anonymous person
Well-Known Member
I was asking you for the criteria. You keep being circularly general and vague.
If a premise has more going for it than against it, I say it is more plausible than its negation. I determine whether or not something is in favor for a premise or against it by looking at subject specific data.
This is my general method. Specifics enter in the more specific the premise is. Common sense is indispensible here.
I have had very good results in assessing things this way and most of the times my assessments take a matter of seconds.
Other than calculable, stastitical probabilities - not at all. And even then, I don´t conclude from probablities on truth.
Now, has the topic changed from propositions about the origin of everything to events in my day to day life? Tss.
So you never say things like "it will probably be worth looking into", or "it's plausible" when asked a question about your view on a particular matter without without taking the time to use probability calculi?
That's interesting. I would never be able to do that. The sheer impractacality of that prohibits me from doing so and even if I could do that, I wouldn't need to or want to, for as I mentioned earlier, I have done very well without having to use probability calculi in my day to day life.
The discussion I think, can be concluded here. The evidence I have for the existence of God requires one to be comfortable with probability, not certainty. There is no evidence for God that will convince everyone or show that God exists with certainty. However, you can know God personally for yourself. When you do, you will not need arguments to know He lives!
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