Every philosophical argument for a god is riddled with flaws. Yes, I've looked at each I could find. If you disagree please present your single best theistic argument. Martin .. don't bother.

There is zero physical evidence for a deity.

Again. Reasons = 0. Evidence = 0.
Rejection of the claim = Justified.

Yet Stan thinks it is unreasonable to reject this proposition because we don't have enough evidence.

Enough evidence, he defines as examining every femtosecond of past, present and future. And he wants this peer reviewed.

I reject this burden of proof as it is impossibly fucking stupid. You don't need a syllogistic argument. A dose of common sense is all it takes to recognize this stance as preposterous. How can anyone fail to recognize how absolutely moronic this stance is? Please! Someone explain to me how this is reasonable without using some sort of ridiculous straw manning of an atheists evidential standards.

Honestly, do you think this is a reasonable criteria upon which to accept a proposition? That it is impossible to disprove??

"Why should we regard naturalism as the default view?"

An assumption of naturalism just seems simpler.

When a window shutter bangs, do we assume it is the wind, or a ghost? Extrapolate this to every phenomenon ever encountered.

Has there EVER been a supernatural explanation that has replaced a natural?

By contrast, how many millions of supernatural explanations of been replaced by a naturalistic explanation?

When the score is millions to zero, at what point do you think it reasonable to assume the one as the default?

I'm not arguing that there can be no such explanation. I am just saying that the assumption of naturalism resolves a tremendous amount of potential confusion.

Okay? I think I'm about done here.

The reason I am not addressing any particular arguments is because it is pointless. No objection will ever amount in the slightest headway.

No matter how many arguments I shoot down, I'm still left with examining every femtosecond of past present and future.

What's the point? If nothing will change your mind, if you refuse the possibility that your mind can even potentially be changed, intelligent conversation is impossible.

I'll still pop in on occasion. I can't deny this blog his laughably entertaining every now and then.

If anyone actually wants to have an adult conversation instead of shooting ideology at each other, I would be delighted.

Stan said...

"It is that there is absolutely no reason or evidence to accept the proposition."

This is dead bottom anti-rationalist thinking. You cannot support this in any fashion whatsoever.

"Every philosophical argument for a god is riddled with flaws. Yes, I've looked at each I could find. If you disagree please present your single best theistic argument. Martin .. don't bother.

There is zero physical evidence for a deity."


You have been directed to Lourdes, in order for you to perform an empirical refutation on the physical evidence for a miracle for us; we're waiting for that with breath 'bated. But you merely make silly claims which you cannot back up, rather than give actual refutations. It is always the same for Atheists: making broad and universal claims of Truth, when they don't know what they are talking about and can't support the claims, then claiming that such a requirement is abusive even though that's their exact stance for the Other.

"Yet Stan thinks it is unreasonable to reject this proposition because we don't have enough evidence.

Enough evidence, he defines as examining every femtosecond of past, present and future. And he wants this peer reviewed."


Oh my yes! Even more so now. You make the universal claim that there is zero physical evidence, then you need to back that up with empirical evidence which can support the claim; nothing less than a universal testing of the universe for all space and all time can be expected to reveal the extensive data required for backing up your claim of zero physical evidence. After all, it's what you require, this physical evidence.

"I reject this burden of proof as it is impossibly fucking stupid. You don't need a syllogistic argument. A dose of common sense is all it takes to recognize this stance as preposterous. How can anyone fail to recognize how absolutely moronic this stance is? Please! Someone explain to me how this is reasonable without using some sort of ridiculous straw manning of an atheists evidential standards."

It is your own claim. You make the positive claim for zero evidence. So support it, using empirical data showing that you searched everywhere and for all time. It's your own requirement, and Atheists believe in science. Atheists claim to know things through logic and science: so it is logical that rigorous science be used to support your Atheist claim.

Of course you understand that. But it is a direct hit which you can't avoid, so it is causing painful squirming. But it is necessary to accept truth even if painful, or else live a fallacious life. It's your choice which is paining you.
(continued below)

Stan said...

"Why should we regard naturalism as the default view?"

An assumption of naturalism just seems simpler.

When a window shutter bangs, do we assume it is the wind, or a ghost? Extrapolate this to every phenomenon ever encountered."


Then you are basing your alleged Truth on assumption. That is closer to being the case than empiricism or logic. But really: assumption? If a theist walked up and wanted to just assume something, what would you say to him? You'd demand the evidence, and you'd be loud and persistent about it. (I'm assuming that, so it must be right).

"When the score is millions to zero, at what point do you think it reasonable to assume the one as the default?

I'm not arguing that there can be no such explanation. I am just saying that the assumption of naturalism resolves a tremendous amount of potential confusion."


First the score is inflated by your "assumption" from above that you need not provide any proof because you can assume an answer, and your favorite answer is zero (without any evidence, of course). So the scorecard is just another assumption, not data.

Second you most assuredly are saying that there can be no other explanation: you said zero evidence. (0). You did not say maybe. You said zero. None. Zero probability. Zero. Now you are struggling under the requirements of empirical knowledge, requirements which you cannot fullfil and which you now try to worm out of with "assumptions", which you fill up with your favorite unsupported answer.

"The reason I am not addressing any particular arguments is because it is pointless. No objection will ever amount in the slightest headway.

No matter how many arguments I shoot down, I'm still left with examining every femtosecond of past present and future."


Life gets hard when you have to use your own criteria, hmmm?

"What's the point? If nothing will change your mind, if you refuse the possibility that your mind can even potentially be changed, intelligent conversation is impossible.

I'll still pop in on occasion. I can't deny this blog his laughably entertaining every now and then.

If anyone actually wants to have an adult conversation instead of shooting ideology at each other, I would be delighted."


Wait, I would like an adult conversation: show some empirical data or logic for your position - let's make it easy - your position that there is no evidence, zero, in our universe for a non-physical agent; defend that position for us to discuss.

We're just looking for a reason to believe what you say. Other than that your conclusion must be true because you assume it to be true.

After we discuss the "zero evidence" proposition, we could discuss the "zero non-physical agents" proposition, and your data and logic for that assertion.

Chris said...

Wow! Seriously? And this isn't fundamentalism?

The simplest explanation isn't always the right one. This tired cliche about simplicity only works if reality is assumed from the beginning to be entirely material, and since the quantum revolution, its unclear what the term "matter" even means. Whatever it is, it certainly isn't as simple as Newton assumed it to be.

And anyways, who is to say which explanation is simpler? I've yet to come across even the hint of an explanation for how neurochemistry might create consciousness in the scientific literature.

"We can say no to some myths, but myth, or story, is as much a part of scientific narrative (especially those of the evolutionary sort) as it is religious narrative. Scientific stories work, as technology testifies. But so do religious stories, as the continued and indeed growing role of spirituality in our society shows."
-Mathew Segall

Martin said...

Jeremy,

If you disagree please present your single best theistic argument. Martin .. don't bother.

Because you can't show the flaw in it.

Interesting. This reminds me of creationists. When shown evidence against their position, they close up even MORE. There is a study about this somewhere, that when people are shown evidence against their beliefs they cling even tighter to them.

eternal said...

" First let’s take the standard Atheist hypothesis:

“there is no deity”."

stan, you say I'm not mature but how can i not laugh when I read something like this :D

Repeat after me: no belief in gods, no belief in god, no belief in God, no belief in a deity, no belief in deities, ...

"Now let’s examine the basic claim for agent-causation of the universe."

more fun!

"The hypothesis for an existence which is outside and beyond mass / energy is this:

Part 1. Given that the universe started from some existence which was prior to the existence of mass / energy, the universe itself started as a non-physical entity."

eternal: Sorry, the hypothesis for what?

stan: for an existence which is outside and beyond mass / energy

eternal: Ok ok so you suggest that there is an existence which is outside and beyond mass / energy and you want to prove that?

stan: no I assume that it is the case, I start with this idea first

eternal: I see, if we look at http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hypothesis, you use definition #1 of hypothesis rather than #2?

stan: yes

eternal: alright, so we assume, for the sake of argument that the universe was non-material before it became mass / energy and...

stan: NO!

eternal: Wait, what?

stan: You stupid atheist, you're rejecting science. The burden of proof is not on me to prove that something is non-material, it is on the challenger to prove that it is, in fact, material. A large part of QM is the troubling aspect of the non-materiality of non-decohered probability waves. The concepts of QM include that the particle is not actual until it decoheres (loses some of its probabilism due to entanglement with the environment: entropy, due to observation for example). Going back to the Copenhagen understanding, the “particle” is actually a probability wave existing in a quantum field; it does not materialize until observed.

eternal: that sounds all fine but whats the point?

eternal said...

stan: [yawwwwn, he is talking about possible scenarios for the universe] ...none of these explains the state of existence or origin of the proposed planck nugget, and because the dimensions of space/time are wrapped into planck length also, there is no material way in which to measure or judge it. In fact, the status of the space/time dimensions is thought to become non-coherent, possibly existing only as a “foam” (the analog for matter, the Bose-Einstein foam, has been produced at temperatures just above absolute zero).

so, there is no reason to presume that the existence within the planck nugget is the same or even similar to the existence which we term “physical” and which consists of well-defined atomic and molecular existences, especially those which are stable enough to be subjected to empirical knowledge extraction.

eternal: well duhh, (happy? I decided to use more duhh)

stan: If they are actually merely probability waves compacted into near zero space, they are non-physical. No matter what they actually are compositionally, they are non-empirical in terms of knowledge.

eternal: ya, so, we cannot know what they were doing, how, for how long, or even if how long means something. what did we conclude then?

stan: The example, of course, is within Quantum Theory where particles do not exist except as probability waves until they decohere, a demonstration of a non-physical existence in terms of empirical knowledge.

eternal: oh sorry you were not done; it's just that you copy/pasted a lot and it's repetitive you know...

so, what did we conclude? that the universe started as a non-physical thing? yes ok but that's what we started with, and you cannot tell much about this non-physical thing. all you can tell is that it can be described with the same probability waves we use to describe particles right here, right now, on a tiny scale, so tiny that we cannot really know if the particles are there or not, there is just a chance they are...

so whats the freaking point? why would anyone continue a discussion on the existence of a god after this? that`s why you don't get maturity from me. its not deserved. this blogs is a long entertaining joke...

Stan said...

eternal,
Your counter argument is that the blog is a joke. Nice work, that; you have revealed the secrets of Atheist logic.

Seriously, thanks for explaining why the lack of maturity keeps coming from your direction. It explains a lot.

I think we are all up to speed now on who you are and what you do.

eternal said...

stan stan stan...

"eternal,
You are free to make up conversations which don't exist and attribute comments which weren't made to people who didn't make them"

they were all real quotes from you, I am just trying to make you understand why you sound ridiculous by putting them in a conversation. i am here to help my friend! :D

eternal said...

stan deleted his comment and then said:

"eternal,
Your counter argument is that the blog is a joke. Nice work, that; you have revealed the secrets of Atheist logic.

Seriously, thanks for explaining why the lack of maturity keeps coming from your direction. It explains a lot.

I think we are all up to speed now on who you are and what you do."

the counter argument was in there:

stan: If they are actually merely probability waves compacted into near zero space, they are non-physical. No matter what they actually are compositionally, they are non-empirical in terms of knowledge.

eternal: ya, so, we cannot know what they were doing, how, for how long, or even if how long means something. what did we conclude then?

why would anyone continue a discussion on the existence of a god after this? this is not a starting point for anything. it's a description of where our knowledge of the universe stops, both empirically and non-empirical, since you say it yourself, this knowledge is not empirical!

yonose said...

Stan,

I don't want to impose my view, just to express some sentiment under it is possible to semantically argument about:

It seems to be that theism is not about a relationship with a personal image of a god or gods only. The image of a god or gods or demigods or whatever are, representations of the essential, not effable significance of an undistinguishable, homogeneous spiritual experience, which then permeates, in that theory, again into our realm.

The big problem is how non-deterministic is this behavioral aspect of experiences of this nature.

Under an empirical perspective, as a whole, those experiences are not falsifiable directly, under the parameters of the scientific method itself; when viewed from a cause-effect prospect, effects which seem to be caused by those legitimate experiences, according to some other research, are constantly replicating, which are falsifiable and explainable under the scientific method, which give a surmounting evidence for the possibility for the existence of what is the holistic concept of God, making spirituality and theism more tenable concepts to be kept within a correct worldview, for the time being.

Without direct experience of the phenomena it is not possible to understand it... I not saying that people who "don't get it" are inferior, either.

The paragraphs above are out of the scope of the purposes of this blog, but the are some aspects of these kinds of parafernalia which are sometimes unavoidably needed to be addressed.


I greatly appreciate the work done in this blog because the information exposed here made me understand two important factors which, from the adequate use of logic, are, from what I understood may not be 100% right:

1) What may be logically scrutinized about theism is the intelligibility, and guarantee, until those first principles may go, of believing in a superior entity which is trascendental of space and time, as what happens with Judeo-Christian, Hinduism and Sikh religions, or about the slightest possibility of inducing about something beyond the material world without resorting to the image of a creator God (which also may be compatible with the premise of theism), which happens to be a bit more concise view according to Buddhism and Taoism.

From a mystical perspective, both approaches lead to the same outcome.

2) Regarding the way of guaranteeing a belief in some intelligible force that is beyond our material realm, while recognizing at the same time that we perceive our material world, seems to be logically tenable from any spiritually driven religious perspective.


And then this invective, just for venting:

Atheists like those just make me cringe in sadness and regret about my own former skepticism... and I just thought religious fundies (becoming an spiritual and devout person myself) and hardcore creationists were the worst... I had some experiences with those kinds of people which also infuriated me a couple of times.

Even a couple of PhD s in physics I know, including one of my parent's friends and a near relative of mine who is one of them, are inside the ideological trap of anti-catholicism disguised as atheism.

When cornered, they behave in that exact same way, its just embarrassing.


@Atheists:

Regarding the few rational atheists out there, there is a one thing you might change:

No need for co-opting the correct use of logic for yourselves, if, I assume, you're using logic correctly. Atheists and theists alike have been using concepts of modal logic for years... why theists should not do to defend their arguments?

For the rest, irrational ones, just keep going :P you're offering me entertainment for free!! ;)

Just demonstrated, you are the same those human-discrimination-machines-like masses (fascism, racism, xenophobia, hooliganism, etc...), even I admit to say in the wrong manner, that trowing an ad-hominem like that from my part is justified.

Kind Regards.

Stan said...

eternal,
First it was not a conversation. It was an explanation in detail of my understanding of X to someone who was rejecting X due to not understanding the underlying reasons, and refusing to accept standard definitions.

Second, I really don't care what you think of my style. Criticism of style as opposed to substance is both juvenile and irrelevant. If you have a point to make, then make it; make it clearly and explain the premises you use to make it.

If you wish to discuss concepts and their origin and impact, then join in.

If all you wish to do is to ridicule, then this is the wrong place for you.

Now as for your single point, if that is what this is, we can discuss it:

"why would anyone continue a discussion on the existence of a god after this? this is not a starting point for anything. it's a description of where our knowledge of the universe stops, both empirically and non-empirical, since you say it yourself, this knowledge is not empirical!"

This is false. Empirical knowledge is not the only knowledge available. Further, it is self-limited to mass/energy. You apparently "know" that my writing style is "wrong", for example. This "knowledge" is not empirical.

The reason empirical knowledge is considered acceptable in the first place is because of the logic which underlays it, and the axioms which underlay logic and rational thought. These are not determined via empiricism: empiricism is determind from them. And logic, math and ethics and many concepts which we use daily do not get their integrity from empiricism, rather empiricism derives its integrity from those intellectual processes which precede it.

Put succinctly, empiricism is a subset of rational thought; it is not the superset, nor the entire set.

So your conclusion that all knowledge stops at the point where empiricism goes blind (a) is not sustainable by empirical data (the concept is self-defeating), (b) is a misunderstanding of empiricism as a subset of knowledge, not the superset, (c) is obviously false by your own standards.

Stan said...

yonose,
I appreciate your comment; if you could define Theism in a single sentence, how would you define it?

You said,
"Without direct experience of the phenomena it is not possible to understand it... I not saying that people who "don't get it" are inferior, either.

The paragraphs above are out of the scope of the purposes of this blog, but the are some aspects of these kinds of parafernalia which are sometimes unavoidably needed to be addressed."


This is where many Atheists just get off the bus. The idea of Theism as more experiential than empirical is something which they cannot argue against except to assert delusion or ridicule, and that reveals the lack of substance behind Atheism. Atheism always resolves to "freedom" without principles, under purely concept-free rejectionism. In other words it is emotional.

I like your example of anti-Catholicism. This type of Atheist is in full-rebellion mode, not intellectual-inquisitiveness mode. Argumentation with them goes quickly into anger.

It's good to have you here, you have an interesting perspective to contribute.

Jeremy said...

"Wow! Seriously? And this isn't fundamentalism?

The simplest explanation isn't always the right one. "


Um, no it is not fundamentalism. If you can explain any reason for me to consider a ghost a more likely possibility than the wind, I will consider it. If the reason is at all convincing, I will accept it. Until then, I will assume the wind is responsible because upon investigation the wind has ALWAYS been responsible. THAT is why it is simpler.

I don't need to light incense and pray. I don't need to sacrifice a goat or a child. I just need to shut the window and close the latch. Simpler AND more effective.

When you assume a supernatural effect, something which is by definition beyond investigation, you end any possibility of a new discovery.

Fundamentalism is saying nothing will change your mind. It is saying they do not care to hear counter points. It is saying your opposition has the impossible task of demonstrating the non-existence of YOUR claim throughout every femtosecond of past, present and future. Sounds familiar doesn't it.

"I've yet to come across even the hint of an explanation for how neurochemistry might create consciousness in the scientific literature."

Your ignorance does not equal facts. Just because we do not have a definitive explanation for how the brain works, or for the origin of the universe, does not lend any credence to theistic explanations.

Also, here's a "hint" of an explanation:
Understanding Consciousness by Giovanni Frazzetto.
The Astonishing Hypothesis by Francis Crick
Naturalizing consciousness: A theoretical framework by Gerald M. Edelman.

If you disagree please present your single best theistic argument. Martin .. don't bother.

Because you can't show the flaw in it.

Interesting. This reminds me of creationists. When shown evidence against their position, they close up even MORE.


Nice try. I went a month attempting to have this conversation with you. When we finally were making some head way (finally agreeing on definitions and such), you essentially reset the entire conversation back to the beginning. A complete waste of time except to confirm that Aquinas' arguments are an exercise in equivocation.

I can point out the flaws in it, (false dichotomy - everything changes / and makes the unjustified leap from "agent" as instigating effect to the God of Western Monotheism - two of the most major charges)

But I say don't bother because you are just going to say "Oh you don't understand the argument. Atheists have no philosophical grounding. There are no convincing arguments for Naturalism." - despite me presenting several rather convincing arguments for Naturalism ...

Sorry if I don't want to go around that circus of a conversation again.

Jeremy said...

Stan,

Life gets hard when you have to use your own criteria, hmmm?

That is not my criteria. I want evidence of a single femtosecond in which the evidence to back up your claim exists. You want me to demonstrate the non-existence of EVERY femtosecond of past, present and future. Ok? The criteria are not even remotely close.

Mine is reasonable, yours is preposterous.

Lourdes:
This straw man is so tiresome.
I have no physical evidence of Lourdes to refute. I'm not in France. I can't talk to any of the eye witnesses. You want me to provide empirical evidence to dismiss a story over the internet. You might as well require that I disprove the miraculous conception and resurrection of Christ. But that would be a preposterous, unreasonable burden of proof, doncha think?

Which is more likely: That the whole natural order is suspended or that a Jewish minx should tell a lie?

Which is more likely: that a crucified man, dead for three days, pushed a boulder from a cave and trudged up a hill to float off to the afterlife, or the Church is propagating nonsense?

Which claim should shoulder the burden of proof, hm?

Sorry to hammer this home. I just can't get over how stupid and irrational this so-called logic is.

You make the positive claim for zero evidence. So support it, using empirical data showing that you searched everywhere and for all time.

I make the positive claim to an evolutionary biologist that there is zero evidence for evolution. In response, they insist I support my claim, demonstrating empirically and throughout all time the non-existence of evolutionary processes.

Right? Right? Am I right? No. That's fucking stupid. The biologist would be like "Here. Here is a mountain of evidence to support my claim."

FrankNorman said...

Stan, it looks like Jeremy's main tactic is to keep twisting what you say to suit himself, making arrogant declarations without any backing, and ending his every post with a smug claim of victory, unless he gets whoever is trying to reason with him to lose their temper.
Then he smugly claims their anger shows they cannot answer him.

I've met such people before - they push some ideology - Atheism, Calvinism, whatever, but they don't really care about truth.
To them, its all about one-upping other people.

Stan said...

”When you assume a supernatural effect, something which is by definition beyond investigation, you end any possibility of a new discovery.”

No one here is “assuming” a supernatural effect, so that is a Straw Man. The rest of the sentence is thus without value.

What is being insisted upon is hard evidence within the boundaries of your ideology be shown for your position. You give no actual reasons which have any empirical value. So under your ideology, you have provided no knowledge, only unsubstantiated opinion.

”Fundamentalism is saying nothing will change your mind. It is saying they do not care to hear counter points.”

You see no parallel to yourself here?

”It is saying your opposition has the impossible task of demonstrating the non-existence of YOUR claim throughout every femtosecond of past, present and future. Sounds familiar doesn't it.’”

That is empiricism, not fundamentalism. When you take a position, either you can justify it or you cannot; under Atheism only empiricism is allowed as a source of knowledge. So either your position as an Atheist can be justified empirically, or it cannot. You admit that it cannot. So you attack empiricism rather than admit that your position is unjustified and unjustifiable. Your position is sacrosanct to you, to the point that you deny the value of logic and empirical requirements for knowledge claims. And that is fundamentalism.

”"I've yet to come across even the hint of an explanation for how neurochemistry might create consciousness in the scientific literature."

Your ignorance does not equal facts. Just because we do not have a definitive explanation for how the brain works, or for the origin of the universe, does not lend any credence to theistic explanations.”


No it doesn’t. But it does demonstrate that science doesn’t even have a basic hypothesis; further, the assertion of a material consciousness requires violation of certain other basic materialist principles. The concept itself is internally non-coherent. So accepting an internally non-coherent concept as being soluble by future science is Scientism, a non-coherent ideology.

”But I say don't bother because you are just going to say "Oh you don't understand the argument. Atheists have no philosophical grounding. There are no convincing arguments for Naturalism." - despite me presenting several rather convincing arguments for Naturalism ...

Say what? I must have missed that while I was focusing on trying to get you to deal with the inability of Materialism and Naturalism to prove their own basic premises using material evidence, which is the source of knowledge demanded as sole source under Materialism and Naturalism. They are rationally and logically false; they are false at their very core. You haven’t provided anything to show otherwise that I have seen. What you have been doing is complaining about having to provide empirical data for your truth claims.

”That is not my criteria. I want evidence of a single femtosecond in which the evidence to back up your claim exists. You want me to demonstrate the non-existence of EVERY femtosecond of past, present and future. Ok? The criteria are not even remotely close.”

No one here has made these truth claims except you yourself. The issue is that you make a claim that is based on materialist assumptions, with materialist claims. So you need to provide complete empirical data to show the value of your truth claims. But you have not and cannot. So your claims are without truth value and without any value as knowledge, which makes them unsubstantiated opinions.
(continued below)

Stan said...

”Lourdes:
This straw man is so tiresome.


You don't know what a Straw Man actually is, or you would not use it incorrectly. You have been directed to physical evidence to refute. So get on with it.

"I have no physical evidence of Lourdes to refute. I'm not in France.

This is an excuse and a failure to give empirical data.

"I can't talk to any of the eye witnesses."

This is an excuse and a failure to give empirical data.

"You want me to provide empirical evidence to dismiss a story over the internet."

No, you were asked to refute it empirically. No restrictions were placed on you.

"You might as well require that I disprove the miraculous conception and resurrection of Christ. But that would be a preposterous, unreasonable burden of proof, doncha think?”

Preposterous? Unreasonable? Absolutely not. You make a claim, you need to cough up the full evidence that it is true, doncha think?

Otherwise you are trying to impose your unfounded, unsubstantiated, unproven, unjustified opinions as being Truth. That is preposterous and unreasonable. Absolutely so.

”Which is more likely: That the whole natural order is suspended or that a Jewish minx should tell a lie?

Which is more likely: that a crucified man, dead for three days, pushed a boulder from a cave and trudged up a hill to float off to the afterlife, or the Church is propagating nonsense?

Which claim should shoulder the burden of proof, hm?”


When a proposition is given, the rebuttor has the responsibility for providing an adequate Burden of Rebuttal. Merely rejecting the proposition is not an intellectual option: reasons for the rejection must be given in full so that they can be judged for their intellectual value. Empty rejection has no intellectual value. You have provided only empty rejection, including empty rejection of your own responsibility for providing empirical evidence adequate to call your position true.

The question is absolutely not “what is more likely” (under the irrational constraints of Philosophical Materialism); the question is this:
(continued below)

Stan said...

“what can you prove adequately enough to claim that it is Truth?”.

You have no intention of proving your claim: you make this clear by your squirming. You make claims that are not justifiable, and then make the additional claim that having to justify them is “preposterous, unreasonable”. That is Special Pleading.

The term “Jewish Minx” is an ethnic and sexual slur and insult. It is the lowest anyone can go. It is anti-semitic and it is false. There is no indication that the girl was Jewish.

You have no knowledge of the Lourdes claim, that is obvious, and have descended into pure, simplistic, school yard bully denigration. I don’t see how you could get any lower. You absolutely don't care about truth: you want your opinions to be declared to be Truth with no justification whatsoever. That is the ultimate fundamentalist irrationality.

And no one has mentioned any crucified man, much less as any part of the concepts presented here. You are angry it appears, and rationally out in the weeds.

”Sorry to hammer this home. I just can't get over how stupid and irrational this so-called logic is.

'You make the positive claim for zero evidence. So support it, using empirical data showing that you searched everywhere and for all time.'

I make the positive claim to an evolutionary biologist that there is zero evidence for evolution. In response, they insist I support my claim, demonstrating empirically and throughout all time the non-existence of evolutionary processes.

Right? Right? Am I right? No. That's fucking stupid. The biologist would be like "Here. Here is a mountain of evidence to support my claim."


And of course that is just what has happened here. (a) You claim that there is no (zero) evidence or logic; (b)you are given evidence and logic; (c) so in response you claim that first, there is no evidence or logic, and/or second, that it is preposterous and unreasonable to expect you to prove your claim.

As you say: “that’s fucking stupid”.

Prove that the evidence or logic is empirically false. That’s the adult response.

Martin said...

Jeremy,

I don't remember any conversation. You mean on email?

I can point out the flaws in it, (false dichotomy - everything changes / and makes the unjustified leap from "agent" as instigating effect to the God of Western Monotheism - two of the most major charges)

OK, false dichotomy. Let's look at just that one. So the false dichotomy is...what exactly? You have to actually present a third option, not just say "false dichotomy."

The argument is that at least some things are changing. I.e., change is real. This is explained on my blog article that I linked.

So you side with Parmenides, then?

Jeremy said...

Frank,

I don't know what conversation you are reading. Name one claim of Stan's I've misrepresented. Cite one sentence where I declare his anger demonstrates his inability to respond. I mean .. IS exactly what Stan did. You are angry it appears, and rationally out in the weeds.

All I am attempting to do is articulate upon who the burden of proof should fall.

And it's not the people that reject unfounded, unsupported claims. Ie: Theism.

Stan misrepresents empiricism. Empiricism does not require the examination of every femtosecond of past present and future to justify a claim.

That's the straw man, regarding Lourdes, regarding your dismissal of atheism and regarding scientific processes in general.

Nowhere have I dismissed the value of empiricism or logic .. seriously wtf are you even responding to?

”Fundamentalism is saying nothing will change your mind. It is saying they do not care to hear counter points.”

You see no parallel to yourself here?


That is exactly what you said. You have established a goal post which is impossible to reach (ie nothing will change your mind), and you've stated you don't care to hear a rebuttal to your arguments for theism. Did you want me to copy-paste the exact quotes again?

further, the assertion of a material consciousness requires violation of certain other basic materialist principles. The concept itself is internally non-coherent.

Oh does it now? This outta be good to hear. Please submit your empirical evidence, straddling each femtosecond of past present and future that material consciousness is impossible. Peer reviewed of course. Don't forget to show your work. But someone really outta let all those neuroscientists know they are wasting their time.

And science has multiple hypothesis regarding these issues. I listed three science books which delve into this very subject, and you respond that science doesn't even have a hypothesis... Are you being intentionally ignorant now?

The term “Jewish Minx” is an ethnic and sexual slur and insult. It is the lowest anyone can go. It is anti-semitic and it is false. There is no indication that the girl was Jewish.

Calling someone Jewish is a ethnic insult now? Wow. Good to know.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_(mother_of_Jesus)

Mary was a Jew. Sorry to all the Jews out there for the racial slur. Oh damn I did it again. Um .. Sorry to the people descended from a particular Abrahamic faith which is not Xianity or Islam?

Jeremy said...

A minx is a sexually promiscuous woman, which she would have been if her story is not true.

There is no sexism or racism going on. It's not like I called her a Hebe cum dumpster. I mean that would be low and completely uncalled for. Completely unacceptable language.

I don’t see how you could get any lower.

At least now you know.

Say what? I must have missed that

Yeah you missed the part where I quoted Martin. That was a response to him.

And no one has mentioned any crucified man, much less as any part of the concepts presented here.

I brought it up? I said "That would be like ..."

And it is. You present a claim which is impossible to falsify with the evidence given and mock me for my inability to do so.

There is no anger here either. I'm crossed between shaking my head in amazement and laughing. Maybe you should add emoticons to your blog so I can point out where I am laughing as I type.

And of course that is just what has happened here. (a) You claim that there is no (zero) evidence or logic; (b)you are given evidence and logic; (c) so in response you claim that first, there is no evidence or logic, and/or second, that it is preposterous and unreasonable to expect you to prove your claim.

a) Correct.
b) I have been given no evidence. You said you did not care to hear a response to your so-called logic.
c) You have no evidence or you would present it. It is preposterous to expect someone to provide exhaustive proof to demonstrate the non-existence of something.

Prove there is no leperachauns. No fairies. No demons. No heaven. Prove there are no unicorns. Prove there are no Oni, no cows, no vampires, no ghosts, no whales, no mermaids. Prove aliens have not visited Earth. Prove there are no Krakens, no Hydra and no Pheonix. No succubi, no imps, no dingos, no quasits.

Prove there is no Krishnu, Vishnu or Mammon. Prove there is no Nirvana, no Moksha, no Nova Scotia, no Hades, no Bardo and no Elysium.

Does anyone yet get the fucking point??

If you can demonstrate a single point in time where ANY of these thing exist, I will accept the claim that they exist.

If you cannot, I will reject the claim they exist.

That is rational. That is a proper evidential standard. That is where and why the burden of proof falls like it does.

Huh. Guess you are right Frank, I did end this post with a smug claim of victory.

Jeremy said...

Martin,

Yes over email.

Hm, I may be using the term incorrectly. I mean to say that you present two states of being, when in fact it appears only one state exists.

I take the opposite view of Parmenides.

Everything appears to change. Nothing is truly static.

Since pure actuality is built into the potentiality that is the universe, is seems completely needless to posit a being of pure actuality.

So change does not occur in spite of what our senses tell us.

Well that appears to be nonsense. Need I elaborate? He's using ancient physics here. That things change is an objective fact.

Something cannot be both potential and actual at the same time in the same respect, as this is a logical contradiction (P and not-P).

To address this anticipated objection, please note that something can be both potential and actual at the same time in a different respect without creating a logical contradiction.

This interpretation has the happy coincidence of being reconcilable with every cosmological model I am aware of. Inflation Cosmology, Bang-Crunch Models, Multiple Bubble Universe Models, etc.

So Aristotle is not needed to "solve" Parmenide b/c the problem he created doesn't really exist.

Finally, I do not believe the deity described by western monotheisms at all matches the description of "a being of pure actuality".

After all, there are multiple examples of the god of western monotheism changing.

Stan said...

Jeremy said,
” And it is. You present a claim which is impossible to falsify with the evidence given and mock me for my inability to do so.”

Yet this is exactly the Atheist approach to Theists, but in an even more egregious context: Atheists could, in principle, attempt to prove their attachment to Materialism is rational; but Theists make a non-material claim, which Atheists demand material proof for (the infamous Category Error of Atheism). And then they disallow any responsibility for rebuttal or even explanation of why they think that Theists should adhere to the Atheist demand for material proof of a non-material existence – while they deny that empirical proof of a material claim is impossible.

This entire conversation with you has been about that, and that only: why you should be allowed to skate away with no responsibility for defending your claims with your ideological source of knowledge.

”And of course that is just what has happened here. (a) You claim that there is no (zero) evidence or logic; (b)you are given evidence and logic; (c) so in response you claim that first, there is no evidence or logic, and/or second, that it is preposterous and unreasonable to expect you to prove your claim.

a) Correct.
b) I have been given no evidence. You said you did not care to hear a response to your so-called logic.
c) You have no evidence or you would present it. It is preposterous to expect someone to provide exhaustive proof to demonstrate the non-existence of something.”


Bullshit. Total Bullshit. This is dishonest enough to call it what it is: a LIE.

(b) Show where I said that. You are attacking a retracted statement because you have nothing left. You have been completely out of ammo for days now.

(c) The evidence has been presented: the logic in the post to which this comment thread is attached; the physical miracle at Lourdes.

This has become so irrational that it presents a case history of Atheist thinking for clinical analysis.

Stan said...

”Prove there is no leperachauns. No fairies. No demons. No heaven. Prove there are no unicorns. Prove there are no Oni, no cows, no vampires, no ghosts, no whales, no mermaids. Prove aliens have not visited Earth. Prove there are no Krakens, no Hydra and no Pheonix. No succubi, no imps, no dingos, no quasits.”

I definitely would have to prove it if I made that claim; because I don’t care about those things I never made any truth claims in their regard. That’s the difference. You desperately want your version of existence to be TRUE. You declare it to be TRUE. But you have no means to provide actual truth value to your ideology, so you squirm around from old Atheist claim to old Atheist claim, trying to make them gain some traction for you. But they are false, all of them. This particular attempt is called the Fallacy of Guilt By Association, which (1) makes it a false attempt, and (2) it is meaningless because none of those posits has been made, and (3) none of those things equates to a non-physical agent, and (4) ‘no cows’?? ‘no dingos’? Good grief.

”If you can demonstrate a single point in time where ANY of these thing exist, I will accept the claim that they exist.”

No one here has made that claim, Jeremy. You are off in the weeds, for sure.

”That is rational. That is a proper evidential standard. That is where and why the burden of proof falls like it does.

Huh. Guess you are right Frank, I did end this post with a smug claim of victory.”


Actually your entire history here has been a demonstration of your inability to make your claims have substance. You have made no attempt to support them and you have spent a lot of time claiming that you shouldn’t have to. In fact that is the entire thrust of the last few days: no, I don’t have to support my claims, it is irrational to expect me to support my claims, it is preposterous and unreasonable to expect me to support my claims, etc. etc. ad nauseum.

In fact, I rather expect that at any time now you will declare that “You will never get me to defend my claims!” and go off to other blogs to celebrate your “victory”.

So from my perspective we are pretty much done here. The conclusion is that you will not be justifying your claims in any manner which extends beyond denialism.

Jeremy said...

Yet this is exactly the Atheist approach to Theists, but in an even more egregious context: Atheists could, in principle, attempt to prove their attachment to Materialism is rational; but Theists make a non-material claim, which Atheists demand material proof for (the infamous Category Error of Atheism).

Except it isn't. Theists make a tremendous swath of claims which effect the material. So it is not a Category Error to request material evidence to substantiate this.

Your claim that theism is merely an immaterial claim is a pure dodge.

Furthermore, if the claim that a deity exists IS an immaterial claim, then so too is the claim that a deity doesn't exist. Either way it seems you are trapped by your own standards.

(b) Show where I said that. You are attacking a retracted statement because you have nothing left. You have been completely out of ammo for days now.

I took the statement said in anger to be honest. That you redacted it doesn't take away from the relevance. I still don't think you give a shit what I have to say, and will skew any argument I make.

(c) The evidence has been presented: the logic in the post to which this comment thread is attached; the physical miracle at Lourdes.

Maybe I should address your logic claims then. I just feel that you don't really give a fuck to hear them, based on your redacted statement.

I'm not at Lourdes. You might as well say there is physical evidence on the moon and I am free to address that. Apparently we have different definitions of "presented".

I definitely would have to prove it if I made that claim; because I don’t care about those things I never made any truth claims in their regard.

Is that so? Well I know a leperachaun who sent his only son here to die for YOUR sins. And if you don't believe as I do, he'll send you to leperachaun hell for all eternity.

Furthermore, my leperachaun doesn't want you to eat meat on fridays, let women have positions of authority or plant two different crops in the same field.

Do you care at all about this truth claim? Do you dismiss it or accept it?

Oh, did I mention the leperachaun is immaterial and beyond falsification?

(3) none of those things equates to a non-physical agent, and (4) ‘no cows’?? ‘no dingos’? Good grief.

(3) Actually a great deal of those things are exactly non-physical agents/places.

(4) What? You think these things are real? Why is that??

Is there *gasp* evidence for that?

No one here has made that claim, Jeremy. You are off in the weeds, for sure.

Oops. I was so preoccupied writing down every imaginary thing I could think of, I forgot to include deities.

You get the point yet?

Your charge of fallacy is inaccurate. Comparing god with god is certainly not a fallacy of false association.

In fact, I rather expect that at any time now you will declare that “You will never get me to defend my claims!” and go off to other blogs to celebrate your “victory”.

Nope, in fact you are pretty much beginning to convince me I'm going to have to pick apart your logical argument now that it is apparent you DO give a rat's hairy asshole to hear my response.

Is that true Stan, do you in fact give a rat's hairy pink asshole what my response is??

You let me know and I'll get right on that response.

A. Klein said...

Stan, what would you say if you found out atheism is a lack of belief in gods NOT a claim that gods don't exist?

Strong atheists claim gods don't exist but regular agnostic atheists just lack belief.

Chris said...

...agnostic atheists just lack belief.

As I understand it, a/theism is about belief. A/gnosticism is about knowledge.

So....atheism is the "lack of belief" belief?

That is to say, atheists believe that they lack a belief?

Strange.

And stranger yet. The agnostic atheist is the person who doesn't know that he believes that he lacks a belief?

Stan said...

” Except it isn't. Theists make a tremendous swath of claims which effect the material. So it is not a Category Error to request material evidence to substantiate this.”

You’ve been given one to refute; refute it. REFUTE IT.

Your days here are drawing short. You cannot prove your claims including the claim you make above by refuting the one single material claim you have been given.

”Your claim that theism is merely an immaterial claim is a pure dodge.”

Bluster from the master dodger. Prove your claims.

”Furthermore, if the claim that a deity exists IS an immaterial claim, then so too is the claim that a deity doesn't exist. Either way it seems you are trapped by your own standards.”

False. And Egregiously so. The claim which is made under the ideology of Materialism requires a material justification. This must the tenth time I have told you that.

” I took the statement said in anger to be honest. That you redacted it doesn't take away from the relevance. I still don't think you give a shit what I have to say, and will skew any argument I make.”

Your arguments are skewed? You have made no arguments except that you don’t have to make any arguments. So you attack rejected material, because that’s all you have. When you make an actual argument, then we might have a reason to respect what you say. But all you have said so far is merely unjustified rejectionism. You are a Materialist; give us some material data for your rejection. As I have predicted time and again, you won’t do so because you can’t – but you won’t accept the intellectual consequences of your inabilities.

” Maybe I should address your logic claims then. I just feel that you don't really give a fuck to hear them, based on your redacted statement.”

That is the weakest excuse for not doing something productive that I have ever come across. Either do it or don’t do it. But don’t whine about it.

” I'm not at Lourdes. You might as well say there is physical evidence on the moon and I am free to address that. Apparently we have different definitions of "presented".”

Then you probably should not make wild claims about zero evidence, should you?

” Is that so? Well I know a leperachaun who sent his only son here to die for YOUR sins. And if you don't believe as I do, he'll send you to leperachaun hell for all eternity.

Furthermore, my leperachaun doesn't want you to eat meat on fridays, let women have positions of authority or plant two different crops in the same field.

Do you care at all about this truth claim? Do you dismiss it or accept it?”


This is a perfect example of the Straw Man Fallacy, you know, the one fallacy you know the name of and charge me with constantly: there is a website called Fallacy Files that you would be better informed if you would visit it.

”(3) none of those things equates to a non-physical agent, and (4) ‘no cows’?? ‘no dingos’? Good grief.

(3) Actually a great deal of those things are exactly non-physical agents/places.”


Good. Now we have something else which you can prove using your Materialist empirical powers: just as you demand of Theists: prove it. I don’t need to take a position which requires proof under your standards. All I have to do is deny it and then claim that you have the burden of proof, never me, not ever.

Prove it.

” You get the point yet?”

Certainly. You have made it very clear that you will not be offering any Materialist data to support your Materialist rejectionism which has always been made without any justification whatsoever.

” Nope, in fact you are pretty much beginning to convince me I'm going to have to pick apart your logical argument now that it is apparent you DO give a rat's hairy asshole to hear my response.”

So far you are all blather and no meaning. If you were going to do it, you would have.

Stan said...

A. Klein said...
"Stan, what would you say if you found out atheism is a lack of belief in gods NOT a claim that gods don't exist?

Strong atheists claim gods don't exist but regular agnostic atheists just lack belief."


That's just the dodge they use to avoid having to support their belief system.

The person who hears the hypothesis either accepts or rejects it, unless he doesn't remember it or doesn't comprehend it. They want the Other to think that they have no intellectual responsibility for supporting their rejection with reasons and reasoning at a minimum, and because they are also Materialists, then that support knowledge must also be Materialist, by their own standard: meticulous empirical investigation with all that entails.

They have found it necessary to dodge the empirical requirement for supporting their rejection, because they cannot support it. So they are vulnerable to the charge of having a worldview which is an ideology based on no evidentiary (or otherwise) knowledge and no logic: this makes their position an evidence-free faith, a tightly held religion which they will not release in the face of factual assaults.

eternal said...

"eternal,
First it was not a conversation. It was an explanation in detail of my understanding of X to someone who was rejecting X due to not understanding the underlying reasons, and refusing to accept standard definitions."

all souls that dare argue with you on your significant blog can detail to you why it is precisely because we accept the standard definitions that we reject your claims for agent-causation of the universe

"Criticism of style as opposed to substance is both juvenile and irrelevant."

yet, this is probably around 90% of what you write yourself. want me to supply quotes?

"If you have a point to make, then make it; make it clearly and explain the premises you use to make it."

I already do, but perhaps I was not always docile with my own code of self-conduit. I will make sure that I make at least one point every time. I promised! but I wont stop writing duhhhh things because this place is fun!

"If you wish to discuss concepts and their origin and impact, then join in."

but but thats all I do!

"If all you wish to do is to ridicule, then this is the wrong place for you."

no, this is the perfect place. all you do is try to ridicule atheists and their positions. its the main point of this blog. if you want to exclude ridicule out of it then theres nothing to put in!

"Now as for your single point, if that is what this is, we can discuss it:"

but wait, I thought you said I did not make a point. oh right, it was not clear enough. well yes, I confirm, it was a point, and apparently you did not get it...

""why would anyone continue a discussion on the existence of a god after this? this is not a starting point for anything. it's a description of where our knowledge of the universe stops, both empirically and non-empirical, since you say it yourself, this knowledge is not empirical!"

This is false. Empirical knowledge is not the only knowledge available. Further, it is self-limited to mass/energy. You apparently "know" that my writing style is "wrong", for example. This "knowledge" is not empirical."

so ya, as I said, you did not get it because I said: ...description of where our knowledge of the universe stops, both empirically and non-empirical

you don't understand what 'both' means or what? I am specifically telling you that we have non-empirical knowledge.

"The reason empirical knowledge is considered acceptable in the first place is because of the logic which underlays it, and the axioms which underlay logic and rational thought. These are not determined via empiricism: empiricism is determind from them."

duhhhhhh

"And logic, math and ethics and many concepts which we use daily do not get their integrity from empiricism, rather empiricism derives its integrity from those intellectual processes which precede it."

what the heck is integrity supposed to mean when used has a link between empiricism and math and ethics. and you complain about using non-standard definition? the irony is strong with this one...

eternal said...

"Put succinctly, empiricism is a subset of rational thought; it is not the superset, nor the entire set."

yes I agree.

"So your conclusion that all knowledge stops at the point where empiricism goes blind (a) is not sustainable by empirical data (the concept is self-defeating), (b) is a misunderstanding of empiricism as a subset of knowledge, not the superset, (c) is obviously false by your own standards."

but it was not my conclusion... read it again:

stan: If they are actually merely probability waves compacted into near zero space, they are non-physical. No matter what they actually are compositionally, they are non-empirical in terms of knowledge.

eternal: ya, so, we cannot know what they were doing, how, for how long, or even if how long means something. what did we conclude then?

why would anyone continue a discussion on the existence of a god after this? this is not a starting point for anything. it's a description of where our knowledge of the universe stops, both empirically and non-empirical

wait wait wait... eternal, if he did not get it the first, why would he get it now? oh right...

ok lets use your answer to it stan then. you said that 'empiricism is a subset of rational thought; it is not the superset, nor the entire set.' and I agree. so, if we keep using sets, we can say that empiricism is the set that contain all the knowledge about the physical universe, what you love to call space/time-matter/energy even if you know, it's like... so 20th century, but anyway

obviously this set of empiricism has limits, but the limits change at each new generation of human beings, being pushed further and further by the availability of new tools that expand empirically acquired knowledge. at the same time, the part of the set of rational thought also expand as both the subset of empirical and non-empirical grow.

looking at these sets today in 2012 does not yield the same results as when our fellow humans look at them 1 year ago, 10 years ago, 100 years ago, 1,000 years ago, 10,000 years ago, 100,000 years ago and 1,000,000 years ago. and no, this is not a random place to stop nor a futile enumeration of numbers. these numbers mean something. they are the visual representation of the exponential rise of human knowledge

so whats up with that u say? well duhhhhh... don't you see that it means that your assumption about the nature of our space-time-matter/energy are most likely wrong? in 1,000 years, people will pity us for knowing so little. some of them will still believe in gods probably, while some will not, both of them for both good and bad reasons...

the ones who believe will say: look!! the empirical knowledge of our universe stops here, what we can know after that is non-empirical, therefore the universe beyond this point is non-material, so I will start an argument for the existence of a god that starts with...

Part 1. Given that the universe started from some existence which was prior to the existence of mass / energy, the universe itself started as a non-physical entity.

eternal said...

martin martin martin

jeremy told you

"If you disagree please present your single best theistic argument. Martin .. don't bother."

which I thought was hilarious by the way, and you replied:

"Because you can't show the flaw in it."

I dont know where jeremy discussed that with you and now it seems that it was by email.

whats interesting is that I also remember another occasion, a certain thread on another forum, where you used the name HAMMIESINK. there were at least 5 people trying to tell you, using various deegree of kindness, where you got it wrong

you have a very selective memory I am afraid...

Martin said...

eternal,

there were at least 5 people trying to tell you, using various deegree of kindness, where you got it wrong

I have yet to see a single atheist even UNDERSTAND the argument, much less refute it. They always seem to be desperate to find something wrong with it in order to maintain their belief system: that all theistic arguments are weak. A claim which I am skeptical of, because I have yet to see any evidence of it.

World of Facts said...

martin, you mean what you posted at

http://rocketphilosophy.blogspot.com/2011/07/aquinas-first-way.html

are you kidding?

i wonder what stan thinks about it? stan probably agrees right?

actually, isnt martin that learn these things from stan, you are like is only disciple martin, but you are a good one, not too docile since you did not reject the science of evolution but jusy brainwashed enough to think, like him, that atheists believe certain things they dont...

anyway, confirm martin that this is what you were talking about, at the link you posted, i will try to explain what you don't understand (pun intended)

......................

by the way, news flash of the day. lazy me decided to connect to a google account so i now have the same fancy blue line under my name that you guys have... so exciting!!!!

......................

another thing!

stan, martin,

what do you think of this "proof" of god by the "famous" pre-sup appologist sye:

http://proofthatgodexists.org/

accurate or not according to you?

mike3838 said...

Stan said:

"(c) The evidence has been presented: the logic in the post to which this comment thread is attached; the physical miracle at Lourdes."

I'm not seeing any evidence presented re: Lourdes. In fact as far as i can tell Stan hasn't even told us what he believes the miracle (singular) to be. One particular healing? A group of healings? The discovery of a spring? The fact that he believes material evidence is there for the observer willing to travel internationally suggests the latter, but surely if he wants someone to offer a rebuttal, we should at least first establish what the claim is. When asked for this clarification, all we've had so far is "Google it", as though that will allow us to know what he's thinking.

A Klein said:

"Stan, what would you say if you found out atheism is a lack of belief in gods NOT a claim that gods don't exist?"

He'll level his charge that the 99% atheist is dishonest and is lying about his true opinion which is actually that of a 100% atheist. It's a much easier target to argue against because he can call it illogical, inconsistent, fallacious etc.

Stan said (on leprechauns):

"This is a perfect example of the Straw Man Fallacy, you know, the one fallacy you know the name of and charge me with constantly: there is a website called Fallacy Files that you would be better informed if you would visit it."

The only way this is a Straw Man is by the fact that it isn't in direct response to the question asked. But it's a directly analogous question that's still relevant to the topic in hand and the subject of the blog. Replace "leprechaun" with "God" and you have the average theistic claim, and Jeremy points out why the atheist response is rational. I notice by calling it a Straw Man you deftly avoid answering the question of whether you accept the leprechaun premise, in the same comment as an accusation of dodging. Do you accept it?

Stan said:

"That's just the dodge they use to avoid having to support their belief system."

And:

"So they are vulnerable to the charge of having a worldview which is an ideology based on no evidentiary (or otherwise) knowledge and no logic: this makes their position an evidence-free faith, a tightly held religion which they will not release in the face of factual assaults"

See, very easy to argue against when you change the opinion presented to you into a different one! "There's no such thing as an agnostic atheist, just a complete atheist whose in denial". Despite the fact that this is exactly how every one of us goes about our lives with regards to everything *except* religion. And yea, I know, "non-material yadda yadda", but we could argue hypothetical (but granted, still rational given certain unproved assumptions) creators all day, but what would be the point?

Stan's sole argument gets him to non-interventionist Deism, and no further by his own admission. So even if we accept it, what next? The atheist says "Hmm, maybe, but we can't know for sure and it doesn't affect me in any way whatsoever" and gets on with his life. The theist is still left with a countless myriad of claims that make impositions on their own life and the lives of people around them, yet that have no credible evidence, logic or reason to back them up. Like I said before, if your logic can get you to "praying is worthwhile" or "cows are sacred", or you have evidence, please show your work.

yonose said...

Stan,

I apologize for the delayed answer, and also, because the whole post would require more than one part, which may be also a bit insulting.

I will try to semantically give an eclectic definition of theism in a sentence, without resorting to the etymological meaning, which is still obvious, though it may be simplistic:

Theism is a worldview that implies the belief in the existence of a greater reality that transcends the constraints of all finite beings in the material world.

I used material instead of natural, because the latter has been repeatedly implemented in a broader context and using it here would be rather confusing.

To begin with, the non-effable, non-distinguishable, is the motto of the greater reality: the main thesis of Theism, is that it exists.

Now:

"Theism is a personal relationship type of deity and is not amenable to logical resolution nor is it subject to empirical investigation.

The definition you've posted in your previously deleted comment, is more akin to the Classical theism, but there are other variants which share the same basic characteristic:

1) Pantheism, is the belief that that transcendental reality is in a synchronic process with every conceivable part of our material world, with some interpretations going as far as saying that every material part of our universe are that very same reality.

Honestly, many people are taking the definition of pantheism with a variety of interpretations which may deviate it from its actual intended meaning, namely, taking it too literally and thinking of it as objective as it may get, which is a problem, nonetheless. Even some people think of it as a holistic version of Deism, like, for example, Naturalistic Pantheism. The intended, generic concept is NOT TO BE CONFUSED WITH DEISM.

2) Animism, which from a etymological standpoint is directly related to the soul, and for which stands for, is the belief that there are spirits, souls which have their own consciousness, that wander in our dimension but also belong to the realm of that greater reality, making it compatible with the eclectic concept of theism. From a mystical perspective, it is even possible to find spiritual teachings which bear both pantheism and animism.

3) Panentheism, is, putting it in lack of a simpler term, a "more flexible form of pantheism", which means a reciprocal, but direct relationship (which differentiates animism from panentheism), not only of "synchronicity", between [everything in our material world] and [that greater reality], where [that grater reality] may interfere in our realm.

4) Polytheism, well, i"ll try to put a more thorough definition other than "belief in many gods". Polytheism is the belief in the need of devotion to more than one finite images, which resemble the different gods that wield different, specific functions, which in essence are, piece by piece, the manifestations of the greater reality.

When I refer to the direct experience of the phenomena, I'm talking about the spiritual experience.

That's why I'm saying that the whole experiential nature of all this, because of its non-deterministic nature, is at first very difficult to be grasped, but is also very, very difficult to be semantically defined, not theoretically or in a metaphysical sense only...

...but because in the practice, in the mystical sense, some subtle parts of the definitions that are given above, are pretty much related among themselves:

e.g. polytheism(multiple functions) with animism(multiple souls) with pantheism(synchronicity, indirect interference with the greater reality), with panentheism and classical theism (the embodied experience of that grater reality) etc, etc.

(Part 1, continuing below)

yonose said...

(part 2, continuing from above)

This is why, AFAIK, the eclectic concept of theism, as a whole, does not give the possibility of being logically deductible from an empirical perspective, because the empirical, practical process (occultism, magick) from what another method of induction concerns, is, in itself, not totally objective but almost entirely symbolic, and holistic. The only objective feature about this method, is the replication of effects by applying given instructions and using certain bill of materials.

But, with or without those kind of practices, it has been possible, to reach the experiential knowledge of the greater reality, or at least, another process in between, which is to be examined and considered, outside of our material realm. This is a key point, because although one of the possible empirical processes (occultism, magick) is separated from the experiential (divinity), one of the many ways to start inducing the non-deterministic, experiential source of knowledge (divinity), is by the occult/mystical practices (empirical process).

And by saying this, to try to understand these phenomena, there must be an a priori, experiential nature from any phenomenon which may/might be attributed by some possible non-material cause, examined that that is the best possible cause, and that's why I agree that the understanding of Theism is an experiential question rather than an empirical question.

So, what an atheist may attack with enough argumentation, being right or wrong in an specific context, is the practice of the mystic/occult (which may be falsifiable, and be distinguished if its either legitimate of not, although the reaches of the scientific method are rather limited here, but not only that, the ideology plays its role too!! so the problem is twofold), because those kind of practices account for one of the possible "effects" I was talking about above, including others like:

Voluntarily and involuntarily induced:

ESP, PSI:
--> Precognition (by dreams or any other source)
--> Clairvoyance
--> Remote viewing
--> Spiritual channelling, communication with the deceased.

Involuntarily induced:

-->NDEs

The problem is, most Atheists, if not all, because of many ideological fixations, who, on one hand, should not deny Atheism actually IS a worldview which also implies a BELIEF, a belief which rejects the THESIS POSITED BY THE CONCEPT OF THEISM, and on the other hand, just don't take into account, the complicated nature of this kind of practices, and also, the part of theism which may be logically addressed, that guarantees, on what it is possible, the justification in believing the thesis posited, so they just lump it all in, altogether, without the examination all this stuff deserves.

Myself, as a former skeptic, also fell myself into that trap, and took me roughly more than a quarter of my whole, short lifetime, to try and at least grasp a little of all these, mysteries of life, after the very first experience I can recall.

Now that I analyze further my previous views, I was an atheist, rather than an agnostic, because it's different to say I don't know than I can't know: that single word changes the whole landscape.

(part 3, continuing below)

yonose said...

(part 3 of 3, continuing from above)

Now,

As I've stated in the first post I tried to clarify this, just to clarify more here:

-->The empirical and experiential processes for what is not logically accountable in the main thesis of theism, give room for the "effects" which are the base for giving evidential credit, which support the thesis posited by the concept of Theism.

--> From the possibility of inducing/deducing logically the concept of theism, that goes, as far as the acknowledged first principles may go, as long as the possibilities lead to the assimilation of the worldview, and in consequence, the belief of it, I think it is better to do so in a particular way, with the possible dangers along the way (and also that this is, a very very vey long and difficult task to accomplish, and should be done individually, to decide anything) :


--> To give logically concise reasons, that may, guarantee the belief in the Classical view of theism, that make classical theism a tenable view, under the necessary evidentiary support, even if it does not address directly the concept of classical theism, but seems to fit.

-->To give logically concise reasons, that may, guarantee the belief in the view of pantheism or panentheism, that make pantheism or panentheism a tenable view, under the necessary evidentiary support, even if it does not address directly the concept of pantheism or panentheism, but seems to fit.

-->To give logically concise reasons, that may, guarantee the belief in the view of animism, that make animism a tenable view, under the necessary evidentiary support, even if it does not address directly the concept of animism, but seems to fit.

-->To give logically concise reasons, that may, guarantee the belief in the view of polytheism, that make polytheism a tenable view, under the necessary evidentiary support, even if it does not address directly the concept of polytheism, but seems to fit.

And, unify everything, by evidentiary support, what all of the logical processes have in common, and retiring the most apparent contradictions, as with happens with the exoteric aspects among spiritually-driven religions, all of that, without using too much associations in a quick, shallow fashion.

That, I believe, may be a good way, in which the truth value for the thesis of theism, from a theological/theosophical, mystical and practical perspective, may be consolidated. I must warn that this will not universally prove theism itself, once and for all, but would make it as valid as to call it a possible truth.

This is what the Atheist is still not able to attack by empirical methods on this side of the coin: they need logical argumentations. But to back up their logical argumentations, as you've said repeated times, they need evidentiary support, but they can't, or they don't want to do it empirically, even if you give them some chance… or at least try to give evidence or a single clue, from a different scope which may be compatible with the tools they are going to use, to clarify what they want to refute, so they don't bite more than they can chew.

If certainly an Atheist would show to me not only the logical argument, because there are good ones in favor of Atheism, but also some evidentiary support of it from an empirical prospect, or al least, some way to give some conclusive evidentiary support of the thesis which rejects theism, that also, which supersedes my prior experiences, the next concise, logical step for me, would be to assimilate, once again, the Atheist view and leave all behind. But instead, we get that "atheist agnostic" nonsense.

Kind Regards.

Martin said...

eternal,

you mean what you posted at
http://rocketphilosophy.blogspot.com/2011/07/aquinas-first-way.html


Yes.

http://proofthatgodexists.org/ accurate or not according to you?

It's an interesting argument. Realism of universals does present a problem for naturalists. If you see my article here and scroll down to part VI, you'll see a brief summary of the possible positions naturalists can take. The two best positions a naturalist could take are not very viable, which leaves abstract objects as potentially real, immaterial entities. This can then be parlayed into an argument for theism. Not 100% proof, but an interesting and viable argument nonetheless.

Anonymous said...

Eternal I would go with a more learned pre-sup such as James Anderson http://www.proginosko.com/ or Paul Manata.

Stan is more along the lines of Dr William Lane Craig using the convert to deist then theism route.

FrankNorman said...

The burden of proof, logically speaking, lies on whoever is trying to convince someone else.
If the Atheist were just sitting quietly in a corner, passively "not believing in God", and not demanding anything of anyone else, no one would expect him to prove any claim, because he wouldn't be making one.

But that is not the case. And we all know its not the case. The Atheists who pretend its the case are being dishonest.

When an Atheist comes into the public forum and tells everyone else that they should not believe in God or gods, he is making an assertion. One that is intrinsically impossible for him to back up.

That is Stan's point - that the Atheist cannot prove his own beliefs using the standards of evidence he wants to impose on everyone else.

And yes, the Atheists do seek to impose their worldview on everyone else. There is a very obvious political agenda.

Stan said...

Eternal said,
"stan, martin,

what do you think of this "proof" of god by the "famous" pre-sup appologist sye:"


I agree with the underlying premise given here, which is that proofs can exist only when applied to a given individual. This is because most Atheists will not relinquish their false concepts which they think defeat actual logic. So no argument regardless of its actual veracity will be allowed past the increasingly skeptical attacks of such people.

It is easy to prove that no knowledge exists under Radical Skepticism. Given that, then no proof can be accepted as valid knowledge. But of course when the Radical Skeptic asserts that he "knows" that there is no knowledge, he betrays the internal non-coherence of such skepticism.

Which is why I use the idea of "what is it that we can accept as rationally acceptable knowledge?"

Can we assume that we are not brains in vats, not in a dream, not deluded, not insane, not in the wrong universe, and that we can define logical procedures, and use principled deduction based on grounded axioms to determine probable "truths"?

Intellectually constipated denialists will fight actual logic without directly attacking it; they will fight actual evidence without actually considering it; they will constantly charge all logic with fallacies which they do not comprehend and which they use themselves; when charged with fallacies themselves they change the subject and never, ever address their errors.

The unfounded, ungrounded, anti-rational attacks on logic and evidence come from ideology - that of Atheism.

Jeremy said...

Stan,

After reading your response regarding your lack of intellectual curiosity/investigation into other supernatural claims, I came across this quote that I found relevant.

"Study one religion, and you'll be hooked for life.

Study two religions, AND YOU'RE DONE IN AN HOUR."


So, why don't you go investigate some of the other supernatural claims I mentioned. Figure out why you so easily dismiss them, and then apply the same intellectual rigor to your own faith.

I bet you too will be done in an hour.

If my leperachaun analogy is a straw man, it should one that is easier for YOU to knock over.

After all, isn't it incredibly absurd?

Yet if you substitute "leprechaun" for "God" we discover the exact claim many many theists make.

Y'know, real theists, with the intellectual stones to say exactly what she believes. Honestly, and without dissembling. Contrary to the approach of the theists on most debate forums today.

So now, you tell me why leprechauns are absurd, but not gods.

This is me staying on topic and addressing your charge of a straw man fallacy.

Regarding your logical argument, has anyone else noticed that it doesn't conclude with anything even remotely resembling deism? It concludes with

something other than mass, ergo, non-material or non-physical per the understanding of the words material and physical.

Something non-physical.

Not deism. Not a God. Deism is just asserted without demonstrating anything resembling an intelligent creative force is required.

You furthermore concede it is impossible to demonstrate that theism is deductively correct.

So by your own argument, (ignoring the myriad flaws I can see), we can safely conclude the universe started off as something "non-physical".

Something that Schrodinger and Hawking both agree with, despite both being atheists.

For the sake of a charitable argument, I will concede that the universe started off as something definable as "non-physical", at least in the same vain that Hawking and Schrodinger argue for.

So, you don't conclude with deism, and you admit theism is not deductible.

That seems a rather gaping hole in your logic.

And somehow it is the atheist who have no footing on which to safely dismiss theism? 'Scuse me for being so f'n skeptical for rejecting the claim even you admit is beyond deduction.

Stan said...

”So, why don't you go investigate some of the other supernatural claims I mentioned. Figure out why you so easily dismiss them, and then apply the same intellectual rigor to your own faith. “

I did that as a youth, long ago and far away. Your idea that I stupidly have not done that demonstrates that you haven’t figured out much about me.

”If my leperachaun analogy is a straw man, it should one that is easier for YOU to knock over.

After all, isn't it incredibly absurd?

Yet if you substitute "leprechaun" for "God" we discover the exact claim many many theists make.”


A straw man is false on the face of it; it doesn’t need any other “knocking over”. For example, why substitute God, when what you mean in the first place is God? If you can’t make a direct argument, then a straw man fallacy certainly isn’t going to make it work.

”Y'know, real theists, with the intellectual stones to say exactly what she believes. Honestly, and without dissembling. Contrary to the approach of the theists on most debate forums today.

So now, you tell me why leprechauns are absurd, but not gods.

This is me staying on topic and addressing your charge of a straw man fallacy.”


It is definitely you, alright, sticking to your straw man fallacy as if it were an actual argument.

”Regarding your logical argument, has anyone else noticed that it doesn't conclude with anything even remotely resembling deism? It concludes with

something other than mass, ergo, non-material or non-physical per the understanding of the words material and physical.

Something non-physical.

Not deism. Not a God. Deism is just asserted without demonstrating anything resembling an intelligent creative force is required.”


And here you merely deny two things for no reason or reasoning whatsoever: (a) Not deism/is deism/not a god; (b)deism is just asserted, no demonstration.

So since you cannot defeat the logic, you must merely deny it exists. That response is fully expected.

You furthermore concede it is impossible to demonstrate that theism is deductively correct.

I don’t concede it. I pointed it out and the reasons for it.

”So by your own argument, (ignoring the myriad flaws I can see), we can safely conclude the universe started off as something "non-physical".”
If you actually saw any flaws, much less myriad, you would point them out. You are merely blustering without substance. Now you appear to make a non-concession, although that is not clear.



And which some Atheists refuse to accept, because it is a hazardous concept to their worldview.

”For the sake of a charitable argument, I will concede that the universe started off as something definable as "non-physical", at least in the same vain that Hawking and Schrodinger argue for.

Surely you meant “vein”… And you need not be charitable, you may defeat the argument if you can: And you would if you could, so obviously you cannot. Therefore your charity is irrelevant.

Stan said...

”So, you don't conclude with deism, and you admit theism is not deductible.”

The argument was for a non-physical agent. So you haven’t internalized the actual argument.

”That seems a rather gaping hole in your logic.

Or in your comprehension of the proposition.

”And somehow it is the atheist who have no footing on which to safely dismiss theism? 'Scuse me for being so f'n skeptical for rejecting the claim even you admit is beyond deduction.”

Your arrogance is betrayed by your lack of comprehension of the actual claim being made. You have made no headway in proving the logical chain resulting in a probable non-physical agent to be false, either logically or evidentially.

You dismiss this on the basis of a corruption of the actual argument, which you then derogate. How about attacking the actual argument being made? You have created your own Straw Man Fallacy once again, and you puff up when you destroy your own creation. Here is a summary of your logic regarding this:

(a) there is no proof of deism or a god; just an assertion of Deism; (no acknowledgement of the argument even existing, much less arguing against it successfully).

(b) don’t conclude with deism (contrary to your claim in (a)); and theism is not “deductible” (sic).

There is absolutely no discussion of the argument being made here regarding a non-physical agent; there is no attempt at disproof. So the smugness you assert is not merely unjustifiable, it is silly (meaning empty of content).

You are just wasting my time here. You have steadfastly declined to provide either any logic or evidence for your position, and when pressed to refute the material evidence given you, you declined to do that, and now you present a non-refutation of the logic given you – yet you puff up as if you actually did something.

Again, you are wasting my time. Do one of the following in order to provide at least a semblance of defending your Atheist Ideology:

Provide irrefutable logic which determines that there can be no non-physical agent;

Provide hard, physical empirical evidence which determines that there can be no non-physical agent.

Provide hard, physical, empirical evidence that the claims of miracles at Lourdes are false.

Provide a full logical refutation of the logic provided to you – not just denials without any support.

You’ve been on here long enough to have done something rational in your defense. Instead you squirm around, whine about the Atheist evidentiary requirements being made on yourself, slip and slide around trying to avoid refuting physical evidence, and now you provide denials as logical refutation. Your time is running out. Unless you give either logical reasons for your denialism, or give proper refutations of the evidence/logic provided you, your time is up, because there is no future value in conversing with you. You have provided adequate demonstrations of Atheist reasoning.

Stan said...

Mike3838,
”I'm not seeing any evidence presented re: Lourdes. In fact as far as i can tell Stan hasn't even told us what he believes the miracle (singular) to be. One particular healing? A group of healings? The discovery of a spring? The fact that he believes material evidence is there for the observer willing to travel internationally suggests the latter, but surely if he wants someone to offer a rebuttal, we should at least first establish what the claim is. When asked for this clarification, all we've had so far is "Google it", as though that will allow us to know what he's thinking.”

Here’s what I’m thinking. Every Atheist so far wants to quibble about the claim without even googling up the actual claims for himself. I didn’t make the claims. The claims were made over a hundred years ago and await your refutation. What I think doesn’t matter one whit: the claims are public, and so should your refutation be.

Atheists charge around claiming logic and evidence and yet get really goosy when their feet are held to the fire of actual evidence. So they want to know what my claim is so that they don’t have to deal with the actual claim.

Here’s the deal with the claim: read what it is, and then refute it using empirical, experimental, replicable and replicated, falsifiable and not falsified, peer reviewed scientific material evidence, just as Materialism demands of Atheism.

”"Stan, what would you say if you found out atheism is a lack of belief in gods NOT a claim that gods don't exist?"

He'll level his charge that the 99% atheist is dishonest and is lying about his true opinion which is actually that of a 100% atheist. It's a much easier target to argue against because he can call it illogical, inconsistent, fallacious etc.”


That’s pretty close, except for the implication you put on my motivation: the motivation is to force the true colors of Atheism to come out of hiding. Atheists have become intellectual cowards, hiding behind claims that they don’t have a belief, when that is functionally impossible unless they actually haven’t heard the posit (which is not the case), they don’t care (which is not the case), or they are mentally limited in memory or comprehension.

Stan said...

”Stan said (on leprechauns):

"This is a perfect example of the Straw Man Fallacy, you know, the one fallacy you know the name of and charge me with constantly: there is a website called Fallacy Files that you would be better informed if you would visit it."

The only way this is a Straw Man is by the fact that it isn't in direct response to the question asked. But it's a directly analogous question that's still relevant to the topic in hand and the subject of the blog. Replace "leprechaun" with "God" and you have the average theistic claim, and Jeremy points out why the atheist response is rational. I notice by calling it a Straw Man you deftly avoid answering the question of whether you accept the leprechaun premise, in the same comment as an accusation of dodging. Do you accept it?”


First, why not make the actual argument regarding God? Is your argument a failure unless you make false analogies, which you set up in order to knock down (straw man)? There is no valid comparison or analogy to be made between deducing a non-physical agent from material premises, and claiming a leprechaun, which is trivial. The intent of this word play is to claim “Guilt by Association” (yet another fallacy) when the leprechaun is accepted as an argument and then to be ridiculed. Further it is yet another dodge to avoid addressing the actual case being made via legitimate hypothesis and deduction, above: in order to avoid the actual posit, you make a false analogy which you set up as a straw man in order to attempt to destroy the posit by proxy, since you cannot defeat it head on. Very sorry argumentation techniques, filled with related fallacies of diversion.

I can’t say this enough: if Atheists had an actual case or actual evidence, they would present it.

”Stan said:

"That's just the dodge they use to avoid having to support their belief system."

And:

"So they are vulnerable to the charge of having a worldview which is an ideology based on no evidentiary (or otherwise) knowledge and no logic: this makes their position an evidence-free faith, a tightly held religion which they will not release in the face of factual assaults"

See, very easy to argue against when you change the opinion presented to you into a different one! "There's no such thing as an agnostic atheist, just a complete atheist whose in denial".


The claim of an agnostic Atheist is purely a dodge, and you have not shown otherwise. Your comment merely attempts to attribute motivations to me which are not necessary: Atheism collapses on its own under its own deceptions which are obvious to everyone. It is intellectual cowardice devoted to protecting themselves from having to produce either logic or evidence, and is tacit proof that they have neither, and that their ideology is a blind belief system. They cannot argue against this, so they have to change the ground rules to allow their Special Pleading room to breathe, if they can get away with it. But they cannot get away with it because the deception is obvious to even the casual observer.

Stan said...

” Despite the fact that this is exactly how every one of us goes about our lives with regards to everything *except* religion”.

So Atheism is no longer based on logic and rational thought as the basis for its theory of knowledge? Or do you mean that you always change your definitions when challenged on a daily basis? Or… What exactly does this sentence mean anyway?

And yea, I know, "non-material yadda yadda", but we could argue hypothetical (but granted, still rational given certain unproved assumptions) creators all day, but what would be the point?”

What actually is the point of Atheists showing up here to disrespect hypotheses without presenting any evidence or reasoning for doing so? Why are Atheists all over the web declaring themselves the knights of truth, logic and evidence (especially when they have none of those things)? What is the point of the Atheist attack mode on the culture? If Atheism is a lack of belief, then what is the point of organized Atheism and Atheists and especially their frenzied denials and dissembly? If they have no beliefs, why are they putting up signs saying what they believe? If the Atheists have no beliefs, why are they so angry, hostile, and generally foul-mouthed in proclaiming their non-belief? It doesn’t add up, and the reason it doesn’t add up is because it is false, logically and functionally.

The point for Atheists is that they must defeat the challenge to their emotional crutch, the total freedom from absolutes including not just freedom from morals but also freedom from the foundations and grounding for logic and rational thought. Those things are dangerous to the Atheist worldview which is based on an ideology that has no logical basis as well as having not only no evidentiary basis but being based on self-defeating materialist premises.

One thing could be said for the No-Belief claim: that also has no rational basis, no logical support, no evidence for its support, and is based in self-defeating Materialist premises also. But it also suffers from being impossible to accept based on rational premises.

” Stan's sole argument gets him to non-interventionist Deism, and no further by his own admission. So even if we accept it, what next?

A truth seeker might wonder about the ability of a non-physical agent to interrupt its own creation. Proof of such interruption would be crucial to a Materialist, who would have to refute it or accept it… or deprecate it in the face of his inability to refute it. Lourdes fits this niche.

The Atheists demonstrate here that they cannot refute it, but cannot accept it. But why? Why cannot actual evidence mean anything to the “evidence based” Atheist? Could it be that Atheism is not actually evidence-based? Not only has it no evidence of its own, it must emotionally reject evidentiary contraries?

Stan said...

Here’s what Atheists say that they say:

”The atheist says "Hmm, maybe, but we can't know for sure and it doesn't affect me in any way whatsoever" and gets on with his life.

Not many Atheists do that; they go on-line and make claims which they cannot back up.

”The theist is still left with a countless myriad of claims that make impositions on their own life and the lives of people around them, yet that have no credible evidence, logic or reason to back them up.

False, and betraying a conflation of theism with ecclesiasticism. Theism merely makes one claim beyond that of Deism: it is rationally acceptable and coherent to think that the non-physical agent probably has the ability to interrupt its own creation in order to somehow make itself known to, or commune with, its followers. This claim is validated experientially, except in cases such as Lourdes.

Just one claim, not myriads. And yes, it is unfalsifiable as you know if you have considered Lourdes as a serious issue, and Popper as a serious issue. It is a non-physical issue, therefore it is out of the self-imposed boundaries of empirical science. The demands for “credible evidence” are just more Fallacies, being Category Errors. So the only recourse for the poor Atheist is not refutation, it is deprecation in support of irrational denialism. Atheism is helpless in the face of Theism, because his Materialist demands are meaningless, and his refutations are empty and without meaning.


” Like I said before, if your logic can get you to "praying is worthwhile" or "cows are sacred", or you have evidence, please show your work.

There is an experiment on prayers effect on animals, in the right hand column. No one claims that cows are sacred as a condition of Theism.

World of Facts said...

stan replied to:

"”The atheist says "Hmm, maybe, but we can't know for sure and it doesn't affect me in any way whatsoever" and gets on with his life.

Not many Atheists do that; they go on-line and make claims which they cannot back up."

hahahahahahaha, stan, you crack me up!!!

not many do that? are you kidding me? out of the tons of atheists that I know, personally, in this thing we call reality, none of them go online, NONE. ZERO.

I am the only one I know of who do that because I think it's fun, and they don't. they just really don't care about these issues because... it is a non-issue!!

they all look so puzzled when I mention people like dawkins, sam harris, pz meyers, or on the other side... ray comfort, cs lewis, father barron, william lane craig, etc...

the only person that some of them know is hitchens, and it's only the girls; why? because he was writing in vanity fair...


//////////////////////////////////////


thanks for your input on pre-sup and the post that came; i will look into that with great interest!!!!

however, after completely misunderstanding my point above, you did not come back to it. you were the one who asks me to make one so perhaps you just got too EMOTIONALLY involved with jeremy to go back??

Stan said...

eternal,
You are right, I didn't answer your question concerning the argument for god.

I don't believe that any argument can convince a closed, shields-up, ideology. That includes the argument made there. I tried to make that clear in the post I made yesterday. One of the tactics used by Atheists is non-symmetrical skepticism, which leads inexorably to Radical Skepticism and total knowledge destruction as required to protect the ideology of total freedom.

Total freedom is completely compatible with no knowledge, no logic, and no evidence. So the denial of logic and actual physical evidence is a congenial fit with Atheism.

Stan said...

eternal,
As for your friends who have no god theory and/or don't care: I consider them to be "non-theists", asserting my right under the Principle of Atheist Opportunistic Semantic Gerrymandering to define things however I please, whenever I please. So this gives me the ability to declare that you are wrong, and if necessary, I will change the definition tomorrow in order to maintain that position.

Geez now I'm writing stupid stuff - you have contaminated me!

Jeremy said...

"I did that as a youth, long ago and far away. Your idea that I stupidly have not done that demonstrates that you haven’t figured out much about me."

"I definitely would have to prove it if I made that claim; because I don’t care about those things I never made any truth claims in their regard. "

These positions are mutually exclusive. Did you investigate those things as you claim? Or do you not care and thus never made a truth claim ... as you claim?

For example, why substitute God, when what you mean in the first place is God?

Reductio ad absurdum? Everyone knows what I mean. And the absurdity is apparent. The absurdity is not lessened by substituting one imaginary concept for another. There is no intention of fallacy here. I genuinely do not see a difference between either claim except that one you accept, and the other you dismiss as absurd. Why?

*****

And you need not be charitable, you may defeat the argument if you can

I don't need to. Your argument essentially ends at:

According to Stephen Hawking (2010) the universe started as just rules, like the law of gravity, and/or the equation collapse of a rule similar to that of Schrodinger’s equation collapse in quantum theory, except on a huge scale. Those are non-mass / energy entities and are non-physical.

And I'm not going to dispute that. I'm more than happy to concede the universe started off as a "law of gravity". THIS IS NOT DEISM.

So the limit, my own limit, is one level of deduction. This limits the process to deism.

You don't argue for anything resembling an intelligent creative force. You use the words "entity" and "agent" but they are obvious equivocations, a logical fallacy.

Mmmk? There are my logical reasons for rejecting your claim of deism/theism.

World of Facts said...

no substance, no logic, just complains and ridicule? don't you at least want to acknowledge that you misunderstood what i wrote?

haha, what am i saying, you correcting yourself, wow, that was a funny one!!

oh the irony...

so the denial of logic and actual physical evidence is a congenial fit with theism?

Stan said...

”"I definitely would have to prove it if I made that claim; because I don’t care about those things I never made any truth claims in their regard. "

These positions are mutually exclusive. Did you investigate those things as you claim? Or do you not care and thus never made a truth claim ... as you claim?”


Are you accusing me of lying? Or are you unable to understand the difference between investigating and finding no need to make a truth claim? You either do not understand the meaning of “mutual exclusion” or you purposely misuse it. It is not only possible to investigate without making a truth claim, it happens all the time.

This sort of false rebuttal is a waste of my time.

The subordinate posits were trivial, as previously explained. However, the existence of a single overarching deity is not a trivial concept, as the existence of the hordes of deniers who fight against it demonstrates. Why are you not on a Leprechaun advocacy site proclaiming your devout Aleprechaunism? It’s because it is trivial: you don't care about leprechauns. This has been explained over and over and over.

”For example, why substitute God, when what you mean in the first place is God?

Reductio ad absurdum? Everyone knows what I mean. And the absurdity is apparent. The absurdity is not lessened by substituting one imaginary concept for another. There is no intention of fallacy here. I genuinely do not see a difference between either claim except that one you accept, and the other you dismiss as absurd. Why?”


This is NOT Reductio Ad Absurdum. You continue to abuse and misuse terms which you don’t understand. And you continue to beat a dead horse after having had the reasons explained to you, demanding yet another explanation, apparently because you don’t understand the first one. So how will you understand it when it is repeated? Refusing to make a direct argument in favor of making a trivial argument shows the poverty of your position and your inability to make a direct argument in its support. It is obvious that you are merely wasting my time, which you apparently consider to be your criterion of success.

”According to Stephen Hawking (2010) the universe started as just rules, like the law of gravity, and/or the equation collapse of a rule similar to that of Schrodinger’s equation collapse in quantum theory, except on a huge scale. Those are non-mass / energy entities and are non-physical.

And I'm not going to dispute that. I'm more than happy to concede the universe started off as a "law of gravity". THIS IS NOT DEISM.”


Hawking has been excoriated for this irrational conclusion; it fails to answer the next questions: Where did mass/energy materialize from, given that gravity is a property of mass/energy? Further, where did the “law of gravity” come from? And why is it considered inviolable before mass/energy? You are thus satisfied with a pre-failed hypothesis.
(more below)

Stan said...

”You don't argue for anything resembling an intelligent creative force. You use the words "entity" and "agent" but they are obvious equivocations, a logical fallacy.

Mmmk? There are my logical reasons for rejecting your claim of deism/theism.”


You reject based on these counterarguments which you make:

(1) An “agent” is not a “deity”, or possibly a “deity” is not an “agent”.

(2) There is no argument being made.

So you (1) deny an obvious necessary characteristic of a deity; and (2) you deny that there is an argument for you to refute, even while falsely charging fallacy.

You have not shown even a single word of reasoning that indicates that the logic is in demonstrable error having violated known principles of logic and deduction, or that the empirical observations upon which it is based are in error. You merely deny that there is an argument there. So you have refuted nothing, you have merely rejected it arbitrarily using bogus reasons of avoidance and dissembling. This renders your judgment trivial and indicates that it is based either on an incapacity for comprehension, or a petulant refusal to engage with that which you cannot defeat. Your supposed defense of your Atheist ideology is as far from logic and evidence as one can get.

Again you are wasting my time.

Here’s where you stand here:

(a) Either provide empirical, experimental, replicable and replicated, falsifiable and not falsified, peer reviewed, hard data which affirms and validates your claim irrefutably that there is no non-physical agent involved in the creation of the universe, or admit that you can’t.

(b) Either provide an actual logical analysis (not silly rejectionism) of the logic provided, which demonstrates known logic principles of deduction which have been violated, and how, or admit that you can’t.

I suspect that you cannot do either (a) or (b) and also that you will not admit to your inability; this is a clear indicator of rigid fundamentalist belief with no hope of proof of any type, empirical evidence or rational logic, for that belief.

You have consistently avoided doing these things; rather you assert denialist blather rather than back up your faith with any sort of proof, either logic or evidence. And having this pointed out to you has no effect on you, as you ignore that which is inconvenient to your blind faith.

You are wasting my time.

Stan said...

eternal,
You'll have to refresh me on whatever you think I misunderstood.

World of Facts said...

stan said...

"However, the existence of a single overarching deity is not a trivial concept, as the existence of the hordes of deniers who fight against it demonstrates. Why are you not on a Leprechaun advocacy site proclaiming your devout Aleprechaunism? It’s because it is trivial: you don't care about leprechauns. This has been explained over and over and over."

wait... let me be more serious than usual here for a second, shall we? is this a legitimate question?

I'll assume the answer is yes...

so in all honesty stan, I think we just hit an important misconception here. the reason why people who write on your blog don't care about leprechaun, but care about gods, is not because we don’t care about leprechaun but do care about gods. the reason is because YOU stan, yes you, care about gods, well, at least one...

you are terribly mistaken if you think that atheists literally care about gods... atheists care about people like you because you devote a significant part of their life fighting what you call an irrational belief/disbelief, and then attack other positions that you consider to be linked to it. the only reason why atheists gather online is because people like you exist, not because gods matter. you provide the reason. without people like you stan, atheists would not bother discussing gods, just like you don't bother discussing leprechaun.

dont get me wrong though; there are all kinds of people and i am sure you could find some atheists that do care. actually, i know there are, because several new non-believers often still fear their old gods, or still fear hell or other ideas like this that were put in their mind as a child. religion is a very powerful tool to shock minds and leave an impression; it`s hard to let go of the fear.

will you correct your misconception this time?

=========

eternal,
You'll have to refresh me on whatever you think I misunderstood.

the previous misconception was this:

stan said:

"So your conclusion that all knowledge stops at the point where empiricism goes blind (a) is not sustainable by empirical data (the concept is self-defeating), (b) is a misunderstanding of empiricism as a subset of knowledge, not the superset, (c) is obviously false by your own standards."

and i replied...

but it was not my conclusion... read it again:

(April 21, 2012 1:22 AM)

yes I know, 4 days ago already, it`s like a century on this blog!!