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Atheism is reasonable, and Christianity is not

2PhiloVoid

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This is true, but it might also be said that God's existence isn't quite demonstrable on just a human whim for those who say they'd like to find out ... I wish it were.
 
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Chriliman

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I understand that atheist dont accept claims about God and that this doesn't necessarily mean they believe there is no God.

Atheism is a result of lack of love and understanding on our part.
 
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DogmaHunter

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That's nice.

However, you forgot to actually answer the question...

How do you assess the truth-value of a claim, if you can't justify the claim to be in accordance with reality?

I mean, do you at least agree that "true" are those things that are in accordance with reality and that "false" are those things that aren't?



So, how does one justify / verify religious claims, if not by matching it with the evidence of reality?

No, none of the positions above are 'special cases' that I've created.

Disagree completely. You are literally creating a "special case" for religious claims.


What does "true" mean, if not "in accordance with reality"?
And how does one verify a claim, if not by checking if it is in accordance with reality?
 
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DogmaHunter

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This is incorrect. If god were "knowable", then you could demonstrate that knowledge and you would not require "faith".

But the fact of the matter is that you DO require faith and that you can NOT demonstrate this "knowledge".

Also, I'ld point out here that most theists I talk to, DO claim that god is "unknowable".

I know what a thought experiment is, which is how I know yours needs to be adjusted. Christian theism does not claim God is unknowable.

Yet, no christian theist can demonstrate this "knowledge".
So you can claim whatever you want. The fact of the matter is that reality doesn't play along with your claim here....
 
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Nihilist Virus

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As I said, I find your gumball analogy silly. It is a poor one.

OK. Obviously you don't know what the intended analog is.

Some may find it useful, I just see it as simplistic and incoherent as I explained earlier.

Incoherent? No, the watchmaker analogy is incoherent:

The watchmaker argument is fundamentally nonsensical.

The wanderer contrasts the watch with the trees and concludes that the watch is designed. We are left to assume that the trees are not designed (if not, what property of each is being contrasted?). But then (???) happens, and we conclude that trees (and indeed all of nature) are designed.

So a premise is being contradicted, but this is not a reductio ad absurdum argument.


Conversely, the gumball analogy is spot-on.

I did not mangle it,

Yes you did. You inserted foreign elements.

I explained why it doesn't function as it is supposed to.

But, again, you clearly don't know the point of the analogy. Will you tell me that a knife doesn't function as it's supposed to when you're attempting to use it as a car?

This is because we are on the grounds of the collective authority we choose to accept or reject, not just musing ourselves.

And as I pointed out, there are many who claim to be an authority. You just LOLed that legitimate objection away.

To answer your first paragraph, this is to be done by Reason and what correlates best with our own experience.

Except sometimes the best answer is, "I don't know, and neither do you."


OK.


But that is the thing. There are people, with experiences, that assert Religion. It is not no-data, but data that needs to be overthrown, to assert atheism.

Got any objective data?

It requires insistence upon merely repeatable empirical data, as if this is the only data we have, instead of merely another form of qualia, for such an assertion.

Suppose a naked man is waving a machine gun around in the middle of the street, screaming, "I'm from the future!" Should we take him at his word or should we ask for evidence? Or should we not even take him seriously at all?

Religious people have made equally absurd claims and accompanied those claims with equally absurd actions. Is it to be taken seriously because there are so many religious people? Is there anything to your argument beyond that?


Data and evidence are not the same thing.

I'm not co-opting agnosticism. Of the gnostic-agnostic dichotomy I am agnostic, and of the theist-atheist dichotomy I am atheist.


Human experience. Great. What do I do with that?

Do you believe I'm from the future, or do I have to get naked first?



It's clear to me that you don't know what agnosticism and atheism are. I, along with most atheists, am an agnostic atheist. Most theists are gnostic theists.




You asked for my arguments and I gave them. I fail to see how you think such a flippant broadside is called for in response to what I wrote. This was thoroughly within your OP anyway, being reasonable arguments for Christianity.

If you say so.


Well, right below this you continue your rambling about what you think logic is despite having been corrected.


You are not listening. We don't use logic to make inferences. We make inferences and test their validity with Logic.

OK. But what *is* logic? I said that it is merely assumptions, definitions, and the conclusions that follow. When one is doing logic, one is pushing symbols. These symbols are ultimately meaningless because they can be reduced to primitive terms.

Nothing I'm saying here is refutable in the slightest.

Logical sequences can have all their propositions replaced with placeholding letters and still remain coherent. The actual propositions are irrelevant to the logic of the sequence, which tests the relations between them.

Correct. This is the whole point. Because the symbols have no meaning, we can substitute any meaning we like. Just like we can attach any units we like to, say, the number 2, because 2 is unitless.

You appear to equate logic with reasoning now. Curiouser and curiouser, as Alice said...

No. As I said, computers can perform logic - and that is in fact all they do - but it cannot be said that they can reason.


Great, but it's clear which of us knows what they're talking about.

I don't really care to continue any of this nonsense. You can have the last word. I don't care. If you want to continue to contribute to this thread, please just answer this question:

Do you positively affirm that all gods aside from Jehovah do not exist (and if so, what is your supporting argument?), or do you accept that other gods can exist (and if so, why is it that you believe in Jehovah but not in other gods?)?
 
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Nihilist Virus

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Chriliman

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Sigh... seems you've learned nothing during your short time here on CF.

It wouldn't be fair to blame you if you see no evidence of God's love and understanding through His people.
 
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Dirk1540

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I could not agree more! Quid has given me much sharper & deeper TECHNICAL replies to my problems than all 3 listed. Although I give Lewis the nod when it comes to extraordinary articulation...than again, who ISN'T less articulate than Lewis?
 
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Quid est Veritas?

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Got any objective data?
No one has objective data on anything. All human data is subjective. Even observation is the subjective data of those observers, with others merely trusting them on it. This would be no different than the subjective experience of the spiritual and others trusting that it had occurred. If two observe or two have spiritual experiences, they weave a inter-subjective agreement, but it is still not objective per se - so this is as much the problem of any materialist as well.

How is this an argument for only using Empirical repeatable data? This seems very tenuously connected to the part you quoted.

Anyway, usually religious claims are held from respected pillars of the community, from revered forebears, including of course scientists of old, and are not so clearly outside the cultural or quotidian spectrum. Claims are made by Naturalistic Materialists as well that can be construed as equally absurd, though. This is really not a strong argument, but more a 'People who live in glass houses should not throw stones' thing here, regarding reality testing.

Data and evidence are not the same thing. I'm not co-opting agnosticism. Of the gnostic-agnostic dichotomy I am agnostic said:
I am fully aware of this nonsensical drivel. Some person, let's call him Stultus Maior, inventing this in the 1970s or thereabouts. This is not what the words historically mean, nor are used in general. 'Atheists' abuse this, by using the traditional meaning of atheist, but then co-opting this disingenuous little framework when pressed on the basis of their position - as if they are fooling anyone.

Atheists disbelieve or lack belief in the existence of God, Agnostics don't know on this question. A Gnostic is an old religion believing in secret knowledge that will help you ascend the heavenly spheres. Simple really. All that these redefinitions you espouse do, is muddy the waters that no one knows what you are talking about. You need to ask intensively on views, as labels are so fluid, and adjectival determinitives left off or added randomly.
For a 'gnostic-atheist' is basically an atheist; a 'agnostic-atheist' is an agnostic; an 'agnostic-agnostic' tautology; an 'gnostic agnostic' nonsense; a 'gnostic theist' a theist and an 'agnostic-theist' an agnostic again. This system is frank idiocy that just doubles meaning and gives you no further information, in fact makes it less clear.

Well, right below this you continue your rambling about what you think logic is despite having been corrected.
Well, I defined Logic. You have yet to give a definition, just saying a few simplistic 'its arguments et al.' that singularly fail to do so, and that I explained why it does not constitute Logic itself.

You are still confusing the noun Logic with the adjective Logical. Assumptions, definitions and conclusions aren't logic, logic is the system of evaluating those as to soundness and validity. I am done with this, as I have tried to explain this to you in two threads already. It has grown too tedious. Please look up Logic when you have some time.

Correct. This is the whole point. Because the symbols have no meaning, we can substitute any meaning we like. Just like we can attach any units we like to, say, the number 2, because 2 is unitless.
Agreed. Then why the vehement objections in your previous thread?

No. As I said, computers can perform logic - and that is in fact all they do - but it cannot be said that they can reason.
I wasn't really talking about your computer-thing you wrote at all though. Computers don't perform logic nor do they reason. They act logically as perceived by man, but this is based off of programming and is therefore as deterministic as hardware allows, just 0s and 1s.
I agree, it is very clear. I feel like the Fox in the Aesop fable, talking to the Monkey while walking in a graveyard.
Do you positively affirm that all gods aside from Jehovah do not exist (and if so, what is your supporting argument?), or do you accept that other gods can exist (and if so, why is it that you believe in Jehovah but not in other gods?)?
I answered this in my first post, and then gave you recommendations for good sources on my reasoning when you pressed for details.
 
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KCfromNC

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That's nice. Now you just need to supply a reason for us to think one or the other is more common among believers vs. non-believers.

Sure. And that may be a mistake

Then again, maybe it isn't. No way to tell. Yay, more useful products of philosophy.
 
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KCfromNC

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Good example here of my phiosophy-as-stamp-collecting idea.
 
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KCfromNC

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Except for the fact that in some cases we can get consistent subjective data that everyone involved agrees on. Those cases aren't the ones involving the spiritual, interestingly enough. It is almost as if there actually is some sort of difference - like the word objective was coined to describe a phenomena we actually experience.
 
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2PhiloVoid

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Are you sure that in the case of defining atheism, you atheists haven't gone so overboard in paring down and reducing your definition(s) of atheism that the finer rational distinctions existing between each of you haven't been obliterated?

If the word 'atheism' is subjective (and it is)...then I'm having a hard time seeing how the perspective of each individual atheist on the matter of religious faith will by necessity employ a conception of "evidence" consistent with that of every other atheist. My point? That just as each individual Christian has a psychological "fingerprint" of faith (no two being identical, but maybe similar), each atheist also has a psychological "fingerprint" of non-belief.

The upshot of this is that our individual psychologies reflect more dissimilarity than do our actual fingerprints, especially when we try to define and construct individual conceptions of how our mental furniture relates to christian faith. So, what counts as evidence, the sufficiency of evidence, the nature of facts, the nature of reason, etc., etc., will differ between each Christian and between each atheist as well...

Welcome to epistemic relativity, KC!
 
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2PhiloVoid

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Good example here of my phiosophy-as-stamp-collecting idea.

Then, are you going to tell Peter Boghossian that his insistence upon the use of a Foundationalist framework for a person's epistemic evaluation of "faith" is just a bit of "stamp-collecting" and that it is really unneeded?
 
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ToddNotTodd

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If the word 'atheism' is subjective (and it is)...

All words are subjective. It’s why several of us keep mentioning that we don’t care if disgruntled theists don’t like how we define atheism, focus on our statements about what our positions are.
 
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Quid est Veritas?

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Well, if you do a scientific experiment, all involved agree on certain points like Empiricism and Realism. So their subjective data, being in accord with it, would be agreed on. It need not be, as look how often eyewitnesses recount different events. Similarly we cannot determine if one person's perception of 'Green' say, is the same as another's, for although we can measure lightwaves, the perceptions cannot be shown equivalent. Even raw sensory data is up for debate, as multiple interpretations of the same findings are common - just look at Medicine where the same studies are trumpeted by both opposing camps in a debate, such as Colloids vs Crystalloid fluids. I think you are really overplaying your hand.

Likewise, if a bunch of Pentocostals fall down and speak in tongues, all of them will agree on the Holy Spirit as operative agent, with glossolalia as external sign thereof - so to their minds, their subjective data will also be consistent and agreed upon.

The fact is that spiritual intersubjective experience have factors in common, is consistent between certain individuals - hence Religions exist. If it was not, then having mystic literature and books like Spirutual Exercises or Imitation of Christ would make little sense, nor shared liturgies.
We even see commonalities between religions, like Thomas Merton the Trappist monk's experience accords so well with the Buddhist of non-duality or Sufi experience of God.
 
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