You learn fast, young padawan. To me, atheism is a lack of belief in the existence of deities. As such, there is nothing ridiculous about it, because it doesn't claim anything.
But it does claim something.
Quantum mechanics (my secret love) was called ridiculous, but only because it made ridiculous claims.
So atheism cannot be ridiculous, because it's the logical default (a discussion for another time, perhaps)
I just ridiculed atheism, yet you baldly claim atheism cannot be ridiculous. Either you're wrong, or we have a paradox.
Indeed. Double standards are what the FSM is all about. That an noodles.
So pasta is effective in "scrutinizing" the idea of a creative Being, but not effective in scrutinizing the idea of self-creating matter? Now there's a double standard.
I disagree. I don't think atheism undermines the validity of reason, if only because it is logical to presume our own ability to reason.
You can say it feels logical to presume, or I hope it's logical, but I don't think you can simply declare it's logical.
It's like Descartes' Demon: yes, technically, it's possible that I'm a brain in a vat and none of this exists.
Both of those ideas are just restatements of the Judeo-Christian idea: "In the beginning, God created..." Christians don't believe this reality is the reality.
But it is highly improbably, and it's simply pragmatic and useful to assume it's false (or, at least, cease considering it). Likewise, while we could assume that our ability to reason is unfounded and ultimately arbitrary, where would that get us? We could assume that we're insane, but just don't know it, and any semblance of sanity is an illusion concocted by our insanity.
But again, where would that get us?
If you stop at just saying it's pragmatic and useful, then I agree. But then so is Santa Claus. (He causes some kids to behave, at least for a little while, up until...the rude awakening.)
This isn't a problem of just atheism, this is a problem of the human mind itself. It's one of this inherent epistemological limitations I was talking about.
But theism provides the solution to the problem.
So you lament atheism for it, but you've obviously overcome it (or simply not considered it) yourself. Thus I submit it back to you.
It's not my problem. You're the one claiming that "it's physics (turtles) all the way down". I also presume our ability to reason, but I posit something to base my presumption on - a divine intelligence and reason. You however are basing your presumption on atoms in thin air.
Oh, and determinism was shot out the window by quantum mechanics - leading us neatly back to the OP.
I understand nothing of QM, so correct me if you need to, but I assume you're referring to "uncertainty"? I do know that uncertainty or chance doesn't matter when it comes to past events. Before an event happens there may or may not be many possible outcomes, but after the event, there is only one - the one which happened. If other outcomes occurred in some parallel universes, well, good for them. But whatever I'm going to have for lunch next Tuesday in this universe, after lunch happens, it will have been determined by the Big Bang.
Ah, but why do we want to live? You get back to a root cause which is fundamentally unjustifiable. What's so good about living? Mars gets along just fine without us, thank you very much.
Where are you when I need you; when I try and make this exact point to atheists? When I question how we can have morality with God, they tell me everything we are and do has been "programmed" for overall (not individual) survival in obedience to some inherent, mysterious "will to live". I ask them if they're isolated this "will to live" in a laboratory, and they look at me funny. They say even bacteria are moral because they will sacrifice themselves for other bacteria, then I ask "why don't those heroic bacteria have a 'will to live' like all the others?"
To answer your question "why do we want to live?", I refer again to Judeo-Christianity and note that God created life, and said "it is good". We are created in the image of a good God, so it is good that we "are".
But in an atheistic universe, I agree with you. Existing versus not existing is of no consequence and is a non-issue. I might result in children or even great-grandchildren, but eventually, after all of them, I will be forgotten forever. There's no one to even notice if the entire planet Earth disappeared, which it in fact will do someday. So I submit the question back to you, the atheist: "Why do we want to live?"
Our hunger pangs evolved for obvious reasons, whereas other sociological traits are a little more complicated to understand (altruism and homosexuality, say require the introduction of kin selection and an less-than-obvious understanding of what constitutes a selection pressure).
Behavioral traits are fine to talk about in the lower animals, but evolution went too far and created a Frankenstein. Birds may or may not have to build nests, but I know I don't have to do anything. Evolution gave me reason and free will, and I can use those to defy the "morals" which evolution legislated.
Ah, but that presupposes a sort of internal, objective morality. What people 'really know in their hearts' is just a poor excuse for explaining why people do terrible things. At the end of the day, you really have no idea what they 'know in their hearts'.
That's why I don't put much truck in objective morality. Even if it did exist, we wouldn't know about it, so we may as well act as if it doesn't.
If we don't agree in our hearts, why do we make excuses for doing the "wrong" thing? Whenever anyone accuses you Wiccan, of something wrong, you will in one way or another appeal to the objective standard you say you don't believe in. We have two words for people who claim not to appeal to the external standard: sociopath and psychopath, i.e., we consider them defective humans.
Well, that statement would be a metaphor. Obviously he wasn't 'truth', since truth is a property, not a thing.
It may be a metaphor also, but we don't think it's wholly a metaphor. We think Truth is a Person.
But facetious talk aside, are you saying that claims have different standards of proof? That moral claims ("This man is guilty of theft"), scientific claims ("The Higgs boson exists"), metaphorical claims ("I am the Way, the Truth, the Life"), etc, should be held to different benchmarks of proof?
I'm just saying that in real life, they in fact are. I would guess that as a scientist you probably don't recognize (and perhaps even find repugnant) the idea of "a preponderance of the evidence", which in law (in my State anyway) means a thing is effectively proved if it's found to be at least 51% likely to be true. Even within one courtroom, offhand I can think of three different standards of proof for three different types of things.
Optimism and pessimism, you mean? I've never heard of Heaven and Hell being the same place; after all, wouldn't we all experience this place in the same way?
We would experience the same thing, but the effect or reaction would not be the same. Coal reacts wonderfully to pressure, sometimes producing things of rare beauty; most other things don't react so well.
Physical sensations don't care about your outlook on life.
It's not about outlook, but about what type of thing you are. Different things interact with other things differently.
Well, yes, exactly: reason can only go so far. Reason can prove that "1 + 1 = 2" is true, but it can only substantiate that evolution is true. The certainty with which we know a statement is true is always maximised by using reason. I can't even think of anything other than reason by which we can determine a statement's truth or falsehood.
If you insist on this I can't really argue it, except to remind you not to fall into scientism, in the derogatory sense of the word. The reality you're in does not consist of a lot of individual statements to be considered. Aren't you a man first, and a scientist second? It's great to think about and study reality, but the important thing is you have to react to it and live it somehow, and if you choose "nothing", then that's your choice. I know that some modern atheists like to think they are "normal", i.e., that their's is the default position, but there is no normal; there is no default.
Aww, I was well up for a fruitless debate on semantics and arbitrary definitions.
I'm sure we'll get around to that eventually.
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