We've been over this.
It seems as though insisting that language conform to individual's preconceived notions is the thing to do lately.
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We've been over this.
I wasn't referring to Paul's conversion or the resurrection. I was saying that bit in Romans 1, his belief that the existence of God can be seen "from what has been made," is reasonable given the model of the world that he was working from. But we're working from better models now, and I don't think his conclusion holds. The idea that God's qualities or even existence are obvious in light of our current knowledge of the universe is not something I would agree with.Paul dos the make his conclusions to convert from Judaism to Christianity based on his scientific ignorance. We still don't have an explanation for how professionally executed individuals who have been pronounced dead by professionals could possibly rise from the dead a few days later given our current science.
Entertaining! Forget about his experience of the risen Chrst.
Oh or are you going to delete that experience. Okay find I delete the experience of all data gathered by scientists if a: it is not repeatable ( there go all the forensic sciences) and if it is not representative of modern knowledge.
Newton should be thrown out due to the fact he was ignorant of quantum mechanics. Genius, pure genius.
Sounds like you may have read to much Hume and his circular arguments against miricales due to his presumption of naturalism.
Correct, but it does have weight. And if ones detractors (the Jewish leaders of Jesus' day) don't challenge the facts of Jesus' miracles or his claims, if he has over 500 witnesses to his being risen, then the alternative hypothesis that explains those will have to hold up.
Now one can not reasonably explain the willingness of the disciples to go to their deaths in services of a story about Jesus they knew to be a lie.
Your method seeks to poison the wells to ALLhistorical witnesses, and ALL EXPERIENCE, which destroys all of history including science but if we accept your epistemology would couldn't possibly find any metaphysical cause as your method would yield a false negative.
Acts consistently presents a minimal facts case of Jesus' life, miracles and claims to be God, all attested to by his enemies followed by claims of a resurection easily disproved by the religious leaders of the day, by producing a body.
Acts 2,13-19
Hmm does light have wave and particle properties?
Does the expansion of space cause gravity?
It seems to build out an ontological account of those existing forces there is more than a little jiggery-pokery (not sure why someone defending philosophical naturalism would say this given the about of questionable jiggery-pokery involved in giving that account).
You can't even prove the reality of the past, other minds, and an external world. Science relies on those assumptions and more.
I'm not anti-science but you keep on assuming the only things that exists are material which will leave you with a 2500 year-old problem of answering the question what is the first cause of material, since it can't be material and there can't be an infinite causal regress.
did not delete the experience. I refer to it in the next paragraph:
Not the case. He called himself the least of the disciples.he lumps himself in to the same category as those that supposedly saw the physically resurrected Jesus (Acts 1
even Bart Erhman and Dominic Crossen, two of the biggest skeptics who are also scholars of NT and NT history both would deny your claim howeveThe church re-wrote history and we are left to try to sort out the mess. That's one of the big reasons I am skeptical.
I am saying that proving something exists is generally easy.
Sure understanding how light works and its properties is incredibly difficult. But to prove that light exists? Uhh..grab a flashlight and turn on the switch. Voila. No jiggery-pokery required. Easy. Simple. Obvious.
forensic scientists, archeologists, mathmaticians, Philosphers are in the same boat as you try and put theists, in terms of epistemically presuppositions. Your view, in an attempt to destroy theism and produce philosophical naturalism does huge damage to the majority of what counts for knowledge at universities around the world.Theists just add a strange and unnecessary assumption to the bucket which I see no need for.
Zeno. Or for more modern treatment, Koon, Rowe, Hilbert, or Bertrand Russell discusses a similar paradox, which he called the Tristam Shandy paradox.Why can't there be infinite causal regress?
strange. So then science can't make a pronouncement on cosmological beginnings. Fine. Then why couch them as science? Just recognize that science has limits. Your understanding of the world has only a small amount of data from science anyways.are highly theoretical and likely cannot ever be tested sadly. It will likely always be an unknown
But we're working from better models now
False.
If you toss a coin and not show me the results, I can "actively disbelieve" both these claims:
- it is heads
- it is tails
and withhold believe in both until I have more data to make an informed decision.
We've been over this.
Your interpretation is demonstrably wrong, as is proved from the very next post (the source which she was paraphrasing explicitly states the opposite of your interpretation). The reason you come to such false conclusions is because you twist language to mean something that it does not.
As every good philosopher knows, we don't "prove" things.
Oh? Says who? I don't even consider you a philosopher, much less a good philosopher. I know that you claim to have a degree, but even in spite of the dire state of academia I do not believe such a claim. Therefore your words have very little authority.
So, do you have any evidence that language is demonstrably objective?
Anyone who has sat through an English class and owned a dictionary knows the answer to this. The others are just playing word games.
For example, if there was a town in which every single inhabitant switched the terms "happy" and "sad",...
...They would be corrected as soon as they ran into an English professor, lexicographer, or even a generally knowledgeable non-sophistic person for that matter. And if they used such false vocabulary on their English paper they would be docked points.
No they wouldn't. As I said, everyone in the town uses the words in the same way. They are correct, to them. The dictionary the town uses defines "happy" and "sad" in the way they use them (opposite the way we use them). Lexicographers in the town would agree with their usage, because a lexicographers job is to report how people use language, not dictate how they should use language. They wouldn't be docked points on an English paper, because the teachers know the proper usage of the words, to them. In fact, if you went to the town and took an English test, you'd be docked points, because you'd be using the terms incorrectly, to them.
...They would be corrected as soon as they ran into an English professor, lexicographer, or even a generally knowledgeable non-sophistic person for that matter. And if they used such false vocabulary on their English paper they would be docked points.
Usage is not determined by a single town.
Lexicographers do not examine a single town to determine usage.
Your interpretation is demonstrably wrong, as is proved from the very next post (the source which she was paraphrasing explicitly states the opposite of your interpretation). The reason you come to such false conclusions is because you twist language to mean something that it does not.
I think perhaps you are concerned I may be an advocate for scientism; rest assured I am not. I agree that we need more than science when we deal with metaphysics (also, I’m not an atheist who shies away from that word, or who imagines that they don’t hold any metaphysical views whatsoever). However, since our beliefs about metaphysics are based mostly on our intuitions and inferences we make based on what we see in the world around us, science has a role to play here.While obviously true, there is no cosmological account (philosophically speaking), that science can make about the universe! It is outside the bounds of science as it must necessarily transcend space, time, matter, and energy! What does science possibly have to contribute?
While I share with (it would seem) most people that there being some sort of brute fact or “uncaused cause” is the most likely explanation of why the universe exists, I don’t rule out the possibility of infinite regress. I don’t reject it intuitively the way some people do, and arguments to show its impossibility have not been convincing to me. Still, it doesn’t make as much sense to me as the option I’ve chosen. That aside, none of my intuitions drive me towards thinking that the uncaused cause must be a personal being, and my view of the evidence actually goes against that conclusion.Paul's context is to the grandeur of creation being awe-inspiring. This still hold true today. And it also gets everyone thinking how did this come to be? But they don't stop with the Inflationary Model. They ask what caused that and seem to know that we can't have an infinite causal regress.
What is the explanatory ultimate? That is the role nature plays. Why am I here? Is there meaning? How should I live my life? These are not scientific questions, it seems. Nor does cosmology (scientifically speaking), have much to do with it.
So this is a conversation I can get behind. It did seem to me that your method led inextricably to scientism. But your comments have cleared up my misunderstanding.I think perhaps you are concerned I may be an advocate for scientism; rest assured I am not. I agree that we need more than science when we deal with metaphysics (also, I’m not an atheist who shies away from that word, or who imagines that they don’t hold any metaphysical views whatsoever). However, since our beliefs about metaphysics are based mostly on our intuitions and inferences we make based on what we see in the world around us, science has a role to play here.
Science also has a role to play if you’re a fan of natural theology, which Paul clearly is based on the passage in question. Science represents our best efforts to explain and understand the natural world, and if our understanding of the natural world can correctly inform us about the nature of God, then a scientific view will benefit us more than a pre-scientific view, where the Earth is the center of the universe, the universe is relatively small, where living things were specially created in their current forms, etc.
These are all things that Paul probably thought, and drove him to his conclusion that, when you look at nature, it’s obvious that there is a God that created it, and that God is some sort of powerful, personal, intelligent being. If I thought the universe looked the way Paul thought it did, I’d come to the same conclusion. But since that is not the universe we live in, Paul’s conclusion is not so obvious, and when people like mark kennedy quote Romans 1 as proof that even atheists must share Paul’s conclusions on some level, I think they do so in error.
Of course it’s possible to have an up-to-date, scientifically accurate picture of the universe and still come out thinking that the evidence overwhelmingly supports the conclusion that there is an intelligent creator, but that passage in Romans 1 has nothing to do with that, and using it as a club against atheists is not only inaccurate, it’s uncharitable and borderline dishonest in my view.
While I share with (it would seem) most people that there being some sort of brute fact or “uncaused cause” is the most likely explanation of why the universe exists, I don’t rule out the possibility of infinite regress. I don’t reject it intuitively the way some people do, and arguments to show its impossibility have not been convincing to me. Still, it doesn’t make as much sense to me as the option I’ve chosen. That aside, none of my intuitions drive me towards thinking that the uncaused cause must be a personal being, and my view of the evidence actually goes against that conclusion.
And as I said previously, our inferences play a role in determining our metaphysics, and science must play a role in those inferences. So while there are matters where science is not the tool that we use, we ignore or contradict our findings in the scientific realm to our own detriment.
...They would be corrected as soon as they ran into an English professor
i hope they dont run into your professerAn american english professor, or a brittish english professor?