I have already explained the basic idea of why high probability is not enough. I have also explained the difference between reason and empiricism. If you want to deny my statement then you have to explain why high probability based on the sample provided by the extent of human knowledge is sufficient. You aren't actually explaining it here, just repeating in different words what you said before. You're saying that the sun has always risen before so "there is no reason to imagine that the sun would not have risen this morning". First off, there is a reason to imagine because I have imagined a region beyond the extent of current knowledgeThis is also the first step in any experiment. You have to know that something is unknown before you even feel the need to find that unknown. Secondly, "sun would not have risen this morning" is not future tense. We're talking about tomorrow morning, not this morning. You don't need much of any faith to believe that the sun has risen this morning unless you have memory loss
The debate can't go forward unless both sides use logic to nitpick the premises. Otherwise it just drags on forever in an endless cycle of contradictions.
I'll give you an example of a simple argumentative debate:
Person 1:
A: The sun has always risen in the morning
B: If something has always happened every morning then it will surely happen tomorrow morning
C: Therefore, the sun will rise tomorrow morning
Person 2:
A: Yes, the sun has always risen in the morning
B: No, something has always happened in past mornings but tomorrow is not yet known
C: Therefore, it is not yet known if the sun will rise tomorrow morning
This is an example of a contradictory debate:
Person1:
A: Yes it will!
Person2:
A: No it will not!
Person1:
A: Yes it will!
Guess which type of debate we were having? Guess why it can't go forward?
Fair enough. You get my meaning, I get yours.
What I'm saying is that faith that the sun is going to rise (again) tomorrow, does not require the same sort of faith as having faith that there is a God who may or may not send me to hell for all eternity.
To say that we don't have all the information, and there might be a God out there somewhere does not mean that faith in it is not far-fetched. We don't have all the information, and Leonard Nimoy might be the creator of the universe, but people would find it somewhat far-fetched if I said that it was true.
I have no reason to believe that God exists (other than the argument that He will send me to Hell for all eternity if I don't, which is a poor reason). I have good reason to believe that the sun will rise tomorrow.
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