No, the question is, "Is B dependent upon A".
Fair enough. In which case if we have to determine if if A exists before we can determine if B is dependent upon it.
Upvote
0
Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
No, the question is, "Is B dependent upon A".
Fair enough. In which case if we have to determine if if A exists before we can determine if B is dependent upon it.
Fair enough. In which case if we have to determine if if A exists before we can determine if B is dependent upon it.
Or if I ask whether morality can exist without invisible pink unicorns, you can confidently answer no.
It is obvious that you must have the ability to be confident about things you have not seen to be a Christian. However that proves nothing. Are you that confident that Bluetooth is used for chewing?I can confidently say that a purple swan will have feathers, even though I've never seen a purple swan.
Not really. I can confidently say that a purple swan will have feathers, even though I've never seen a purple swan. It's part of the definition of swan. Or if I ask whether morality can exist without invisible pink unicorns, you can confidently answer no.
Of course, it is necessary to define terms. By God with a capital G on Christian Forums, I assume that would be YAHWEH, which is fairly well-defined. However "morality" might not be. Is "morality" defined as "commands from God", or "a system for telling right from wrong"? The first of these would lead to the conclusion, if morality exists then God exists, however it would cause people to question whether morality exists so won't serve as a proof for God.
Why? A could be something we know doesn't exist, but that doesn't invalidate the relation. "If it rained on the Moon, the Moon would be wet". We know it doesn't rain on the Moon, but if it did, then the Moon would indeed be wet. A implies B, even though we know that A is false.Fair enough. In which case if we have to determine if if A exists before we can determine if B is dependent upon it.
Given the fact that the temperature on Moon goes from way below freezing point during the night to much more than the boiling point (which is quite low as moon has no substantial atmosphere) I doubt it would be wet. So, it is quite bad to make conclusions if you don't have all required data first.Why? A could be something we know doesn't exist, but that doesn't invalidate the relation. "If it rained on the Moon, the Moon would be wet". We know it doesn't rain on the Moon, but if it did, then the Moon would indeed be wet. A implies B, even though we know that A is false.
Well yes, that's why we know it doesn't actually rain on the Moon. But if, somehow, clouds and and atmosphere were poofed into existence on the Moon, and precipitation began to fall, is it unreasonable to conclude that, in that particular scenario, the Moon's surface would become, in the broadest sense of the term, wet?Given the fact that the temperature on Moon goes from way below freezing point during the night to much more than the boiling point (which is quite low as moon has no substantial atmosphere) I doubt it would be wet.
Well, that was my point. You asked "if it rained on the Moon. ..", I didn't know that you are thinking about "clouds and atmosphere poofing into existence". Thus I had no enough information to make a conclusion. So, the question actually is very dependent on the definition. If it was about magic rain that just happens, then the answer is "no", it would be not wet. If the definition is "magic clouds and atmosphere" then the answer could be "yes". So, actually you question has no definite answer.Well yes, that's why we know it doesn't actually rain on the Moon. But if, somehow, clouds and and atmosphere were poofed into existence on the Moon, and precipitation began to fall, is it unreasonable to conclude that, in that particular scenario, the Moon's surface would become, in the broadest sense of the term, wet?
Why? A could be something we know doesn't exist, but that doesn't invalidate the relation. "If it rained on the Moon, the Moon would be wet". We know it doesn't rain on the Moon, but if it did, then the Moon would indeed be wet. A implies B, even though we know that A is false.
That too, but even with established relationship ill-defined questions have no actual meaning as I've shown.
That too, but even with established relationship ill-defined questions have no actual meaning as I've shown.
Gotta disagree here. Atheist disagree with religion because of the religious, not because of the religion. Kinda the same problem Gandhi had with Christianity.
Let's talk about purple magic. White and black are boring.