Many thoughtful replies. You’re all invited over for whiskey and cigars on my back porch to finish hashing this out! Several replies acknowledged the fallibility and limitations of the human mind and one at least admitted the necessity of unproven basal axioms. These replies were therefore consistent with my earlier remark about there being no logical stopping place between theism and universal skepticism or solipsism. In fact, your replies were so consistent with that earlier remark that I now wonder whether the remark came across as commonplace rather than provocative.
Or simply dismissed as a vacuous assertion. We get a lot of that in this forum.
Some of you made arbitrary assertions, but perhaps these were intended only as “tentative conclusions,” as Davian put it. Even a basal axiom based on nothing is arbitrary and therefore irrational.
I'm glad I based mine on something.
And testing a basal axiom would necessarily involve circular reasoning—proving reason by reason. But what has consistent materialism (this is the kind of atheism I have in mind)
I have never heard of this type of atheism before. Is not atheism a position on deities, and not metaphysics? As I do not identify as an atheist, I won't dwell on this.
to do with something immaterial like a basal axiom? Anyway, both theists and atheists can have tentative conclusions.
I have not seen that reflected in the manner in which the theists in these forums appear to hold their beliefs.
For the purposes of this series of posts, I would distinguish between conjecture and knowledge.
Some impressions may have been mistaken. For example, there is no “worry” that gravity or other natural processes might not always work the same way.
Should there be?
The question is more basal, How is it that we, both you and I, know, yea, even know with certainty, that there is such a thing as uniformity in nature?
Observation.
As mentioned before, that natural processes worked uniformly in the past is an unproven assumption.
I don't see why they need be 'proven'. There is plenty of evidence for it.
Also that they are working uniformly now cannot be proven.
Indeed. Perhaps you should lay off the alcohol if this is an issue for you. I never touch the stuff myself.
Our present observations may be appearances only and/or simply the products of chemicals in our heads that necessarily give rise to thoughts of uniformity, thoughts over which we actually have no control. That natural processes will work uniformly in the future is also an unproven assumption. Even assuming that the processes are natural (whatever “natural” is assumed to mean) is no more than a hypothesis.
Nobody addressed the Harambe in the room of materialistic atheism, the fact that the cranial chemical processes producing what we perceive to be cognition and volition are parts of a system of necessity, over which we have no control and which have no necessary connection to the external world outside our heads, assuming there is an actual external world and assuming we really do have heads.
If what we experience is consistent, persistent, observable, measurable, and behaves in a manner in which we can make reliable predictions, and for all intents and purposes it *is* reality. This is where the solipsism arguments fail.
Have I not mentioned this already?
Seriously, if I were going to be a skeptic, I would not be satisfied with half measures.
Yet as a theist, you are satisfied with so little.
One of the points that Bowne makes is that the knowledge of uniformity, for example, does not flow logically from the atheistic hypothesis.
What is a atheistic hypothesis? I have not heard of such a thing.
Atheism is not a worldview. Are you new here?
the atheist has justifiable grounds for worrying about uniformity, if he cared to ponder the question.
When he is not pondering the existence of deities, that is.
The fact that the atheist does not worry about uniformity is logically an inconsistency. But it is a felicitous inconsistency.
If I ever run into one of these atheists, I'll be sure to tell them that.
The atheist in this regard behaves just as a theist does, believing that there is uniformity in nature.
Certainly, if he bases his views on observation. The theist, however - would he not have "nature" responding to the whim of his "god"? Would it not be the
theist that could not depend on uniformity in nature?
But the theist has a basis for his knowledge of uniformity, viz., a faithful Creator.
How circular. Their belief in a "creator" (needed for this "uniformity") as a basis for their belief in uniformity.
In this sense, the atheist is borrowing from theism, that is, borrowing a benefit of knowledge that flows logically only from theism. Put more syllogistically (by me, not Bowne), knowledge is possible only if God exists; we know some things; therefore God exists.
As an ignostic, perhaps it would be time to ask exactly what do you mean by "God". I gather that we are talking of the "God" character in the Bible, that [allegedly] walked and talked in a garden that has no evidence of having existed, poofed people and animals into existence, and later, in a manner contrary to the modern understanding of genetics, populated the planet with using a tiny group of individuals and animals that survived a global flood in an unbuildable boat, a flood that killed the dinosaurs in a manner that only *appears* to be 65 million years ago, because the Earth is really only somehow 6000 years old, yet remains, by every object measure to date indistinguishable from nothing?
This is the "God" that you are asserting is needed to make knowledge possible? And, to be clear, virtually all of modern scientific knowledge would have to be wildly inaccurate to accommodate such a "god" story as reality? Anything you want to add to that?
The analog to this kind of "borrowing" in the moral universe is the atheist who behaves inconsistently with his worldview by affirming good and evil, affirming the voice of conscience as authoritative, valuing human life above animal life, honoring self-sacrificial love, despising treachery, asserting human rights, recognizing and imposing moral duties, etc. None of these moral behaviors flow logically from a world of materialistic necessity and brute facts mindlessly thrown together.
Now that you have propped up and punched a hole in that strawman, does it leave a metaphysical hole big enough for you to drag your 'god' through?
But all are easily justified on a theistic basis,
If you are making it up as you go along, you can justify anything.
indeed on a specifically Judeo-Christian basis.
Are you Jewish now? Or have they got it all wrong too?