Sorry for the low quality graphic. When I uploaded it this site must of downgraded the quality. Here is a link to dropbox where the file should be good quality.
Absolute truth conversation tree:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/y3xdrfjpsaxm4dw/Absolute-Truth 3.png?dl=0
Oh great, presuppositionalism again.
Lovely.
Just in the "blatantly obvious" department, here's one clear error: something "seeming" irrational does not make it irrational. You've looked at the possibility that our consciousness creates the universe and said, "Eh, that doesn't sound right", and as a result have discounted it out of hand without actually demonstrating that it is logically impossible. For all I know, our universe is created by our consciousness.
Seriously, though, this is all solipsism 101. Like all presups, you, in essence, bring up the issue that we cannot know anything, because we cannot logically get beyond "I think, therefore I am" without trusting our senses. Then you try to bridge that gap with god. The problem is that we have no mechanism of deciding whether or not
god is true! It doesn't get us any further. If you want to claim that your worldview has solved the problem of hard solipsism, you need to actually
demonstrate that your worldview has solved the problem of hard solipsism!
And of course, absolutely none of this is formatted in syllogisms. That's kind of a big deal. I'm having trouble figuring out the line of logic that says that if god doesn't exist, absolute truths are impossible, and phrasing it as a syllogism would make it far easier for me to grasp it. As far as I can tell, it goes something like this:
P1: Our truths and realities are all dependent on our consciousness
P2: Absolutes are not dependent on our consciousness
C: Therefore an absolute conscious mind must exist
...Except that that doesn't follow. At all. Simply because what
we hold to be true is dependent on our consciousness does not mean that the absolutes are dependent on any consciousness. Why do the absolutes need to be dependent on any consciousness? I reject that idea. A rock is a rock, regardless of whether or not a mind is there to observe it. Your case simply does not hold water. It's not even
good presuppositional apologetics. At least Matt Slick makes the case coherently and in a way that is difficult to question. At least Sye Ten Bruggencate is somewhat entertaining. Oh, and as usual, there's no case made from this impossibly vague, useless definition of god as "absolute consciousness" (a definition which demands absolutely nothing of the being beyond existence) to the very specific god of Christian dogma.
This picture actually illustrates the problem even more clearly. The atheism picture is actually
accurate - we have
no way of determining anything that may or may not exist beyond our subjective reality. Your theology does nothing to remedy this. You have to
assume that this is the case in order to come to absolutism. In other words:
Wow, you should have kept the image small. Gave it some mystery.
+1.