No.Either natural events are caused or not. If so the cause must be non natural. If not then natural events have no cause, because a cause must be different from the effect. Logical?
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No.Either natural events are caused or not. If so the cause must be non natural. If not then natural events have no cause, because a cause must be different from the effect. Logical?
I'm done debating.
It's obvious that you are not interested in being the least bit charitable with what I have to say.
Either natural events are caused or not.
If so the cause must be non natural. If not then natural events have no cause, because a cause must be different from the effect.
Logical?
First you must establish the existence of said entities before we can move on to discuss origins of said entities.Premise 1: The naturalistic explanation for the source of our God concepts is lacking or incomplete.
The basis of deities is within one's imagination, they emerge or originate from this basis.Premise 2: Deities could not have emerged out of nowhere but have some basis.
Why? we have made this error numerously over the course of human history with phenomena like eclipses, thunder, lightning, rainbows, tides and diseases to name a few. All these phenomena now have natural explanations thanks to science.Premise 3: If the naturalistic explanation is inadequate than one must turn to a different explanation.
Premise 4 demonstrates clearly that we cant take you seriously.Premise 4: If the naturalistic explanation is false than one must turn to a supernaturalistic explanation as there is no middle ground.
Conclusion: The Gods must exist, or must have existed.
I mean the set of natural events as a whole. Either has a cause (non-natural) or is uncaused.Good so far...
BZZZZZZZZT! Wrong. Thanks for playing.
Tectonic activity causes earthquakes.
Natural cause, natural effect.
There are innumerable other examples, of course, but one is all it takes to prove this assertion wrong.
Not remotely logical. Or factual.
I mean the set of natural events as a whole.
Either has a cause (non-natural) or is uncaused.
Explain what you mean by 'set of natural events as a whole'. Just say 'universe', if that's what you mean.Natural part of the universe.
Causes precede effects, in ordinary language, as oproduction is temporal. (cause: that which prioduces and effect).Prove it. Prove that this is a true dichotomy.
There is no needfor a "precise ontology" and I dont thingk one can be given anyway. yet, meachanism I suppose involves mechanics, which involves machinery, matter, natural stuff. So you have asked the impossible from a logical pov.After you've done that, you can provide a positive ontology for what you mean by 'non-natural', and explain the mechanism by which it interacts with nature.
You are assuming there is a non-natural part of the universe?Natural part of the universe.
Natural part of the universe.
Causes precede effects, in ordinary language, as oproduction is temporal. (cause: that which prioduces and effect).
There is no needfor a "precise ontology"
I dont thingk one can be given anyway.
yet, meachanism I suppose involves mechanics, which involves machinery, matter, natural stuff.
So how did the natural come into being? Or did it not come into being. If it did come into being what caused it, because if cause precedes effect it cannot cause itself afaict. If it did not come into being then how could it have a cause?Effects in the 'natural part of the universe' all have natural causes. There is no need to invoke anything 'supernatural'.
So what caused the natural?This does not prove that 'non-natural cause vs. uncaused' is a true dichotomy.
Ok I am not expert but the soul is regarded as non-natural; or "preternatural". So we know consciousness by intuition, and it may be non natural but capable of being indicated.Positive ontology, not 'precise' ontology, and yes, there is. Otherwise, it means nothing, as 'non-natural' only tells us what it isn't. Any statement referring to 'non-natural' is cognitively vacuous, since it doesn't actually refer to anything.
Ok I am trying.Then there's nothing to discuss. 'Non-natural' is an empty concept that can be dismissed out of hand.
Are you saying a process (non-natural affecting the natural) must be known in order for a substance (the non-natural) to exist, or be postulated to exist? Is there such a thing as mental causation, and if so when people are ignorant of its nature does that mean it cannot be postulated cognitively (meaningfully)?No it doesn't. You're committing an equivocation fallacy, between 'mechanism' as in 'parts of a machine', and 'mechanism' as in 'process by which something takes place'.
I dont know. Maybe psychokinesis, but that would be "unexplained".What I'm asking is how does the 'non-natural' causally integrate with nature?
Which you can answer after you've provided a positive ontology for 'non-natural'.
Seeing that causality is what we observe within nature (natural events have natural effects) there is absolutely nothing logical about concluding that nature itself is caused, and even less about concluding that something non-natural can cause something natural - provided there is something non-natural, in the first place.So what caused the natural?
If you want my natiuralist explanation of belief in Gods it is the sociel areas of the brain interpreting natural phenomenon. We are social animals, wired to seek and find, and understand human communicaiton. So the saying "theology is anthropology" meaning talking about God we may be talking about ourselves may be truue. A greek philosopher said that humans make gods in mans image, and animals would make gods in their own image. Apparently that is our natural state, to see animist and intentional trends in nature, and we ould learn atheism later on. But can become recedivist due to stress. I think that understanding that a mystical interpretation of nature may be instinctive, and IIRC Dawkins recognises this, may help to diffuse tensions between atheists bent on deconverting believers, and the believers themselves.
Would you agree that the God concept can act as a form of something like hypnotic induction? If not sending people into literal trance, then influencing self concepts through formation of ego ideal and the blending of "God consciousness" with "self consciousness".
I believe they are myths; I believe humans are always looking for answers and often they would rather have a comforting wrong answer over no answer at all.What say you people about the origin of the gods? Are they only myths?
History is full of examples of primitive people mistaking humans from another land with more technology as Gods rather than just people like themselves with more technology. If beings from another planet came to Earth during a time that all humans were primitive, I believe they would have assumed those beings were Gods rather than beings like themselves with more technology.If so, how are they only myths? What is your evidence?
If Gods were proven to be real I would be more than willing to accept that as fact. I aint holdin my breath thoughIf that evidence is lacking, internally inconsistent, or otherwise implausible, how willing are you to accept that the gods are in fact real?
Christians are atheists to all the other gods that have ever "existed."
Tnmusicman said:Christians aren't atheists because we believe in God. To be an atheist you must believe in NO God. That being said I understand what you are saying but it's not an accurate way to say it.