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Why would an atheist come to Christ, if not to avoid hell?

ElijahW

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I can't say for sure. I am tempted to say a great deal of superstition, however, he is dealing with the natural world. He might (and probably does) have evidence to back it up. However, I am not an expert by any means in physics.
I may not know what you mean by superstition still but at least I know it isn’t meant typically, and is of no concern if you consider theoretical physicists like Heisenberg superstitious.


Oh. What are we talking about, and how do we know what laws that follows?
The source of matter. We reason out its nature the best we can.


But you were the one who claimed that he is moving:
Ah that is where you are getting that from. That quote was used for a claim of God having knowledge of us, by contact with us, not a statement of him actually moving. This should be evident by the movement of God happening someplace movement isn’t possible.


But all three are still on the table, and now we're saying they don't matter anyway? We didn't get any closer to the truth.
They don’t matter because they are describing change in matter and what we are discussing is a non-material source for matter.


The Sun still shines on Texas at night?
The sun doesn’t actually go anywhere when it gets dark, it just keeps doing its thing on the other side of the planet.


Somehow I don't think that's the only possible alternative.
Either matter needs assistance from non-matter or it doesn’t.


No, what I'm saying is that I am distinguishable from the rest of the universe, which is made clear since we can identify me, just as we can identify you, or a building, or pencil. It's not necessarily that we are part of a soup-like universe, but maybe the universe is simply made up of us, and all of the things around us making their own contribution. Perhaps the universe itself is not a thing at all, but just the sum total of all the things in our reality. On the other hand, maybe it's everything, and we just perceive difference between objects, and energy that aren't really there. Maybe it's something else completely. I don't know.
We aren’t concerned about us being distinguishable but if there is any reason to believe that what we are moving in, isn’t moving in us.


I don't know what energy is, but I know it's stored and transfered, generally through matter. We can touch matter, but can only manipulate energy. We can't actually see energy, but the effect it has on matter. There's no reason to believe that they're not two different things. But that's not the point, what is non-matter?
Well, non matter in your understanding, is energy, if you don’t think of energy as a material wave or particle. You can’t actually see energy but the effect it has on matter. this effect isn’t just what you see in the temporal events you see in matter fluctuating but ongoing in the formation of the structure of the atom creating solid matter we can touch and also gravity. Initially we may be inclined to think of energy as being a bunch of separate or distinguishable things but in reality we have one unified energy doing something that while constant appears to vary because the effect changes depending on the makeup of the matter being affected in the area is constantly changing.


From where you are you really have no idea how tall I am, as you have no evidence of my height. However, if you were to actually see me, you'd have some evidence of my height, and could probably narrow it down to a few inches. If you were to informally measure me, you could probably narrow it down even further with a margin of error. And with very sophisticated equipment, even get a very precise measurement with a smaller margin of error.
Got it. It’s not that the number of options change, just your accuracy to predict which is correct. Not that there are more options the less you know. If spirit is in motion or at rest are the only two options, regardless if you are aware of that or not.


I thought we were discussing a rational God, which would be necessarily supernatural.
A rational understanding of God. Yes, supernatural in that it isn’t physical.


How do you figure that's true?
If you are arguing against the existence of their being anything ideal, then are arguing that everything is material.


So, if I think my wife is looking fat, I should tell her?
Of course.


Well, subjective opinion and empirical evidence are not mutually exclusive. However, without evidence you clearly are left with nothing but a subjective opinion.
Can’t evidence be that the alternative position isn’t as rational?


How do we know that that's all we can perceive. Maybe we can perceive other things, but have not had the opportunity to do so.
As long as our perception is tied to our bodies then it is going to be limited to the physical. The same for any machine that we can build. If it requires physical change to detect something then it isn’t going to be able to detect non-physical constants.


Nobody has produced evidence of it at all. This is a claim that can't be made.
Evidence here is being used for perception since it is limited to empirical. Which makes it the same claim that I’m making about spirit. That no one has perceived any evidence of it.


Well this is also a poor logic set.
Firstly, it takes for granted that a band that plays music uses musical instruments for that purpose.
Secondly, the logic set takes for granted that the football team, while not playing music, does not use musical instruments for any reason.
You assume that musical instruments can only be used for music, which is not dictated in your logic set.
I’m not taking that for granted. I’m defining the band by the using of instruments. What does them using the instruments for that purpose have to do with anything?

I know the football team doesn't use instruments, that’s how we identify them as not playing music.

I’m not assuming that instruments can only be used to make music or that a football player can’t also be in a band. Just that that the production of music can determine if the group uses instruments or not.

This is similar to earlier when you assumed that anything which is not perceptible, is also not in motion. There was nothing in that logic set which dictated that premise, and yet it was necessary for the conclusion. This is not sound logic.
It’s not in the logic set that dictates that premise but the empirical evidence that shows that everything we can detect is in motion and we haven’t detected anything at rest.


Assume whatever you like, but we see what that led to in those logic sets.
Do you really think you came up with this routine yourself, and it’s not something up picked up?


Then I should be easy to convince.
Easy to spot but impossible to convince because you have your irrational demands of empirical evidence, which means your assumptions will never be questioned. Obviously I mean questioned by you because your position isn’t actually disclosed to be questioned by others. Got to protect that bias.


Something that is not subject to, or defies natural law.
You may want to refine your definition so that the laws of nature aren’t in the same box as vampires.


I think it's fair to say that we agree that this is not a purple triangle. We can agree to this because the experience is independent of our own minds, and exists in the same way for everyone. Evidence which only exists in our minds, cannot be shared as that experience is personal, and may differ from one person to the next.
No doubt we have a shared experience in the physical but what I’m looking for is the empirical evidence that says a rational opinion
can’t be produced without empirical evidence.

Actually, it's devil's advocate. You're the one making the claim afterall, and you claimed they were unchanging.
And you can’t advocate any reason to believe they are changing.


That depends on your definition of idealist. A materialist can be a moral idealist, and a philosophical idealist is not a materialist.
Sure ,if you take the words out of the context of this conversation you can combine them.


That's true in a subjective conversation, not an objective one.
I’m not sure what you mean by subjective/objective. What are the top three objective opinions of yours and the top three subjective opinions of mine that are producing our disagreement?
 
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ElijahW

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What are we using as evidence then?
If no other rational alternative can be produced.


Not necessarily. One can be drawn to think a certain way, but not believe it. Every person on Earth is biased to favour their own race, gender, religion, nationality, or whatever. Most people don't believe that their race, gender, religion, or nationality is superior to others.
That would be a pretty extreme belief. Feeling lucky about your situation would be the more likely opinion to arise from those kind of biases.


It's a psychological theory. So, what's your opinion? Do you accept it or reject it?
You wouldn’t be making your point any better if you were speaking in a foreign language. I have a worldview that is already established, just like you do. If what you suggest fits that worldview I believe it, if not, I don’t. My opinion of that theory exists without me understanding it because my opinion is based on, if it aligns with my current beliefs.


Yes, which is why critical thinking tells me your theories aren't verifiable, or reliable, which gives me every reason in the world to be skeptical.
There is no way that thinking you should expect physical proof for non-physical entities is critical.


Not exactly, but the same would be true when I ask how God can be unchanging. We can't actually know that. For all we know these words may not even be applicable to "God." In fact, we don't really know which words could be applicable to "God." Which is why I continue to say "I don't know."
The difference is one is a response to reason and awareness of the conversation while the other is just blind skepticism.


I have no ability to understand it without asking questions.
You could read up on the subject and take the time to form your own rational understanding of what is going on around you. Once you have that, then you won’t have to rely on other people proving to you what you should think.


Plato’s Sophist, Theaetetus, Phaedo and part of the 10th book of Laws would be a good place to start so you can see socratic irony in play with the conversation we are currently having.

No, I'm sorry, but that's exactly what I have to do. Just because you make a claim doesn't mean I have to accept it unless you can back it up with evidence. It doesn't matter if I have another explanation or not, you still have to back yours up with evidence. But, if you don't accept that, then my standard explanation will be "William Shatner did it."
Those are your standards and you are free to live how you choose.

No, I don't. I merely have to explain why I don't think your explanation is adequate. There doesn't even have to be a counter-position.
If you could explain why, that would be one thing but all you can do is demand something you know isn’t possible, and think you are proving something. You can’t actually show how my explanation is inadequate, only that your biased standards of evidence isn’t met.


Firstly, how do you know I'm not undecided? Secondly, if I have an opinion that I can't defend, but must be defended, why on Earth would I share it?
You have an expectation to reconfirm your bias towards that decision is why I think you have made a decision.


You put your opinion forward to develop your thinking further. Also so you provide an example of what you are looking for and show that what you are asking for isn’t just an unreasonable expectation to reconfirm your bias.
 
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oi_antz

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Well you tell me OA, cause I'll trust you on this. Have I been abusive? Have I been unreasonably harsh? Am I calling people names, and mocking them? Have I been entirely disrespectful? Have I been getting angry and condemning them?
No of course you haven't! Don't you think there must be a reason why a large proportion of Christians seemingly struggle with the likeness of Christ? I wouldn't want you to think I am pointing my finger at Ronald, because atheist's have demons to battle too. But this verse might turn a light on for you:

Matthew 12:43 “When an impure spirit comes out of a person, it goes through arid places seeking rest and does not find it. 44 Then it says, ‘I will return to the house I left.’ When it arrives, it finds the house unoccupied, swept clean and put in order. 45 Then it goes and takes with it seven other spirits more wicked than itself, and they go in and live there. And the final condition of that person is worse than the first.

What is Jesus saying? That when a person is freed from their bondage to the enemy, they can continue living as they did before? Quite the contrary, that is when the battle begins, and you can observe the failure of many Christians to overcome their demons, but you can also observe the salvation of many Christians who have kept their eye on the goal.
Or is it simply, that I don't believe what you think I should believe?
Yes, it does get frustrating. Every time I try to corner you there's another excuse and we end up running around in circles.
Well, why don't you tell me? That's what the thread is here for.
I can't get inside your mind. That's what makes a conversion so interesting, that it isn't actually anyone other than God who makes it happen. We keep telling you about Him, you keep dismissing our testimony, even having called me delusional at one time! Why do you think that my experience is any less valuable than yours? And if you don't, then why do you not believe my testimony?
 
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JGG

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I may not know what you mean by superstition still but at least I know it isn’t meant typically, and is of no concern if you consider theoretical physicists like Heisenberg superstitious.

I didn't say he was superstitious. He at least deals with natural science, so he likely wasn't. I said it looked that way to me, and reitterated that I am not a physicist.

The source of matter. We reason out its nature the best we can.

Yes, which is to say not very well.

Ah that is where you are getting that from. That quote was used for a claim of God having knowledge of us, by contact with us, not a statement of him actually moving. This should be evident by the movement of God happening someplace movement isn’t possible.

An unchanging God with no beginning cannot know beings which are created and change.

They don’t matter because they are describing change in matter and what we are discussing is a non-material source for matter.

So, what is this non-material source for matter, and how do you know what it is, and what it does?

The sun doesn’t actually go anywhere when it gets dark, it just keeps doing its thing on the other side of the planet.

Right, but it's activity has changed. It doesn't have to move for it to change.

Either matter needs assistance from non-matter or it doesn’t.

You mean energy?

We aren’t concerned about us being distinguishable but if there is any reason to believe that what we are moving in, isn’t moving in us.

I don't really know what that means, but why does it matter?

Well, non matter in your understanding, is energy, if you don’t think of energy as a material wave or particle. You can’t actually see energy but the effect it has on matter. this effect isn’t just what you see in the temporal events you see in matter fluctuating but ongoing in the formation of the structure of the atom creating solid matter we can touch and also gravity. Initially we may be inclined to think of energy as being a bunch of separate or distinguishable things but in reality we have one unified energy doing something that while constant appears to vary because the effect changes depending on the makeup of the matter being affected in the area is constantly changing.

Either sounds good to me. What does that tell us?

Got it. It’s not that the number of options change, just your accuracy to predict which is correct. Not that there are more options the less you know. If spirit is in motion or at rest are the only two options, regardless if you are aware of that or not.

Maybe it moves in some conditions and doesn't in others. Maybe there is a third or fourth option we haven't considered yet. Spirit is not a definable thing. It is not a measurable thing. The laws that apply to the "natural world" like motion may not even apply to this. So motion may be a concept that doesn't even apply to spirit, and the whole discussion may be moot. Or maybe it moves and doesn't move simultaneously. And let's not forget that spirit might not exist at all.

All options worth considering.

Can’t evidence be that the alternative position isn’t as rational?

The other side being less rational already makes the first side more rational. It doesn't serve as evidence for the first side.

As long as our perception is tied to our bodies then it is going to be limited to the physical. The same for any machine that we can build. If it requires physical change to detect something then it isn’t going to be able to detect non-physical constants.

That doesn't necessarily lead to the conclusion that we can only perceive things in motion, or that things we can't perceive aren't in motion.

Evidence here is being used for perception since it is limited to empirical. Which makes it the same claim that I’m making about spirit. That no one has perceived any evidence of it.

Then allow me to suggest that if no one has perceived any evidence of it, that there might not be anything to perceive at all.

I’m not taking that for granted. I’m defining the band by the using of instruments. What does them using the instruments for that purpose have to do with anything?

You defined them by making music, not using instruments.

I know the football team doesn't use instruments, that’s how we identify them as not playing music.

This is my point: You expect us to define the football team based on our previous knowledge of football teams. Something like that has to be defined in the logic, otherwise it isn't logical. However, in this case doing so would be stating the conclusion as a premise which is circular reasoning.

I’m not assuming that instruments can only be used to make music or that a football player can’t also be in a band. Just that that the production of music can determine if the group uses instruments or not.

It can, but what's important is that it is not a logical conclusion based on the logic set you presented. Someone who has no clue what a football team, band, music and musical instrument are has to be able to reach the same conclusion based on the logical progression, otherwise it isn't logical.

It’s not in the logic set that dictates that premise but the empirical evidence that shows that everything we can detect is in motion and we haven’t detected anything at rest.

No, the empirical evidence only shows that everything we have detected is in motion. It is not determined that everything we can detect is in motion, or that everything that we can't detect is not in motion.

Do you really think you came up with this routine yourself, and it’s not something up picked up?

No, I learned it, but not from atheists. I learned to ask questions as a child. I learned the socratic method in high school science class. I learned to be skeptical of people making grandiose claims through personal experience.

Easy to spot but impossible to convince because you have your irrational demands of empirical evidence, which means your assumptions will never be questioned. Obviously I mean questioned by you because your position isn’t actually disclosed to be questioned by others. Got to protect that bias.

If you have no empirical evidence then your problem is not that I have a bias, it's that you have no empirical evidence to convince me.

You can keep going on about my "secret opinions and biases," but when it comes down to it your position depends on personal experiences, claims without evidence, and questionable logic. I'm sorry, that's just not enough.

You may want to refine your definition so that the laws of nature aren’t in the same box as vampires.

Explain.

No doubt we have a shared experience in the physical but what I’m looking for is the empirical evidence that says a rational opinion can’t be produced without empirical evidence.

I already have, and you accepted it. We agree that we share physical experience. That's my empirical evidence. From there it's logic. All I said is that rational facts are rooted in empirical evidence. There's my root.

And you can’t advocate any reason to believe they are changing.

I don't need to. My position is that I don't know. We can't even be sure that such "things" can be described as changing or unchanging at all.

Sure ,if you take the words out of the context of this conversation you can combine them.

Then put them in some concrete context please. There are three types of idealists.

I’m not sure what you mean by subjective/objective. What are the top three objective opinions of yours and the top three subjective opinions of mine that are producing our disagreement?

I haven't presented anything purely objective, I have been merely responding to your claims. You have claimed that God is unchanging, that anything we do not perceive is unchanging, and that God, spirit, Logos, etc. all exist.
 
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JGG

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If no other rational alternative can be produced.

No, that's argument from ignorance, and poor logic.

That would be a pretty extreme belief. Feeling lucky about your situation would be the more likely opinion to arise from those kind of biases.

But it's not a belief. It's a bias.

You wouldn’t be making your point any better if you were speaking in a foreign language. I have a worldview that is already established, just like you do. If what you suggest fits that worldview I believe it, if not, I don’t. My opinion of that theory exists without me understanding it because my opinion is based on, if it aligns with my current beliefs.

So you don't judge such things on whether or not they're actually true, but if they fit your worldview?

Then there's the difference between you and me.

There is no way that thinking you should expect physical proof for non-physical entities is critical.

Then there's no way to know or believe that there are non-physical entities at all. Prove me wrong.

The difference is one is a response to reason and awareness of the conversation while the other is just blind skepticism.

There's always reason to be skeptical, but when someone makes a very big claim, there's a bigger reason to be skeptical.

The existence of God is a huge claim, especially without any actual evidence, I have every right to be as skeptical as I need to be.

You could read up on the subject and take the time to form your own rational understanding of what is going on around you. Once you have that, then you won’t have to rely on other people proving to you what you should think.

What a strange thing to say right before you tell me this...

Plato’s Sophist, Theaetetus, Phaedo and part of the 10th book of Laws would be a good place to start so you can see socratic irony in play with the conversation we are currently having.

Why should I believe these guys? How do we know they are right, or reliable? What evidence do they have? You just finished saying I shouldn't have to rely on other people to tell me what I think, and then simply say that I should rely on these guys to tell me what I think.

If you could explain why, that would be one thing but all you can do is demand something you know isn’t possible, and think you are proving something. You can’t actually show how my explanation is inadequate, only that your biased standards of evidence isn’t met.

I'm not asking for a lot really. This is pretty standard, and it's hardly a bias. If you're explanation is adequate then it is up to you to demonstrate it. You have already shown a complete lack of understanding of logic, evidence, subjective vs objective concepts, and the burden of proof. Consider, just for a moment that the problem isn't me, but that your explanation is really weak. You've made claims about God, and spirit, and logos, with no explanation of where these claims came from other than "Plato said so." In other cases you've pointed out that you don't know but want to label that unknown thing "spirit" or "God." You've essentially told me that God has no beginning, but also claimed that it is impossible for something to be infinite. Yet, you haven't been able to rationally explain how that works.

If we're dealing with something supernatural, then any law of the natural world may or may not apply, and we have no way of knowing, or even suspecting how it might work. Even the idea that God is changing or unchanging may not apply as far as our knowledge. So I keep asking "how do you know?" because I am skeptical above all that we have a method of knowing anything supernatural, including whether it exists. When you can't answer, you instead give me a hard time about my secret opinion and biases. That's why your explanation is weak.

If you had a good explanation, my "biases" wouldn't matter, and my opinion would be changed. I would be forced to believe you.

You have an expectation to reconfirm your bias towards that decision is why I think you have made a decision.

My opinion and bias are hardly secret, it's what I've been saying the whole time. I don't know. I don't think we can know true or not. I think the kind of thing you're trying to rationalize is beyond our rationalization. I think the kind of thing you're trying to explain is behond our comprehension, and certainly beyond our ability to explain. That's my bias, and it's what I've been saying from the start.

But if you recall, you don't accept that. You want to pigeonhole me as "just another atheist." The idea that I could be otherwise apparently doesn't fit in your worldview.

You put your opinion forward to develop your thinking further. Also so you provide an example of what you are looking for and show that what you are asking for isn’t just an unreasonable expectation to reconfirm your bias.

Right, and I have told you from the start what my opinion is. Instead you want me to tell you that I'm just another atheist who hates God, who just wants an excuse to sin, worship Satan, eat babies, and destroy the world. In other words, you just want me to confirm your bias.
 
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ElijahW

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I didn't say he was superstitious. He at least deals with natural science, so he likely wasn't. I said it looked that way to me, and reitterated that I am not a physicist.
Then what does Platonic metaphysics say different that gets it labeled as such.


An unchanging God with no beginning cannot know beings which are created and change.
God can know you like you know an apple in your hand. It doesn’t matter how much we change, we don’t leave the hand of God.


So, what is this non-material source for matter, and how do you know what it is, and what it does?
It the conventional sense of the word it “does” nothing, it’s at rest. I don’t know what you mean by how do I know what it is.


Right, but it's activity has changed. It doesn't have to move for it to change.
What changes about the activity of the sun when the earth is facing one direction and facing 180? Or the difference in the activity on the side of the sun facing the earth and the side facing away?


You mean energy?
Your non material understanding of energy.


I don't really know what that means, but why does it matter?
You were objecting to the idea of the logos at work within the mind.


Either sounds good to me. What does that tell us?
You should be skeptical of your perception, instead of putting absolute faith in it because it is only showing you a partial picture.


Maybe it moves in some conditions and doesn't in others. Maybe there is a third or fourth option we haven't considered yet. Spirit is not a definable thing. It is not a measurable thing. The laws that apply to the "natural world" like motion may not even apply to this. So motion may be a concept that doesn't even apply to spirit, and the whole discussion may be moot. Or maybe it moves and doesn't move simultaneously. And let's not forget that spirit might not exist at all.
All options worth considering.
A distinguishable object has a combination of parts that are both in motion and at rest to produce the whole. In that way the duality can be overcome in an individual but each part is either in motion or at rest. I would consider the possibility of there being a third option I can’t imagine but nobody else has came up with anything either in over 2000 years so I’m fairly comfortable that belief is justified. To consider another option I would need an actual reason beyond your blind skepticism.

The other side being less rational already makes the first side more rational. It doesn't serve as evidence for the first side.
It justifies the belief though, even if it doesn’t empirically prove the alternative.


That doesn't necessarily lead to the conclusion that we can only perceive things in motion, or that things we can't perceive aren't in motion.
Yes it does lead to that conclusion unless you can explain why. Beyond you haven’t been empirically shown you can’t see something at rest.


Then allow me to suggest that if no one has perceived any evidence of it, that there might not be anything to perceive at all.
You can but the suggestion isn’t relevant to the set. The set isn’t addressing if spirit exists but if we should be looking for something in motion or at rest.

You defined them by making music, not using instruments.
I’m not sure about that, or the difference, or the point?


This is my point: You expect us to define the football team based on our previous knowledge of football teams. Something like that has to be defined in the logic, otherwise it isn't logical. However, in this case doing so would be stating the conclusion as a premise which is circular reasoning.
It can, but what's important is that it is not a logical conclusion based on the logic set you presented. Someone who has no clue what a football team, band, music and musical instrument are has to be able to reach the same conclusion based on the logical progression, otherwise it isn't logical.
I don’t expect you to define a football team or have previous knowledge of them. I expect you to know they don’t make music so they don’t use musical instruments. What the football team actually does isn’t an issue with the set, beyond they don’t make music by using instruments.

Could you explain how you think I have committed circular reasoning?


No, the empirical evidence only shows that everything we have detected is in motion. It is not determined that everything we can detect is in motion, or that everything that we can't detect is not in motion.
The empirical evidence shows a body that needs physical change to respond to, which means we are limited to perceive what changes. Unless you have seen evidence of something else? Knowing our perception is limited to what changes, if we can’t perceive something that actually exists, then we know it doesn’t change.


No, I learned it, but not from atheists. I learned to ask questions as a child. I learned the socratic method in high school science class. I learned to be skeptical of people making grandiose claims through personal experience.
Yeah sure. The kid asking “why” of their parents just naturally evolved to “prove-it empirically” I agree that you should be skeptical but you are blinded because of your faith in empirical evidence, which isn’t something a child naturally develops without the example to follow. Those examples are commonplace so the idea that you picked up this bad habit from your atheist peers/idols shouldn’t come as too grandiose a claim.


If you have no empirical evidence then your problem is not that I have a bias, it's that you have no empirical evidence to convince me.
You can keep going on about my "secret opinions and biases," but when it comes down to it your position depends on personal experiences, claims without evidence, and questionable logic. I'm sorry, that's just not enough.
You have a bias that says you need empirical evidence to have a reasonable opinion. That bias is your issue to address when you are ready to deal with it.

What personal experience have i went to evidence for? What other fallacies have I committed?

You should expand your vocabulary so that you can differentiate between believing in the laws of the universe and believing in Dracula is synonymous.


I already have, and you accepted it. We agree that we share physical experience. That's my empirical evidence. From there it's logic. All I said is that rational facts are rooted in empirical evidence. There's my root.
What kind of logic are you using there that from one premise you can suggest that an unbiased opinion can’t be had unless there is empirical evidence?


I don't need to. My position is that I don't know. We can't even be sure that such "things" can be described as changing or unchanging at all.
Again, no reason to believe contrary. Your lack of an opinion on this doesn't matter, only if you can articulate any reason to believe otherwise.


Then put them in some concrete context please. There are three types of idealists.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platonic_idealism

I haven't presented anything purely objective, I have been merely responding to your claims. You have claimed that God is unchanging, that anything we do not perceive is unchanging, and that God, spirit, Logos, etc. all exist.
I would recommend you lead by example, instead of making demands you willing refuse to even attempt to meet.
 
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ElijahW

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No, that's argument from ignorance, and poor logic.
No that is arguing a lack of evidence of the contrary. I’m arguing a lack of another rational possibility. It would be like seeing a bear in a tree in the woods and I suggest that he climbed up there, while you suggest that there could be other alternatives. If you can’t articulate a rational alternative then the bear climbed up the tree is the rational belief you should have about the situation.


So you don't judge such things on whether or not they're actually true, but if they fit your worldview?
Then there's the difference between you and me.
How do I know if they are true unless it falls inline with what I already accept as reality? If someone shows me a crop circle, should I believe an alien came or that they are lying? Should I trust the evidence or my previously held worldview? Don’t you only accept things as true if it falls inline with your worldview that empirical evidence equals the truth?

Then there's no way to know or believe that there are non-physical entities at all. Prove me wrong.
I would pray at this point in the conversation you would realize why that would be the case. Do you yet?


There's always reason to be skeptical, but when someone makes a very big claim, there's a bigger reason to be skeptical.
The existence of God is a huge claim, especially without any actual evidence, I have every right to be as skeptical as I need to be.
You have no more reason to believe that is a bigger claim then the universe has existed for an infinite amount of time. Have you questioned that idea with the same level of skepticism? If not, why?

What a strange thing to say right before you tell me this...
Why should I believe these guys? How do we know they are right, or reliable? What evidence do they have? You just finished saying I shouldn't have to rely on other people to tell me what I think, and then simply say that I should rely on these guys to tell me what I think.
The difference is that I’m not appealing to their authority but to you educating yourself on this conversation so you are informed about this discussion and what actual socratic irony looks like in work, so you don’t assume your game is in imitation of that. It’s not about believing them but about educating yourself on the fundamental texts that shaped, not only this conversation but our culture.

I'm not asking for a lot really. This is pretty standard, and it's hardly a bias. If you're explanation is adequate then it is up to you to demonstrate it. You have already shown a complete lack of understanding of logic, evidence, subjective vs objective concepts, and the burden of proof. Consider, just for a moment that the problem isn't me, but that your explanation is really weak. You've made claims about God, and spirit, and logos, with no explanation of where these claims came from other than "Plato said so." In other cases you've pointed out that you don't know but want to label that unknown thing "spirit" or "God." You've essentially told me that God has no beginning, but also claimed that it is impossible for something to be infinite. Yet, you haven't been able to rationally explain how that works.
If we're dealing with something supernatural, then any law of the natural world may or may not apply, and we have no way of knowing, or even suspecting how it might work. Even the idea that God is changing or unchanging may not apply as far as our knowledge. So I keep asking "how do you know?" because I am skeptical above all that we have a method of knowing anything supernatural, including whether it exists. When you can't answer, you instead give me a hard time about my secret opinion and biases. That's why your explanation is weak.
I will take the weak explanation, over no explanation at all. If you are truly comfortable with being in a state of opinion-less bliss, as you would like me to believe, then more power to you.

If you had a good explanation, my "biases" wouldn't matter, and my opinion would be changed. I would be forced to believe you.
I would like to see previous evidence of this being successful with you so I know why you assume this to be the case.


My opinion and bias are hardly secret, it's what I've been saying the whole time. I don't know. I don't think we can know true or not. I think the kind of thing you're trying to rationalize is beyond our rationalization. I think the kind of thing you're trying to explain is behond our comprehension, and certainly beyond our ability to explain. That's my bias, and it's what I've been saying from the start.
That’s a hard bias to overcome. I don’t think there is any way to have a rational conversation with someone whose fundamental belief is they can’t understand the subject matter. It does explain a lot of the problems I have been having with communication. I’m of the other school, that says we can understand anything if we approach it rationally, even an unknowable God.


But if you recall, you don't accept that. You want to pigeonhole me as "just another atheist." The idea that I could be otherwise apparently doesn't fit in your worldview.
Right, and I have told you from the start what my opinion is. Instead you want me to tell you that I'm just another atheist who hates God, who just wants an excuse to sin, worship Satan, eat babies, and destroy the world. In other words, you just want me to confirm your bias.
I do have the habit of pigeonholing people and sorry that will be the case until you prove you can do more than imitate their common fallacies. That is a completely absurd picture of the atheist you think I have though, the atheists I know rarely eat babies. I don’t think you hate God but to be blunt, I don’t think you have been working with the most informed understanding.
 
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JGG

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Then what does Platonic metaphysics say different that gets it labeled as such.

But there is not any evidence in metaphysics.

God can know you like you know an apple in your hand. It doesn’t matter how much we change, we don’t leave the hand of God.[/FONT]

That's pretty, but doesn't explain anything. If we change, if we're created, and destroyed, how can an unchanging God, who cannot learn, who cannot think, who can assess, in effect, cannot change, know us?

It the conventional sense of the word it “does” nothing, it’s at rest. I don’t know what you mean by how do I know what it is.

So it does nothing. We don't know what it is. We can't observe it. So, how can we possibly know it's there?

What changes about the activity of the sun when the earth is facing one direction and facing 180? Or the difference in the activity on the side of the sun facing the earth and the side facing away?

What the sun is shining on, obviously.

You should be skeptical of your perception, instead of putting absolute faith in it because it is only showing you a partial picture.

Agreed. However, none of us can objectively agree on what the rest of that picture is. So, why don't we just admit that we don't know?

A distinguishable object has a combination of parts that are both in motion and at rest to produce the whole. In that way the duality can be overcome in an individual but each part is either in motion or at rest. I would consider the possibility of there being a third option I can’t imagine but nobody else has came up with anything either in over 2000 years so I’m fairly comfortable that belief is justified. To consider another option I would need an actual reason beyond your blind skepticism.

I'm not saying consider the third (or forth, or so on) option, only that it might exist. Without evidence, you can't show that you're correct while there might still be other as yet "unimaginable" options.

It justifies the belief though, even if it doesn’t empirically prove the alternative.

Sure. But you can't dump on me because I don't accept either one.

Yes it does lead to that conclusion unless you can explain why. Beyond you haven’t been empirically shown you can’t see something at rest.

Firstly, I have explained, and painstaking length, why your logic is lacking. It is your claim that that which cannot be perceived is not in motion, and, it is your claim that something that is not in motion cannot be perceived. So you have to show evidence that both of those premises are true. The burden of proof is on the person making the claim (that's you).

You can but the suggestion isn’t relevant to the set. The set isn’t addressing if spirit exists but if we should be looking for something in motion or at rest.

Oh, well then first you have to provide evidence that spirits exist.

I don’t expect you to define a football team or have previous knowledge of them. I expect you to know they don’t make music so they don’t use musical instruments. What the football team actually does isn’t an issue with the set, beyond they don’t make music by using instruments.

No, your logic stated that football teams don't make music, therefore they don't use musical instruments. Your logic set assumes either that we know that musical instruments can only be used to make music, or that football teams don't use musical instruments (which would be the circular reasoning).

The empirical evidence shows a body that needs physical change to respond to, which means we are limited to perceive what changes. Unless you have seen evidence of something else? Knowing our perception is limited to what changes, if we can’t perceive something that actually exists, then we know it doesn’t change.

That's a reasonable assumption, but we can't make the conclusion. We don't have access to an environment where nothing changes. We have no way of knowing how we might perceive something in that environment. While we can say that we can observe things that change, we don't know that we can't perceive things that don't change. I agree that it's probable that we can't perceive it, but can't claim it as a fact.

Yeah sure. The kid asking “why” of their parents just naturally evolved to “prove-it empirically” I agree that you should be skeptical but you are blinded because of your faith in empirical evidence, which isn’t something a child naturally develops without the example to follow. Those examples are commonplace so the idea that you picked up this bad habit from your atheist peers/idols shouldn’t come as too grandiose a claim.

I didn't learn this from atheists at all, in fact I learned it from my Jewish high school chemistry teacher. And then my Buddhist philosophy prof, my Christian psych prof, and my Christian logic prof. They understand the difference between belief, and fact.

I also learned from a couple of religious scam artists who taught me that if someone makes a claim of fact, you shouldn't trust them on it.

You have a bias that says you need empirical evidence to have a reasonable opinion. That bias is your issue to address when you are ready to deal with it.

A rational opinion. There's a difference.

What personal experience have i went to evidence for? What other fallacies have I committed?

I have no idea what your experience is, but you're getting these claims from somewhere, and it clearly isn't any type of evidence.

You should expand your vocabulary so that you can differentiate between believing in the laws of the universe and believing in Dracula is synonymous.

I don't have a clue what your talking about, but it sounds neat.

What kind of logic are you using there that from one premise you can suggest that an unbiased opinion can’t be had unless there is empirical evidence?

If your claim is coming exclusively from the mind, then it is all subject to bias. It's not that it necessarily isn't rational, but we have no way of knowing whether it is or not, so we should assume it's not before we start claiming it as truth. If it is to be a rational fact (without bias) it would need to be rooted in some sort of physical evidence which is true regardless of personal bias. Hopefully a lot of physical evidence.

Again, no reason to believe contrary. Your lack of an opinion on this doesn't matter, only if you can articulate any reason to believe otherwise.

No, again you are the person making the claim, the burden of proof is on you, not for me to prove otherwise. You can believe all of this if you'd like, but you cannot fault me at all for not believing it.


See? Not the idealist I was thinking of. Explain why a materialist can't believe in the theory of forms? Read up on Pythagoras.

I would recommend you lead by example, instead of making demands you willing refuse to even attempt to meet.

They're your claims, I'm just explaining why I don't believe them.

No that is arguing a lack of evidence of the contrary. I’m arguing a lack of another rational possibility. It would be like seeing a bear in a tree in the woods and I suggest that he climbed up there, while you suggest that there could be other alternatives. If you can’t articulate a rational alternative then the bear climbed up the tree is the rational belief you should have about the situation.

Perhaps the bear was being airlifted to an animal sanctuary when he escaped and fell into the tree. Perhaps the bear climbed up a cliff near the tree, and fell onto it.

How do I know if they are true unless it falls inline with what I already accept as reality? If someone shows me a crop circle, should I believe an alien came or that they are lying?

Of course, not. I would ask how they know the crop circle was made by aliens.

Should I trust the evidence or my previously held worldview?

No, maybe they can show you the aliens actually making another crop circle. Or maybe you can show that people can make crop circles on their own as a prank, and explain that that's why their "evidence" isn't convincing.

Don’t you only accept things as true if it falls inline with your worldview that empirical evidence equals the truth?

No, my worldview could be wrong, and honestly, probably is from time to time. I spent years, re-examining my worldview and saw that it was wrong. That's a pretty humbling experience, not I try not to be too comfortable with my world view.

I would pray at this point in the conversation you would realize why that would be the case. Do you yet?

No. Please, enlighten me with evidence.

You have no more reason to believe that is a bigger claim then the universe has existed for an infinite amount of time. Have you questioned that idea with the same level of skepticism? If not, why?

I am no more inclined to believe that the universe has existed for an infinte amount of time. But I would suggest that it is at least possible as any God concept.

The difference is that I’m not appealing to their authority but to you educating yourself on this conversation so you are informed about this discussion and what actual socratic irony looks like in work, so you don’t assume your game is in imitation of that.

Maybe it is. So what?

It’s not about believing them but about educating yourself on the fundamental texts that shaped, not only this conversation but our culture.

That may be so, but unless these books contain facts, they contribute nothing to the conversation. This is a conversation about what is factual is it not? Otherwise, I would suggest reading the Uppanishads, the Tao Te Ching, or other texts of Vedic philosophers. They had a different view that is no less right or wrong. But you're not about to educated yourself on that point of view, are you?


I will take the weak explanation, over no explanation at all. If you are truly comfortable with being in a state of opinion-less bliss, as you would like me to believe, then more power to you.

That's my point. You can sit on your weak explanation, and your current worldview. I will continue to look.

I would like to see previous evidence of this being successful with you so I know why you assume this to be the case.

I was taught to hate Jews, non-whites and gays in my youth, and honestly did. Then I found out my best friend was gay, and the only person who stood by him was a Jew. It forced me to question everything I thought I knew, and everything I had been taught. In the end, I married a Jew, my best friends are a gay couple, and my research partner is Muslim.

That’s a hard bias to overcome. I don’t think there is any way to have a rational conversation with someone whose fundamental belief is they can’t understand the subject matter.

It's downright impossible. But I have a very good understanding of logic, evidence, and deductive reasoning, which is the conversation we are having.

It does explain a lot of the problems I have been having with communication. I’m of the other school, that says we can understand anything if we approach it rationally, even an unknowable God.

You can rationalize the unknowable?

[/quote]I do have the habit of pigeonholing people and sorry that will be the case until you prove you can do more than imitate their common fallacies.[/quote]

Really? Name the fallacy. Requiring evidence for a claim, any claim, is not a fallacy.

That is a completely absurd picture of the atheist you think I have though, the atheists I know rarely eat babies. I don’t think you hate God but to be blunt, I don’t think you have been working with the most informed understanding.

Yes it is an absurd picture, but it is no more absurd than the one you've been using for me for the entirety of the conversation.
 
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ElijahW

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Really? Name the fallacy. Requiring evidence for a claim, any claim, is not a fallacy.
(shifting the) Burden of proof (see – onus probandi) – I need not prove my claim, you must prove it is false.”
You are making sure the burden of proof rests on me by not disclosing/developing your position that you would have to support.
Begging the question (Latin petitio principii, "assuming the initial point") is a type of logical fallacy in which a proposition is made that uses its own premise as proof of the proposition.“
Your suggestion that empirical evidence is necessary to form a rational opinion.
“Argumentum ad nauseam or argument from repetition or argumentumad infinitum is an argument made repeatedly (possibly by different people) until nobody cares to discuss it any more. This may sometimes, but not always, be a form of proof by assertion”
Your constant demand of empirical evidence for non physical things that you know isn’t possible would be an excellent example of this.
Moving the goalposts, also known as raising the bar, is an informal logically fallacious argument in which evidence presented in response to a specific claim is dismissed and some other (often greater) evidence is demanded. In other words, after a goal has been scored, the goalposts are moved farther to discount the attempt. This attempts to leave the impression that an argument had a fair hearing while actually reaching a preordained conclusion.[4]”
You did it before the conversation but you made sure that the evidence would be dismissed unless it was empirical and supported your worldview.
Cherry picking, suppressing evidence, or the fallacy of incomplete evidence is the act of pointing to individual cases or data that seem to confirm a particular position, while ignoring a significant portion of related cases or data that may contradict that position.
What you are doing when deciding that evidence would be limited to empirical evidence.
Thelogical fallacy of accident (also called destroying the exception or a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid) is adeductive fallacy occurring instatistical syllogisms (an argument based on ageneralization) when an exception to arule of thumb[1] is ignored. It is one of the thirteen fallacies originally identified byAristotle. The fallacy occurs when one attempts to apply a general rule to an irrelevant situation.
Empirical evidence should be expected except when?
“Argument from ignorance, also known as argumentum ad ignorantiam or "appeal to ignorance" (where "ignorance" stands for: "lack of evidence to the contrary"), is a fallacy in informal logic. It asserts that a proposition is true because it has not yet been proven false, it is "generally accepted" (or vice versa).“
You suggest this subject isn’t able to be rationally understood because you haven’t personally grasped the subject matter.
Equivocation ("to call by the same name") is classified as both a formal and informal logical fallacy. It is the misleading use of a term with more than one meaning or sense (by glossing over which meaning is intended at a particular time). It generally occurs with polysemic words (words with multiple meanings).
Mixing up idealism and your own particular understanding of what superstitious and supernatural means.
 
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JGG

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(shifting the) Burden of proof (see – onus probandi) – I need not prove my claim, you must prove it is false.”
You are making sure the burden of proof rests on me by not disclosing/developing your position that you would have to support.

You claimed that you could produce a rational God. I made no claims. We do not have to discuss my position because we're talking about your claim. I did not shift the burden of proof, it was yours to begin with. You have not succeeded yet, so it's still your burden. Besides, we have discussed my position ad nauseum: I don't know. You just don't accept that because you can't adjust your worldview, and will only accept that I'm one of those atheist-type fellas, and you assume you know me better than I do.

Begging the question (Latin petitio principii, "assuming the initial point") is a type of logical fallacy in which a proposition is made that uses its own premise as proof of the proposition.“
Your suggestion that empirical evidence is necessary to form a rational opinion.

How is that begging the question? Empirical evidence, and rational opinion are two completely different things.

“Argumentum ad nauseam or argument from repetition or argumentumad infinitum is an argument made repeatedly (possibly by different people) until nobody cares to discuss it any more. This may sometimes, but not always, be a form of proof by assertion”
Your constant demand of empirical evidence for non physical things that you know isn’t possible would be an excellent example of this.

I'm sorry for asking you to provide evidence for your claims, how absurd of me. How about if I ask you for objective evidence instead? Or evidence that originiates from somewhere other than imagination?

Moving the goalposts, also known as raising the bar, is an informal logically fallacious argument in which evidence presented in response to a specific claim is dismissed and some other (often greater) evidence is demanded. In other words, after a goal has been scored, the goalposts are moved farther to discount the attempt. This attempts to leave the impression that an argument had a fair hearing while actually reaching a preordained conclusion.[4]”
You did it before the conversation but you made sure that the evidence would be dismissed unless it was empirical and supported your worldview.

What evidence? You can use logic as evidence, but somewhere along the line we need some empirical evidence. You don't have any.

Cherry picking, suppressing evidence, or the fallacy of incomplete evidence is the act of pointing to individual cases or data that seem to confirm a particular position, while ignoring a significant portion of related cases or data that may contradict that position.

What you are doing when deciding that evidence would be limited to empirical evidence.

Not limited to empirical evidence. Someone could use logic, and deductive reasoning. However, you need at least some evidence which is independent of the imagination.

Thelogical fallacy of accident (also called destroying the exception or a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid) is adeductive fallacy occurring instatistical syllogisms (an argument based on ageneralization) when an exception to arule of thumb[1] is ignored. It is one of the thirteen fallacies originally identified byAristotle. The fallacy occurs when one attempts to apply a general rule to an irrelevant situation.
Empirical evidence should be expected except when?​


Belief.

“Argument from ignorance, also known as argumentum ad ignorantiam or "appeal to ignorance" (where "ignorance" stands for: "lack of evidence to the contrary"), is a fallacy in informal logic. It asserts that a proposition is true because it has not yet been proven false, it is "generally accepted" (or vice versa).“
You suggest this subject isn’t able to be rationally understood because you haven’t personally grasped the subject matter.

No, I claimed that the subject matter isn`t able to be rationally understood because the subject matter deals with non-physical things which we have no ability to understand or study. It`s not that I don`t understand the subject matter, it`s that nobody can lay make a factual claim to it.

Equivocation ("to call by the same name") is classified as both a formal and informal logical fallacy. It is the misleading use of a term with more than one meaning or sense (by glossing over which meaning is intended at a particular time). It generally occurs with polysemic words (words with multiple meanings).
Mixing up idealism and your own particular understanding of what superstitious and supernatural means.

I didn't mix up idealism, you didn't differentiate between the three definitinons, which you introduced to begin with.
I'm still curious how you would define supernatural, and how your vampire reference sprung into it.
I still stand by my definition of superstition:

Superstition
A belief in supernatural causality: that one event leads to the cause of another without any physical process linking the two events;

a false conception of causality, such as astrology, omens, witchcraft, etc, that contradicts natural science.

So, have you given up on proving God here then?
 
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Timothew

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(shifting the) Burden of proof (see – onus probandi) – I need not prove my claim, you must prove it is false.”
You are making sure the burden of proof rests on me by not disclosing/developing your position that you would have to support.
Begging the question (Latin petitio principii, "assuming the initial point") is a type of logical fallacy in which a proposition is made that uses its own premise as proof of the proposition.“
Your suggestion that empirical evidence is necessary to form a rational opinion.
“Argumentum ad nauseam or argument from repetition or argumentumad infinitum is an argument made repeatedly (possibly by different people) until nobody cares to discuss it any more. This may sometimes, but not always, be a form of proof by assertion”
Your constant demand of empirical evidence for non physical things that you know isn’t possible would be an excellent example of this.
Moving the goalposts, also known as raising the bar, is an informal logically fallacious argument in which evidence presented in response to a specific claim is dismissed and some other (often greater) evidence is demanded. In other words, after a goal has been scored, the goalposts are moved farther to discount the attempt. This attempts to leave the impression that an argument had a fair hearing while actually reaching a preordained conclusion.[4]”
You did it before the conversation but you made sure that the evidence would be dismissed unless it was empirical and supported your worldview.
Cherry picking, suppressing evidence, or the fallacy of incomplete evidence is the act of pointing to individual cases or data that seem to confirm a particular position, while ignoring a significant portion of related cases or data that may contradict that position.
What you are doing when deciding that evidence would be limited to empirical evidence.
Thelogical fallacy of accident (also called destroying the exception or a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid) is adeductive fallacy occurring instatistical syllogisms (an argument based on ageneralization) when an exception to arule of thumb[1] is ignored. It is one of the thirteen fallacies originally identified byAristotle. The fallacy occurs when one attempts to apply a general rule to an irrelevant situation.
Empirical evidence should be expected except when?
“Argument from ignorance, also known as argumentum ad ignorantiam or "appeal to ignorance" (where "ignorance" stands for: "lack of evidence to the contrary"), is a fallacy in informal logic. It asserts that a proposition is true because it has not yet been proven false, it is "generally accepted" (or vice versa).“
You suggest this subject isn’t able to be rationally understood because you haven’t personally grasped the subject matter.
Equivocation ("to call by the same name") is classified as both a formal and informal logical fallacy. It is the misleading use of a term with more than one meaning or sense (by glossing over which meaning is intended at a particular time). It generally occurs with polysemic words (words with multiple meanings).

I see these fallacies committed all the time when I discuss hell-fire with traditionalists. Is there a link to a webpage where all of these fallacies are listed?
 
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JGG

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No of course you haven't! Don't you think there must be a reason why a large proportion of Christians seemingly struggle with the likeness of Christ? I wouldn't want you to think I am pointing my finger at Ronald, because atheist's have demons to battle too. But this verse might turn a light on for you:

Matthew 12:43 “When an impure spirit comes out of a person, it goes through arid places seeking rest and does not find it. 44 Then it says, ‘I will return to the house I left.’ When it arrives, it finds the house unoccupied, swept clean and put in order. 45 Then it goes and takes with it seven other spirits more wicked than itself, and they go in and live there. And the final condition of that person is worse than the first.

What is Jesus saying? That when a person is freed from their bondage to the enemy, they can continue living as they did before? Quite the contrary, that is when the battle begins, and you can observe the failure of many Christians to overcome their demons, but you can also observe the salvation of many Christians who have kept their eye on the goal.

So, there's an excuse?

Yes, it does get frustrating. Every time I try to corner you there's another excuse and we end up running around in circles.

Maybe, but that's equally true for me. I still don't have to take personal shots at people.

I can't get inside your mind. That's what makes a conversion so interesting, that it isn't actually anyone other than God who makes it happen.

Then you should all spend your time getting angry and condemning your God, not me.

We keep telling you about Him, you keep dismissing our testimony, even having called me delusional at one time!

I believe I said that I have to consider that you may be deluding yourself. I also believed you called me the antichrist. So, let's call it even.

Why do you think that my experience is any less valuable than yours? And if you don't, then why do you not believe my testimony?

Because your experience is your experience, not mine. I can only experience my experience. Yours might be wrong, you may use selective reasoning, selective observation. You may be deluding yourself, or suffer from some undiagnosed mental illness for all I know. Furthermore, why should I believe that your experience is more valid than that of a Hindu man whose subjective testimony is completely different from yours? In the end, your experience is subjective, and neither of us can confirm it.
 
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ElijahW

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So, have you given up on proving God here then?
That was never my position, that was what you wanted my position to be.
A straw man is a type of argument and is an informal fallacy based on misrepresentation of an opponent's position.[1] To "attack a straw man" is to create the illusion of having refuted a proposition by replacing it with a superficially similar yet unequivalent proposition (the "straw man"), and refuting it, without ever having actually refuted the original position.
My position was that God could be understood rationally and that what you were asking for in regards to evidence was irrational.

Just because you saw your professors do this, doesn't mean it is rational behavior.

But yes we can wrap it up. It's been fun chatting.
Easy travels man.
 
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JGG

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That was never my position, that was what you wanted my position to be.
A straw man is a type of argument and is an informal fallacy based on misrepresentation of an opponent's position.[1] To "attack a straw man" is to create the illusion of having refuted a proposition by replacing it with a superficially similar yet unequivalent proposition (the "straw man"), and refuting it, without ever having actually refuted the original position.
My position was that God could be understood rationally and that what you were asking for in regards to evidence was irrational.

Just because you saw your professors do this, doesn't mean it is rational behavior.

It's not? Why not? We all ask for evidence. We all seek information and ask for information. Remember the theory of unsubstantiated operant awareness? You refused to claim at your opinion of it was before you had information about it. Which is completely normal. Yet you condemned me for not being willing to decide what God is, with mere conjecture (which is anti-information).

However, the information you provided was merely a God created to answer your questions so that it seems rational to you, so that you feel you understand it. You then get upset with me because it doesn't answer my questions (and I have a lot of them).

That doesn't mean God is rational, as all you really did was create a God concept to fill some gaps, not actually address questions about whether God is truly rational.

Do you understand what I'm getting at? How do you intend to distinguish fact from imagination without physical evidence?
 
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ElijahW

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It's not? Why not? We all ask for evidence. We all seek information and ask for information. Remember the theory of unsubstantiated operant awareness? You refused to claim at your opinion of it was before you had information about it. Which is completely normal. Yet you condemned me for not being willing to decide what God is, with mere conjecture (which is anti-information).
Because you would be committing another fallacy if you did so.
"Appeal to authority – where an assertion is deemed true because of the position or authority of the person asserting it."
However, the information you provided was merely a God created to answer your questions so that it seems rational to you, so that you feel you understand it. You then get upset with me because it doesn't answer my questions (and I have a lot of them).

That doesn't mean God is rational, as all you really did was create a God concept to fill some gaps, not actually address questions about whether God is truly rational.
Red herring – argument given in response to another argument, which is irrelevant and draws attention away from subject of argument. See also irrelevant conclusion.

An ad hominem (Latin for "to the man" or "to the person"), short for argumentum ad hominem, is an attempt to negate the truth of a claim by pointing out a negative characteristic or belief of the person supporting it.[1] Ad hominem reasoning is normally described as a logical fallacy,[2][3][4] more precisely an informal fallacy and an irrelevance.

Appeal to motive is a pattern of argument which consists in challenging a thesis by calling into question the motives of its proposer. It can be considered as a special case of the ad hominem circumstantial argument. As such, this type of argument may be a logical fallacy.
 
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Timothew

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JGG

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Because you would be committing another fallacy if you did so.
"Appeal to authority – where an assertion is deemed true because of the position or authority of the person asserting it."​


Actually, if I didn't ask for evidence, this would be the fallacy I'm committing.

Red herring – argument given in response to another argument, which is irrelevant and draws attention away from subject of argument. See also irrelevant conclusion.

Maybe you should learn how to use these properly.

An ad hominem (Latin for "to the man" or "to the person"), short for argumentum ad hominem, is an attempt to negate the truth of a claim by pointing out a negative characteristic or belief of the person supporting it.[1] Ad hominem reasoning is normally described as a logical fallacy,[2][3][4] more precisely an informal fallacy and an irrelevance.

Appeal to motive is a pattern of argument which consists in challenging a thesis by calling into question the motives of its proposer. It can be considered as a special case of the ad hominem circumstantial argument. As such, this type of argument may be a logical fallacy.

But these are what you did, throughout the entire conversation!

What fallacy can you find in there about double standards?
 
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ElijahW

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Actually, if I didn't ask for evidence, this would be the fallacy I'm committing.

Maybe you should learn how to use these properly.
Another.

Ad hominem – attacking the arguer instead of the argument.
But these are what you did, throughout the entire conversation!

What fallacy can you find in there about double standards?
Tu quoque ("you too", appeal to hypocrisy) – the argument states that a certain position is false or wrong and/or should be disregarded because its proponent fails to act consistently in accordance with that position.

I think that is 14 different fallacies you have openly committed recently in this conversation.
 
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