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Author | Topic: Agnosticism vs. Atheism | |||||||||||||||||||||||
John Inactive Member |
quote: What is evidence of absence? There isn't any.
quote: Yes, but it doesn't mean that you can infer the thing's non-existence. Consider: 1) If ~(exist) then ~(evidence)2) ~(evidence) This is your argument, yes? There is no way to logically get to ~(exist). Didn't we go through this with Rrhain, during which discussion you took the side I take now? ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: That is my position. You call it atheism. I call it agnosticism. It isn't proven, therefore, I don't know-- which is why I find it very irritating when people refer to agnosticism as cowardice. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: There is a third option-- "insufficient evidence." BTW, your sentence "there's no evidence that leads us to believe that there is a god" does not translate to "you don't believe something exists." "No evidence for..." puts the subject in limbo. We can't use it in argument, but neither can we call it "proven to be non-existent." ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: For non-existence, there isn't any sufficient evidence. Think about how you'd show that something doesn't exist in a limited set. "6" does not exist in "1,2,3,4,5." You can tell because you can see the whole set and simply compare. It is simple deduction. The problem is that with the universe-- meaning all that exists-- you can't see the whole set. Thus, any claim to non-existence is based on insufficient evidence. Claims of existence are different. One cat and you know that at least one cat exists. You can limit a set by other means- say, "things in two dimensions" or "non-contradictory things." This is where science operates-- within the very limited set of human experience. We have no choice, really. Claiming that within our knowledge there is no Puffinstuff is one thing. Claiming that there is no Puffinstuff at all, is quite another.
quote: Sure, if you know everything about everything and know with certainty that you know everything. I'm not holding my breath.
quote: This is logically flawed, crash. In fact, it is 'Intro. to Logic' material. That is what I was trying to explain in my previous post to you. I think you are wanting to use the formulation that "if something exists then it will leave evidence." This is logically equivalent to "if there is no evidence then it doesn't exist." Though this formulation makes a lot of common sense, it doesn't work. You can't know that all things that exist will leave evidence, especially since our perspective is limited and probably always will be. You have to use the formulation that "if there is evidence, then something exists." This is not equivalent to the previous formulations, and lack of evidence will not allow you to prove non-existence. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: You should read some of the world's mystics-- St. Theresa of Avila, for example. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: The vast majority of mystics from various religions do agree, however, to a surprising degree. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
That's what I think too.
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John Inactive Member |
The formula "If (God exists) then (evidence of God)" does lead to ~(God exists) if you have ~(evidence of God). The problem is with the direction of causality in the premise. You can't know that God would leave ( detectable ) evidence, if he exists. Consider: If gravitons, then evidence. We have no evidence for gravitons, therefore the do not exist. Well, this works just fine until someone finds evidence for a graviton. You can plug in any number of things. A few hundred years ago there was no evidence that heavier than air vehicles could fly, therefore heavier than air vehicles can't exist. It just doesn't work. The formula that does work is "If (evidence of God), then (God exists)." This is not equivalent to the previous formulation, and ~(evidence of God) does not lead to ~(God exists).
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John Inactive Member |
quote: Sure. If god is supposed to perform an action, or is supposed to have performed an action, which can be checked, then we can confirm or deny that conception of god. What we are confirming or denying is the conception, really, not the god. It is great fun nonetheless.
quote: Mathematical induction only works in rigidly defined systems. Think of it as toppling dominoes-- you've probably heard this analogy. In a system like mathematics, you know the next domino will fall-- it is built into the system. In the real world, you don't know that the next domino-- the next conception of God-- will fall. All you can do is check one at a time. You will be busy for eternity.
quote: I think it is rational to behave as if there is no God until evidence for one is found. This is the same for anything else. I will behave as if there are no alien colonists on Earth until someone finds evidence for such. This is not to say I believe in alien colonists, nor does it say I don't.
quote: I just really don't see it that way at all. Only things that have evidence get onto my continuum of confidence, as you put it. Things that don't have evidence just sit in limbo. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: You can't know that. It is possible that some things exist which we can never detect-- previous or alternate universes for example. It is very questionable whether we can ever settle this. It isn't a statement of existence or non-existence. We simply can't know. Something we can't detect may not make a difference to us and we ought to be able to ignore such things; but that isn't a statement of non-existence.
quote: That is exactly the problem with 'lack of evidence' arguments. It is always a matter of what we can detect right now. You can't know what will be detectable a few days, weeks, or centuries from now; and so you can't make claims of non-existence based upon lack of evidence.
quote: Sure it is. There isn't any evidence. That makes it about 'there being no evidence.'
quote: I think you mean what a logician would call contradictory evidence. We can refute a lot of particular claims. What this proves is that the particular claim is wrong. You will never exhaust the particular claims and you can't generalize from particular to universal. It would be like trying to prove that there are no red marbles in a box of infinite size. There really is no contradictory evidence. The only way to prove the postulate is to investigate every single aspect of the box. The box being infinite, this is impossible.
quote: It is your assumption that a God would be obvious. You don't know that, and you can't know that, without having the ability to investigate God. And if we could investigate God, we would have positive proof of God's existence and we wouldn't be having this conversation. There are conceptions of God which do not fit your criteria. You cannot brush them aside to make your argument work. That is special pleading.
quote: Which is exactly the same case as with God... How is the example not apropriate?
quote: Now apply the same logic to the idea of God. "God doesn't exist, or our idea of God is wrong." ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
I'm gonna skip down to where you start disagreeing.
quote: I don't understand how. I don't even understand enough to guess at a response.
quote: Inference is acceptable. I don't see the problem. Inferring a God would be acceptable as well. I don't know of any such thing. It would really change the debate if someone could present something like that.
quote: Well, yeah, I do actually. I don't know of any good evidence for ESP, but I don't consider it impossible either.
quote: The ark story in the Bible is specific enough that I think it can be effectively refuted. It could have been based on some real event-- a sea-faring migration, perhaps, or just a large local flood.
quote: The Flood story is not just about a lack of evidence. We know enough about floods to know what traces one would leave behind. "God" isn't so simple a postulate. We don't have any evidence of small local gods which might tell us what evidence a large God would leave behind.
quote: I agree that an Ark, had it existed, may have disintegrated, or perhaps is buried and simply hidden from view at the moment in some unknown location. But I am not an arkian agnostic. The ark story is specific enough that one can say it didn't exist. It is too small to hold the animals it must have held. It would have been too large for the wooden structure to hold. You get the idea. But this is a conclusion about the particular ark recorded in the Bible. Some ship, or artifact, may have had a myth build around it. This is the same as refuting a particular example of God. A God that invariably answers prayers can be refuted or confirmed. But we don't know that a God would invariably answer prayers. In fact, assuming God has a will of its own, it is reasonable to assume God wouldn't invariably answer prayer-- perhaps deeming some prayers too trivial or some requests distasteful. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: Right-o.
quote: Yes. The lowest common denominator is perception. It is all we have. With perception as a starting point, you can only gain information about what is, not about what isn't. To get negatives you have to limit the set to a bite sized chunk and essentially list what is in the set and subtract. Simple deduction. If you can't limit the set like that, the process doesn't work.
quote: "Real" is such a loaded term. Renaisance astronomers screwed the church's real world. Einstein screwed Newton's real world. Quantum mechanics screwed Einstein's real world. Einstein returned the favor. Most people assume a materialistic world-- classicly materialistic-- which is patently wrong as per modern atomic and sub-atomic physics. Things aren't solid, even the particles aren't solid. They aren't even matter, really. The universe isn't a neat 3D box...
quote: Functionally, I make the same assumption. It is an assumption, however, not a proof or conclusion derivable from anything we have.
quote: Must have missed that. But you got the point.
quote: If you have a conception of a god who should leave evidence, then you can test it and prove or disprove that conception. You would spend eternity disproving conceptions that might leave evidence. It is an impossible task. Take gravity. I could go through thousands of ideas-- millions of ideas-- to explain gravity. Disproving all of them would not disprove gravity. With gravity the process would eventually stop because I would, one hopes, stumble upon an idea that does work. With God that might never happen, but assume that God exists and does leave some kind of evidence just as does gravity. How many refuted ideas, refutes the thing?
quote: There is an infinite set of gods. Take A,B, and C. These are gods. One can refute A and B, leaving C. Logically, by a process called addition, I can add D, E, and F. Refute C, leaving D, E, and F. Refute D and E. Addition. etc. etc. and so on forever. ------------------
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John Inactive Member |
quote: I think that is the problem. I don't know what god is other than 'some entity who influences or once influenced humans and/or the world we call the real world.' I'm not even sure about the 'entity' part-- the tao doesn't qualify for example.
quote: You should be able to prove or disprove a great many common, even uncommon, ideas about god. I don't know whether you can get them all, however. ------------------
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