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I didn't say that. I said you made up the term 'persuasive doubt'. Because a) it doesn't mean anything and b) no-one else has apparently thought to use it.I didn't make up inductive reasoning.
You mean inductive scrutiny, or. . .?
I simply want to know where "persuasive doubt" ranks on the ladder of soundness and scrutiny.
Well, as atheists, we’re at a bit of a disadvantage, as his guy in the sky gives him the lion’s share of “objective honesty.” It’s a gift he’s even talking to us at all.I didn't say that. I said you made up the term 'persuasive doubt'. Because a) it doesn't mean anything and b) no-one else has apparently thought to use it.
And you've used it more than once. It would help if you said 'actually, what I meant to say is...' rather than 'hey, here's a term I didn't make up!' Do you move goalposts for a living?
Can we agree to each answer simple questions when they arise? I've asked a few but I'm getting a lot of hat and no sign of cattle (with due reference to Hitch for that).
I didn't say that. I said you made up the term 'persuasive doubt'. Because a) it doesn't mean anything and b) no-one else has apparently thought to use it.
I mean deductive reasoning from premises I accept as true, with all the terms in the argument being well-defined.
Sorry, you lost me. What do you mean by "persuasive doubt"?
So I'm reading this as the claim that you're the final judge as to what is true or not.
I'm not allowed to use adjectives?
I'm asking you to define your terms so that I can answer your question. When you say "persuasive doubt", do you mean the belief that an assertion is probably false?I simply want to know where "persuasive doubt" ranks on the ladder of soundness and scrutiny.
Sorry, you lost me. What do you mean by "persuasive doubt"?
Well, as atheists, we’re at a bit of a disadvantage, as his guy in the sky gives him the lion’s share of “objective honesty.” It’s a gift he’s even talking to us at all.
Word salad. Hit me up when you’re serving meat and potatoes, sonny.
I was summing up the following statement, "I do not know of any proofs of the existence of God that I accept as fully sound proofs, holding up to the same kind of scrutiny that we use in our everyday work as mathematicians and computer scientists."
"I accept" = persuasive
"scrutiny" = inductive scientific doubt
Therefore, "persuasive doubt." No?
I'd say that if one scrutinizes an argument and finds it to be unsound, then persuasive doubt would follow as a consequence of that analysis. Doubt of the proof, note, not the theorem; it's always possible that there's a different, sound proof of the theorem.I simply want to know where "persuasive doubt" ranks on the ladder of soundness and scrutiny.
When I speak of proofs, I'm thinking of deductive proofs, like the ones used in mathematics, not inductive reasoning as in the natural sciences. The proofs in St Thomas Aquinas' writing and Gödel's paper have a deductive form. Thus, the scrutiny is going to be the kind that's appropriate to a deductive proof: 1) Does it follow the rules of deductive logic? and 2) Are the premises true?
*Meaning that, until you can actually bring a fourth option (or more), then all rational options have been cited.
Some of your assumptions were wrong.
But a fourth option is a cyclical universe. There's no infinite regress and the cause of the next one is this one. Etcetera.
And yes, it contradicts what we might define as 'common sense'. But then, so does a lot in science.
I'm not as stupid as I look. You're merely kicking the can down the road of an infinite regress of cycles instead.
I'm not hanging on it. You asked for a fourth option. Don't shoot the messenger.
And there are problems with the proposal.
As there are with all suggestions as to exactly how the universe started.
But if you check out conformal cyclic cosmology (proposed by Sir Roger Penrose) and investigate some of the problems, you won't find anyone who says 'Hey, it can't be right because it means an infinite regress'. And that's because it doesn't.
Again, saying 'infinite regress' is simply exhibiting a lack of knowledge of the proposal. And that's honestly not a criticism - to fully understand it you need to understand very high level physics.
But it is one of the many options available for 'how it all started'.