spblat
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- Apr 9, 2007
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I have done no such thing; the answer to the question of God's existence is not the foundation for my belief system, as I believe it is for yours. My only a priori claim, in my opinion, is the first bullet. That's the bedrock: that naturalism and rationalism make a suitable foundation for a world view, that we should make important decisions and draw important conclusions not on faith nor dogma, but on the basis of logic, evidence and reason. Everything else flows from that.Do you notice the breakdown from bullet 1 to bullet 2. In bullet 1 they make a statement that knowledge is derived through observation, experimentation and rational analysis. In bullet 2 they say evolution is a result of unguided evolutionary change.
Now you accurately identify the bullets as tenets but what would be the point of concluding that God does not exist. The tenets have no logical foundation from the beginning. So there is no reason to act as though there is a foundation for belief. You should just state that you have made an a priori decision that God does not exist and you have built a resulting belief system on that premise.
As to whether God exists or doesn't, I have not, as you say, concluded that He does not. I have rejected claims that He does in the same way I have rejected claims of other supernatural phenomena for which rationally supported evidence is unavailable.
EDIT: hi from a fellow Linux fan.
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