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True enough. Even if you believe in the scientific theories and findings, the absolute worst-case scenario is that God didn't do it quite like it was described in the Bible.Alessandro said:Science shows God's work.
AtheistArchon said:- Actually...
- It is very possible to rule out the existence of a god by using science and logic together. The only trick is that we actually have to DEFINE that god and his or her attributes, and those attributes must impact us in some empirically measurable way.
- For example. Any god that is defined as:
1. The creator of the universe.
2. Omnipotent.
3. Omniscient.
4. Benevolent.
- Such a god cannot exist. It is logically prohibited.
Actually, it's A that is not necessarily true. Deity only has to be powerful enough to do the actions ascribed to it: creating the universe, raising the dead, etc. It is a man-made extrapolation from the power required for these actions that deity is omnipotent.Ben_Hur said:Dude, I got an A in logic and you've shown none of the principles I learned to show a logical relationship here. You seem to imply that it is proven that items 1 through 4 are known. You're begging the question.
What you are saying (in summary), breaking it down:
A. The creater, if he exists, must be omnipotent.
B. Omnipotence is impossible.
A and B = No creator
While A is true, B has not been proven. Be is not necessarily true.
That's one way of doing it. Search the entire search space. The other way to do so is to demonstrate that the actions ascribed to deity were not done by deity. That is, to show that the universe arose thru a process other than creation by an intelligent entity. Hawking realizes that, if No Boundary is true, then that is what he has done. In No Boundary the universe just IS and wasn't created. The catch is that No Boundary has not been shown to be correct. It might be correct. But then again, creation by a deity might be correct.Bottom line is you can't prove a the non-existence of a creator without searching the entire universe and the other 6 of the 10 theorized dimensions (reference on the dimensions available upon request).
This is equivalent to saying that consciousness requires an intelligent entity -- consciousness -- to exist. You are making a revised Argument from Design. You obviously haven't been paying attention to science fiction in a while. Remember Data on the show Star Trek: The Next Generation? Here was a postulated "robot" (actually android) capable of self-programming. The result was consciousness. In more contemporary philosophical thought, Daniel Dennett has explored the issue in the books Consciousness Explained and Darwin's Dangerous Idea. Before you accept your argument as "proof", you should read and understand these.Mahdi_Golestaneh said:Imagine a robot that the network of brain has been simulated for it by electronic circuits. It re-acts like a human but can we say that it feels events, which occur, and even what itself do. How we can say a combination of materials as brain or that simulated brain circuit is aware of activities that happens in itself and feels them. I think we cannot explain it without accepting the existence ghost.
Existence of ghost is a reason for existence of god.
This is not methodologial naturalism. What you have defined is philosophical naturalism.Morat said:All science is based on methodological naturalism. That is that the natural universe can be understood as the result of natural processes and natural processes alone.
Here you contradict your definition. If supernatural processes cannot be studied by "natural" tools and methods, then you can't say that the universe can be understood by natural processes alone.As I alluded to earlier, this was chosen as the method because supernatural processes are not studieably by natural tools and methods.
Darwinian selection eliminate those "probability factors". Darwinian selection is a method for cutting down odds and making what appear to be long shots if taken in a single step to be virtual certainties if taken in small steps. See Climbing Mt. Improbable by Richard Dawkins.Drotar said:If anything, the fact that evolution, if I do come to accept it, has led us to the point we're at now, it makes it all the more likely that evolutionary processes were directed.
If I ever do come to accept evolution, I'd be forced to stick with theistic evolution. That eliminates the probability factors that we see of the eye and brain evolving, etc.
This is more a statement of faith than of knowledge. How are you so confident of predicting the future? How do you know what science might come up with? With the tools and knowledge we have now, science is agnostic. But it seems premature to speak for all time. At some future time, science might be able to settle the issue of the existence of a deity -- either for or against. To say "nothing ... could possibly come up with" is way beyond your knowledge.Nothing science could possibly come up with could ever prove God did not exist. It would at best only 'prove' that our view of Him and His creation is wrong. You may be able to prove that this god or that god does not exist, but to prove that no god exists is impossible.
That is not methodological naturalism. MN says nothing about "purely naturalistic processes" nor does it arise "for the sake of procedure". MN arises directly from how experiments are done.The Archangel Aethariel said:As others have indicated, science cannot make any *direct* claims about the existence of God, or lack thereof. Science is methodological naturalism, that is, for the sake of procedure in the discipline, all phenomena are treated as if they driven by purely naturalistic processes.
The method isn't as complete as you thought. As I just demonstrated. Without controls for the supernatural, you can't make any ontological statements. Not even about "falsification of ontological naturalism". ON may be completely false, like No Boundary may be completely false. Neither can be tested.However, while science is only methodological naturalism, the completeness of the method casts serious doubt on any falsification of ontological naturalism.
This isn't about methodological assumptions, but about the statements of a theory. The theory makes statements about the physical world, and one of the underlying statements is that air resistance is negligible. When air resistance is not negligible, the theory is false and has to be modified.However, in most cases, these methodological assumptions can and have been demostrated to be only that. Take, for example, the methodological assumption in simple mechanics that air resistance is negligible. In most cases, this assumption is perfectly valid, and for good reasons-- most objects that we fire about in the air have minimal surface area and/or are aerodynamically designed. But if we were to drop a large sheet to the ground of surface area 10 (m^2), our methodological assumption would fail us-- our sheet would fall far slower than it would be predicted to with our assumption.
Sorry, but one of the underlying assumptions here is that "natural = without the supernatural". And it is that assumption that is unjustified. With your example above, we do have a control for the paper: solid sphere. For MN, we have no control.There is no case where our methodological assumption of naturalism has failed us. If naturalism truly *was* only methodological in nature, we would expect that there would exist instances where methodological naturalism is unable to explain.
Notice the easy out: "well-confirmed". Since such instances are going to be single, you can always take Hume's way out and simply say that there can be no sufficient confirmation. For instance, Jesus' Resurrection would qualify but you will claim that is not "well-confirmed".Simply put, *one single well-confirmed and gratuitous* breach of 'natural law' would undercut all of our arguments for ontological naturalism.
Not always. For instance, there are at least two ways that deity can act on evolution and not get caught. Since both methods were found by atheists (ONs), you can't argue bias.The fact that no such event has occured can lead us to one of a few conclusions:
1) Ontological naturalism is true.
2) Ontological naturalism is false, but God/god/gods are, in the visible realm, acting entirely through processes describable by naturalism, or are simply refraining from engaging in the process at all.
Look at the specific arguments used by Ben_Hur. And look at my response. What matters are the specific claims, not the overall position. You can't arrive at a truthful position by using flawed claims and arguments.Drotar said:I understood you to be a theistic evolutionist lucaspa. Your post to Ben_Hur seems to hint at something else.
No Boundary eliminates the singularity of the Big Bang by having the time and space dimensions be exactly the same at a critical point during the Big Bang. This has nothing to do with the universe being isotropic. Hawking chose this condition arbitrarily. No Boundary gives us exactly the universe we see today but also makes the universe finite but unbounded. Think of the surface of a hyperbolic solid. An ice cream cone with the point rounded off. The Big Bang would be at the bottom of the solid but the solid is finite (a limited size) but it has no boundaries. Therefore no creation. It just IS and was never created.Also, the fact that no boundary has not be demonstrated to be correct- are you saying there is no proof that the universe is isotropic? Alas, my feeble mind is confused again.
Well, I'm not quite sure what to say here. By definition, any process that is called 'naturalistic' is "purely naturalistic"-- there are not shades of grey regarding 'just how naturalistic' is a process. Methodological naturalism, by definition, assumes that for the experiments being performed, all objects are treated as if they are only influenced by naturalistic forces. You seem to have some sort of twisted definition of 'methodological naturalism' that honestly doesn't make much sense--by definition of the words, it means an assumption of purely naturalistic processes for the sake of procedure.That is not methodological naturalism. MN says nothing about "purely naturalistic processes" nor does it arise "for the sake of procedure".
Of course. Which is exactly why, for the sake of procedure, we have to assume that none of the setups are operated on by supernatural forces. You seem to think that MN is merely saying "Ok, we can't make a control for supernaturalistic forces, so we're just not going to make judgments either way regarding them." This, however, is misguided-- you aren't looking hard enough at the process. Unless you explicitly rule out all possible supernatural interference, you cannot make any tenable claims about the causality involved in your experiment.Now comes the kicker. How about the supernatural? Where is my control for that? Which plant can I point to and say "this one has NO supernatural in it?" I can't.
As I've been saying, you're started in the right direction, but you're drawing radically incorrect conclusions-- you cannot even call the material parameters you set up to be causes unless you remove the possibility of supernatural intervention from your methodology.I am limited to looking at only material causes that I can set up "controls" for.
Your second sentence here is nonsensical-- existence of the supernatural or not plays no role in whether something is --existence is a property indepedent of whatever force holds it in existence. I can say "my chair exists" and be perfectly coherent without introducing ANY sort of judgments or controls about the supernatural. Whether God holds my chair in existence or not, the chair still IS.The method isn't as complete as you thought. As I just demonstrated. Without controls for the supernatural, you can't make any ontological statements.
I'm starting to think you just don't understand what 'methodological' means-- reach for a Webster's or dictionary.com. Saying, 'in this procedure, we assume air resistance to be negligible' is the very DEFINITION of a 'methodological assumption.'This isn't about methodological assumptions, but about the statements of a theory. The theory makes statements about the physical world, and one of the underlying statements is that air resistance is negligible. When air resistance is not negligible, the theory is false and has to be modified.
Sorry, but one of the underlying assumptions here is that "natural = without the supernatural"
Given that, at the time, there was not even a well-formulated scientific method, tools of any precision, or a group of relatively unbiased individuals who witnessed the actual event, yes, I would have to say that such an event would qualify as "not well-confirmed."For instance, Jesus' Resurrection would qualify but you will claim that is not "well-confirmed".
Which, exactly as I said before, is why science has to assume that supernatural influences are absent from ALL 'test tubes,' or it can make no claims whatsoever. Butler makes absolutely no sense-- claiming that 'natural' "requires an intelligent agent" makes just as much sense as my equally arbitrary claim that 'orange' "requires a homicidal tuna fish." Moreover, claiming that the only 'distinct' (whatever he expects people to think of that) meaning of 'natural' is "fixed" or "settled" is complete hogwash-- 'natural' is defined in a great number of ways in a great variety of disciplines. I'm inclined to think Butler either doesn't know what he's talking about, or is just promoting transparently flimsy arguments. ("I'm going to define this term as X, claim it can be nothing BUT X, then proceed to assert that X requires Y, even though there is no apparant reason to think this is true. Then, I will assert that X->Y, and prove my point of Y!" Great argument, that.)you can't set up two test tubes and say "supernatural is in this one but absent from that one" you don't know whether any "natural" process will work without the supernatural.
Will they burn to form water without my amorphous, metaphysically prior shade of blue? Or maybe, will you be able to post tommorow without the intervention of Descartes' Evil Demon? Or, yet, does this post even exist unless Santa Claus does the tango while drinking a dry vodka?? Who knows!! Then again, who cares? Because wild skepticism supported by nothing but logical possibility and assertion aren't treated as philosophically valid objections.Will oxygen and hydrogen burn to form water without Butler's "intelligent agent"?
Oh, pssh, of course not. Atheists are never biased. I love you roll your assumptions and a hidden ad hominem into the same sentenceNot always. For instance, there are at least two ways that deity can act on evolution and not get caught. Since both methods were found by atheists (ONs), you can't argue bias.
Both of those cases are covered EXPLICITLY by "God/god/gods are, in the visible realm, acting entirely through processes describable by naturalism." What else did you think I meant, if not exactly those kind of scenarios?1. Deity could provide certain mutations. Directing a cosmic ray such that it made a genetic change in a germ cell is not beyond deity. That would be a "gratuitous" incident, by your definition, but undetectable.
2. In the past, deity could have engaged in artificial selection. That is, deity could cause any number of "natural" phenonmenon, like lightning, to eliminate individuals like human breeders cull herds. That would also be "gratuitous" but would be undetectable.
LOL! Semantic games. Remember the term is methodological naturalism. That "methodological" is part of the term, and that term rules out the "purely" part.The Archangel Aethariel said:Well, I'm not quite sure what to say here. By definition, any process that is called 'naturalistic' is "purely naturalistic"-- there are not shades of grey regarding 'just how naturalistic' is a process. Methodological naturalism, by definition, assumes that for the experiments being performed, all objects are treated as if they are only influenced by naturalistic forces.
I want you to look at the sources I am using carefully. NONE of them are creationist or even theist.You seem to have some sort of twisted definition of 'methodological naturalism' that honestly doesn't make much sense--by definition of the words, it means an assumption of purely naturalistic processes for the sake of procedure.
We don't make that assumption. Rather, we wouldn't be able to identify the supernatural even if they were there.Of course. Which is exactly why, for the sake of procedure, we have to assume that none of the setups are operated on by supernatural forces.
Bingo! Exactly right!You seem to think that MN is merely saying "Ok, we can't make a control for supernaturalistic forces, so we're just not going to make judgments either way regarding them."
Sure I can. I can say the material processes discovered by science are sufficient as material processes. What you don't get is that creationism is a material process. Don't let the invocation of God fool you. Creationism is saying that entities are made thru a material manufacturing process other than the one we observe thru science. Species are manufactured elsewhere and placed on the planet. Earth did not form by gravity, but was manufactured elsewhere and placed in its orbit. Life did not arise by chemistry on the earth, but was manufactured elsewhere and placed here. Or elements were rearranged by different processes than we have found now such that life resulted.Unless you explicitly rule out all possible supernatural interference, you cannot make any tenable claims about the causality involved in your experiment.
Sure I can. I can say that plants require these material components for growth. Do they also require an additional component: a supernatural component? I don't know. I've never seen a plant where I know it does not have a supernatural with it so I don't know if the plant will survive without it.Unless you say, for the purpose of procedure, "the factors governing the growth and death of these plants are assumed to be purely natural," you CANNOT come back and say that plants require air, water, or anything else involved in your experiment.
Does not follow. Death from lack of water is due to lack of water, because I have an identical plant with water and it doesn't die. What you are trying to say is that the material components are not necessary, but that does not follow at all. They are necessary. The question is whether they are sufficient. Is there a requirement for another, supernatural, component?After all, if the supernatural remains a possibility, a plant's apparant death from lack of water just as well may have been the result of a pernicious divine will.
Changed the claim. I was speaking about causes. You changed it to "existence". You contradict yourself. If God holds your chair in existence, then the chair's existence is not "a property independent of whatever force holds it in existence." If existence depends on God sustaining it, then it's not "independent". In this case, the statement "the chair exists" depends on God sustaining the four basic forces such that matter can exist.existence of the supernatural or not plays no role in whether something is --existence is a property indepedent of whatever force holds it in existence. I can say "my chair exists" and be perfectly coherent without introducing ANY sort of judgments or controls about the supernatural. Whether God holds my chair in existence or not, the chair still IS.
You confused yourself by mixing the method of testing a theory with the theory itself. It's not a "methodological assumption" but rather a restriction of the theory: Objects will fall at this speed as long as there is no air resistance. Therefore, to test that statement, you have no air resistance. The method comes from the statements of the theory.I'm starting to think you just don't understand what 'methodological' means-- reach for a Webster's or dictionary.com. Saying, 'in this procedure, we assume air resistance to be negligible' is the very DEFINITION of a 'methodological assumption.'
A process is either naturalistic, or it is not. Where are you getting the idea that 'natural = with the supernatural,'Sorry, typo. That should have read "natural = without the supernatural".
Now to repeat, that is a statement of faith, not of science. Science can't tell you if the supernatural is present or not. No controls.
All those criteria are irrelevant. Who could have witnessed the event and not been called "unbiased" and are you saying accurate observation could only occur if you have a well-formulated scientific method? Nonsense.Given that, at the time, there was not even a well-formulated scientific method, tools of any precision, or a group of relatively unbiased individuals who witnessed the actual event, yes, I would have to say that such an event would qualify as "not well-confirmed."
As I said, you can always find a way to use "well-confirmed" to weasel out of anything. Here's how Hume did it:
The essay is "An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding". "Where shall we find such a number of circumstances, agreeing to the corroboration of one fact [miracle]? And what have we to oppose to such a cloud of witnesses, but the absolute impossibility or miraculous nature of the events which they relate? And this surely, in the eyes of all reasonable people, will alone be regarded as sufficient refutation."
This isn't arbitrary or unconnected like your strawman. Butler is hypothesizing what is behind or in addition to the material causes we study. He is hypothesizing that, in order to occur regularly and each time, the process requires an intelligent agent. Again, show me the experiment that shows Butler to be wrong. Your noise and thunder shows you can't.Butler makes absolutely no sense-- claiming that 'natural' "requires an intelligent agent" makes just as much sense as my equally arbitrary claim that 'orange' "requires a homicidal tuna fish."
Darwin didn't think the argument was so flimsy. He included the quote in the Fontispiece to Origin of the Species.Moreover, claiming that the only 'distinct' (whatever he expects people to think of that) meaning of 'natural' is "fixed" or "settled" is complete hogwash-- 'natural' is defined in a great number of ways in a great variety of disciplines. I'm inclined to think Butler either doesn't know what he's talking about, or is just promoting transparently flimsy arguments.
You left out "stated". I can see why. Think about it. When we say "natural process" aren't we referring to processes that are fixed or settled in certain circumstances? Like your sphere and sheet of paper dropping. In those circumstances, the "natural" behavior of those objects is "stated" by the law of gravity, isn't it?
If your shade of blue or Descarte's Evil Demon is an intelligent entity that sustains the universe, maybe not. What you are doing now is just trying to duck by changing names. But, a rose by any other name ...Will they burn to form water without my amorphous, metaphysically prior shade of blue? Or maybe, will you be able to post tommorow without the intervention of Descartes' Evil Demon?
Really? Want to try talking about tachyons?Because wild skepticism supported by nothing but logical possibility and assertion aren't treated as philosophically valid objections.
There was no ad hominem. I happen to admire the work of both Daniel Dennett and Richard Dawkins. It's just that you couldn't dismiss the arguments as coming from apolgetics. But you managed to try to dismiss the arguments anyway! Not deal with them, but dismiss them.Oh, pssh, of course not. Atheists are never biased. I love you roll your assumptions and a hidden ad hominem into the same sentence
OK, so you have the bases changed by some process not described by naturalism or have the organisms in the past drop dead by supernatural means during artificial selection. Could you still detect them by science? If so, show us how.Both of those cases are covered EXPLICITLY by "God/god/gods are, in the visible realm, acting entirely through processes describable by naturalism." What else did you think I meant, if not exactly those kind of scenarios?
No...a process is either treated as naturalistic, or treated as not naturalistic. Maybe you're just misunderstanding what I'm saying, although I thought I was clear. However, since this is somewhat ancillary to the real contention, I'm just going to ignore this for now.LOL! Semantic games. Remember the term is methodological naturalism. That "methodological" is part of the term, and that term rules out the "purely" part.
See, there you go again. Why would I care if the sources are creationist or theist? A qualified professional in the field is just that, regardless of their beliefs.I want you to look at the sources I am using carefully. NONE of them are creationist or even theist.
No, I've never committed myself to the position that a supernatural process is necessarily material. Moreover, I'm not sure why you would think that. It does not at all seem inconsistant to think that supernatural processes would be immaterial for a great deal of their causal chain, until they possibly terminate in material and physical results. Presumbly, this is how any supernatural entity such as god, ghosts or whatnot would work on the world.The problem is that you are using "supernatural" the same way as creationists. For you "supernatural" is some other material process than the one being studied. For MN supernatural is another component to a complete process.
I want to say that? I never knew. The best I'm ever going to say is there is no reason to believe immaterial processes are at work. A categorical denial of the possibility of supernatural processes would clearly be absurd. I cannot ever say "there is no god of any sort," "there are no supernatural influences of any kind," or any other such universal negatives. You clearly know enough about the subject to know better, so why strawman my position as something absurd?What I cannot say, but what you want to say, is that the material processes are the only processes at work.
No, really, you can'tSure I can. I can say that plants require these material components for growth.
Now we're starting to get to the second fundamental difference. You cannot have evidence that material causes alone are adequate. It is impossible to mop of the every last drop of skepticism as to produce such evidence. But the argument here is not about being able to produce that kind of evidence-- we both know it can't be done. The real point is that you can't produce any evidence to show that supernatural causes so much as exist, or even have a relationship with the world. As I have said multiple times thus far, and you keep avoiding, the point is not that ON can be proven as a definitive truth (it cannot be, ever), but that there is no justifying reason whatsoever for believing that supernatural forces exist.You are asserting, without evidence, that the material causes alone are adequate.
I'll assume you just misread me. 'Existence' is an independent property from 'reason for existence,' in that they are not the same thing. That is the only sense in which independence is required. Just as I don't need to make ANY sort of judgments regarding the manufacturing plant or chemical makeup of paint to tell you what color a bike is, I don't need to make ANY sort of judgments regarding god or the supernatural to tell you that something exists. I am perfectly justified in making ontological claims such as "I am" without making a "control" for the supernatural. If you're going to dispute this, I suggest you explain the problems you see with me making the ontological statement "I am." I mean "independent" as "distinct," not as "totally unrelated." I was unclear on that, I should have just said distinct and avoided the confusion. Bad word choiceYou contradict yourself. If God holds your chair in existence, then the chair's existence is not "a property independent of whatever force holds it in existence." If existence depends on God sustaining it, then it's not "independent".
Oh, ok. If accurate measurements, unbiased observers, and an accurate method are all "irrelevant" to making an event well-confirmed, I would really, really love to hear what you think is a better method. Also, I would point out that I said "relatively unbiased." No-one is perfectly unbiased, but you can do a lot better than sympathetic cult members.All those criteria are irrelevant. Who could have witnessed the event and not been called "unbiased" and are you saying accurate observation could only occur if you have a well-formulated scientific method? Nonsense.
And I'm hypothesizing that, in order to occur regularly and each time, the property 'orange' requires a 'homicidal tuna fish' somewhere in the world. Again, show me the experiment that shows me to be wrong. Just because Butler pretends to be reasonable does not make him so-- his claim is just as vacuous and arbitrary as my own.This isn't arbitrary or unconnected like your strawman. Butler is hypothesizing what is behind or in addition to the material causes we study. He is hypothesizing that, in order to occur regularly and each time, the process requires an intelligent agent. Again, show me the experiment that shows Butler to be wrong. Your noise and thunder shows you can't.
Actually, I left out stated because I didn't feel like writing all three, given that they're all synonyms are used here. Of course, maybe it was a conspiracyYou left out "stated". I can see why. Think about it. When we say "natural process" aren't we referring to processes that are fixed or settled in certain circumstances? Like your sphere and sheet of paper dropping. In those circumstances, the "natural" behavior of those objects is "stated" by the law of gravity, isn't it?
Not particularly, given that zippy subatomic particles don't have anything to do with the bullet you're trying to dodge. As a general rule, if you require theoretical physics to prove your point in a debate that isn't explicitly about theoretical physics, you're probably just grasping for justification. (This it the First Corollary to the First Law of Internet Debate, which states the same thing, except in regard to Nazis and Hitler.) Argument by obsfuscation isn't a very good strategy.Really? Want to try talking about tachyons?
I love how agreeing with what you wrote and saying I already stated that myself counts as a "dismissal"It's just that you couldn't dismiss the arguments as coming from apolgetics. But you managed to try to dismiss the arguments anyway! Not deal with them, but dismiss them.
I'd better be careful not to agree with you again, eh? Wouldn't want to come off as dismissive Please respond.Drotar said:I understood you to be a theistic evolutionist lucaspa. Your post to Ben_Hur seems to hint at something else.
Also, the fact that no boundary has not be demonstrated to be correct. Could you elaborate on this.
Third, how would no boundary prove that there is no God?
