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Yeah, the way you’re suggesting I should do research is the way I do it. Anyway, you can say I’m not retaining your answers if that suits you, but my most recent responses to you have been pretty direct refutations to the reasoning you provided and you haven’t acknowledged that or pointed out how they’re missing the point. Others around here will probably tell you I’m pretty slow and stubborn, but when I’m shown to be wrong I do come around to admit it and adjust accordingly. You think you’ve provided enough to prove me wrong, but as others have noted, your arguments cut corners in a way that leads to confusion. You can’t blame me for misunderstanding you if you’re not making yourself clear.I am trying to explain it, not add to it as you are not retaining the things that have been said.
Use google for learning, not for finding defenses of ones world view. Don't look up "how to counter x" look up "what is x" and you will be straight. Enter a discussion to learn the truth, not to maintain belief.
I actually wasn't thinking of you when I said that. Though on these forums it's not unreasonable to draw such a conclusion.
I don't think they were, and I replied directly to your rebuttal. The reason I don't want to move forward is because I am tired of repeating myself over things you forgot I already stated and being continually misquoted because your eagerness to do away with this exceeds your eagerness to understand it. I told you we can continue when you go back through and try to understand it.Yeah, the way you’re suggesting I should do research is the way I do it. Anyway, you can say I’m not retaining your answers if that suits you, but my most recent responses to you have been pretty direct refutations to the reasoning you provided and you haven’t acknowledged that or pointed out how they’re missing the point. Others around here will probably tell you I’m pretty slow and stubborn, but when I’m shown to be wrong I do come around to admit it and adjust accordingly. You think you’ve provided enough to prove me wrong, but as others have noted, your arguments cut corners in a way that leads to confusion. You can’t blame me for misunderstanding you if you’re not making yourself clear.
Fair enough, but in that case, you're going to need to unpack your own evolutionary argument against naturalism a bit more, since where things stand right now, familiarity with Plantinga (or Nagel) is necessary to make sense of what you're saying.
1) Why, under naturalism, do you think that it would be surprising if our cognitive abilities matched up to reality? Does evolutionary theory truly involve cutting off the branch we're sitting on, as Darwin so famously worried?
2) Why would the existence of God solve this particular problem, and what, in this context, is meant by the word "God" at all? (I am actually curious about how you conceptualize things.)
Now, I obviously think there are approaches to naturalism that do get around this problem, though they might fall prey to very specific cosmo-teleological arguments in the process.
You replied to my rebuttal saying you had no idea what I was talking about. You pointed me back to your 50% true/false belief example when I asked you what calculus led you to a greater probability value of God’s existence than naturalism successfully explaining the reliability of cognitive faculties. That didn’t answer my question at all, and I showed you what question it did answer, which was not my question. You replied by simply restating that the conclusion undercuts the premise. I certainly don’t want you to repeat yourself again, and if you cannot recognize the flaws in your reasoning as I’ve shown them to you, I’m not going to repeat myself either. I will invite you to take your own advice, reread our conversation, and come to the conclusion that you have failed to justify your assertion that the statement “naturalism is likely true” undercuts its underlying assumptions.I don't think they were, and I replied directly to your rebuttal. The reason I don't want to move forward is because I am tired of repeating myself over things you forgot I already stated and being continually misquoted because your eagerness to do away with this exceeds your eagerness to understand it. I told you we can continue when you go back through and try to understand it.
"your arguments cut corners in a way that leads to confusion" you don't even know what that is referring to.
You replied to my rebuttal saying you had no idea what I was talking about. You pointed me back to your 50% true/false belief example when I asked you what calculus led you to a greater probability value of God’s existence than naturalism successfully explaining the reliability of cognitive faculties. That didn’t answer my question at all, and I showed you what question it did answer, which was not my question. You replied by simply restating that the conclusion undercuts the premise. I certainly don’t want you to repeat yourself again, and if you cannot recognize the flaws in your reasoning as I’ve shown them to you, I’m not going to repeat myself either. I will invite you to take your own advice, reread our conversation, and come to the conclusion that you have failed to justify your assertion that the statement “naturalism is likely true” undercuts its underlying assumptions.
Well, you’d need to run an ontological argument successfully to establish God’s logical and metaphysical necessity, and I’m more than happy to debate that with you.Not that part, I am talking about the part that did make sense. The last paragraph you made from that post. It actually went at the argument I was making.
The existence or non existence of God does not change the nature of the problem of naturalism. It doesn't address my OP because my OP didn't require God. It was purely a statement of the conclusion of naturalism. As far as the probability of Gods existence he is a logical and metaphysical necessity.
You seem to think you’ve shown me a problem with naturalism. I don’t know why you beat around the bush so much when I ask you to explain it. I don’t take naturalism as a hard stance in the way we’ve been using the word, but I’ve provided a line of reasoning under which an intelligent species’ cognitive faculties are not unlikely to reach the correct conclusion that naturalism is true. I haven seen any response to that.
The ontological argument is the hardest for people to comprehend. If you can't comprehend or retain the particulars of this relatively simple argument that even convinces non Theists I see no point in moving to an advanced argument with you.Well, you’d need to run an ontological argument successfully to establish God’s logical and metaphysical necessity, and I’m more than happy to debate that with you.
You seem to think you’ve shown me a problem with naturalism. I don’t know why you beat around the bush so much when I ask you to explain it. I don’t take naturalism as a hard stance in the way we’ve been using the word, but I’ve provided a line of reasoning under which an intelligent species’ cognitive faculties are not unlikely to reach the correct conclusion that naturalism is true. I haven seen any response to that.
You take the conclusion of the ontological argument for granted in your comparative calculus of the likelihood of naturalism vs. non-naturalism. Otherwise you wouldn’t be able to say which was more likely unless one of them was impossible, which you explicitly stated you weren’t doing. So you’ve failed in your endeavor to demonstrate that naturalism is more likely false than true by refusing to actually make the ontological argument. That’s a corner you’re cutting.The ontological argument is the hardest for people to comprehend. If you can't comprehend or retain the particulars of this relatively simple argument that even convinces non Theists I see no point in moving to an advanced argument with you.
What are you talking about??? The ontological argument is not a part of this. I merely brought it up because of the res herring about the probability of God. GO BACK AND UNDERSTAND WHAT YOU ARE DISAGREEING WITH...You take the conclusion of the ontological argument for granted in your comparative calculus of the likelihood of naturalism vs. non-naturalism. Otherwise you wouldn’t be able to say which was more likely unless one of them was impossible, which you explicitly stated you weren’t doing. So you’ve failed in your endeavor to demonstrate that naturalism is more likely false than true by refusing to actually make the ontological argument. That’s a corner you’re cutting.
If the ontological argument is proof positive that God exists, I don’t know why you bother with any other argument.
Now, I agree with you that we shouldn’t believe that naturalism as you define it is true. If it is true, we have no means by which to confirm it. But not confirmable is not the same as “likely false.” Because naturalism and non-naturalism is a true dichotomy, the best your 50% explanation can demonstrate is that naturalism and non-naturalism are equally likely. Further, if it makes absolutely no actionable difference as per your hypothetical scenario, it doesn’t even matter which is true. I hope this is clear now.
What are you talking about??? The ontological argument is not a part of this. I merely brought it up because of the res herring about the probability of God. GO BACK AND UNDERSTAND WHAT YOU ARE DISAGREEING WITH...
This does not include non naturalism. It is purley a statement of naturalism. I even gave you a guide to follow so you wouldn't strawman and still you fail. You can make a sosyourolman argument once you deny or accept the present one as it's formulated. Key word...as it's formulated.
That is not what the argument is about. GO BACK and understand it. Why is that so hard for you to do??? The only thing you should be disagreeing with is what I actually presented, and you cannot do that until you go back and understand what was said, and then retain what was said longer than 30 minutes.Look, I don’t even disagree with you on the fact that if naturalism is true, then we would have no way to confirm that that is in fact the case.
Alright, I’m done.That is not what the argument is about. GO BACK and understand it. Why is that so hard for you to do??? The only thing you should be disagreeing with is what I actually presented, and you cannot do that until you go back and understand what was said, and then retain what was said longer than 30 minutes.
It is likely false by self defeat, it doesn't require a contrast anymore than the statement "There are no three letter words in this sentence."
The only thing you have walked me through is the missrepresentation of what I have said in print. You have intentionally avoided all attempts by me to get you to walk through what I have actually said.
I cannot succeed where my interlocutor does not retain what I say between posts, misrepresents what I say and the argument, and utterly refuses to go back and fulfil their duty to understand what I have said. You do need to read it again as apparent in your replies and by forgetting your own questions that you have asked. You are by no means an interlocutor.
Look, I don’t even disagree with you on the fact that if naturalism is true, then we would have no way to confirm that that is in fact the case. YOU need to understand what it is I’M disagreeing with. I disagree with your statement that naturalism is likely false. You said it. Many times. THAT STATEMENT REQUIRES YOU TO WEIGH THE ACTUAL LIKELIHOOD OF NATURALISM BEING TRUE VS NOT TRUE. I have walked you through your own logic and shown you how it is insufficient to lead to that conclusion.
I’ll admit that my explanation of pragmatism was clumsy and I’m in the process of reformulating that thrust of my argument, but you need to take some responsibility for your failings as well. It is not productive to assume your interlocutor is just an idiot and needs to read your arguments again. If that’s all you’re going to do, I’m done.
THAT STATEMENT REQUIRES YOU TO WEIGH THE ACTUAL LIKELIHOOD OF NATURALISM BEING TRUE VS NOT TRUE. I have walked you through your own logic and shown you how it is insufficient to lead to that conclusion.
Now, I agree with you that we shouldn’t believe that naturalism as you define it is true. If it is true, we have no means by which to confirm it. But not confirmable is not the same as “likely false.” Because naturalism and non-naturalism is a true dichotomy, the best your 50% explanation can demonstrate is that naturalism and non-naturalism are equally likely. Further, if it makes absolutely no actionable difference as per your hypothetical scenario, it doesn’t even matter which is true. I hope this is clear now.
I agree. I think it's proper to talk about truth in terms of correspondence to reality, but I feel quite strongly that the importance of truth is directly related to its pragmatic value, which does require coherence. So if we're going to talk about truth, then we have to assume from the start that reality is intelligible without any justification for doing so. If you don't make that assumption, you can't hope to communicate that fact to anyone outside of yourself. But when you do make that assumption, empirical data seems to line up with the predictions it makes....I think it's enough to just say that any sort of human truth should have some pragmatic elements within it, but it should also have some elements of correspondence as well as coherence. And this is just in regard to the essence of human truth. The essence of human knowledge, however, is a bit more complex than that, and if we try to tie all of this into our considerations for Christianity, then not only is it all highly complex, it becomes downright complicated. On a practical scale, I think we should just all leave it at that and try to encourage each other to explore the world, explore possible factors that make up our individual understandings of our perceptions, and to be open to something bigger than ourselves. Whether there is a God or not, we're all in one big cosmic boat together, one that I think is fascinating any way we slice it--unless one is downright cynical about it all ...![]()
If we're going to try to justify our belief that beliefs must be justified, that leads to an infinite regress. So we’re going to have either at least one unjustified (perhaps self-justifying) belief at the foundation, or an infinite regress of beliefs justifying one another. Where I depart from proponents of a theistic solution to this dilemma is it seems to me that any founding unjustified belief should itself make testable predictions. If it doesn’t, even in principle, then we cannot tie these beliefs to reality in a way that has any pragmatic value. If we can’t tie a belief to reality, we can hardly say it’s justified. I don’t know of any theistic solutions that make testable predictions. Ergo... I don’t see how theism can solve this dilemma.