- Sep 22, 2020
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Oh? Seems it is, because the question is where do we start our investigation? You start with something you don't know is true. I start with something that can't possibly be false.Your religion is irrelevant to the question.
Yeah, and my question is why do you need the word physical if you're identifying the same thing? What are you supposed to be distinguishing, exactly?The question is on the nature of "physical" versus "natural".
The value is in the resolution of a discrepancy in observations. The disappearance of the inconsistency which allows the four propositions to stand together without conflict. If they were the same thing nothing would change by shifting terms around. But something changes when we do. So they don't mean the same thing. As atheists love to trot out:do not multiply entities needlessly. If we only mean by physical that it is natural, then there is no need for a different term. Yet you seem to require that the term be preserved and not just take natural in terms of itself. You can't just say nature is nature. You claim they're the same thing, so what difference would it make to let go of the word physical? Why do you needlessly multiply entities?Differentiate between the two in a fashion that gives even a scintilla of value to your "solution" to the "exclusion problem" as stated in the OP.
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