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08-26-2002, 02:28 PM | #221 | ||
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Hi sir drinks-a-lot,
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Presuppositions are circular, there is no way to avoid that. Circular arguments are not fallacious when it comes to ultimate things. We all must start our reasoning somewhere. Presupposing your starting point is unavoidable. So, the only way to determine if certain presuppositions are valid is if they provide the foundations necessary to support the whole worldview. Quote:
In the Christian worldview, the computer does not have in itself rationality. We humans program it. How would you as an atheist answer this question? In the atheist worldview, are computers rational? Why or why not? If you had my dog I think you would answer, no, dogs are not rational Honestly, I see dogs act both ways or maybe I am confusing irrationality with lack of intelligence. It's hard to tell. Kent |
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08-26-2002, 02:42 PM | #222 | |
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Hi Mark_Chid,
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This is a good question. The bible tells us that Jesus died on the cross for the sins of many and then he rose again from the dead. He died on the cross because only God himself could satisfy God's justice for our sin. We as humans cannot pay for our own sin. We would spend an eternity trying because our sin is against an infinite God. That is why God sent His Son to die on the cross for us. Jesus as God and being sinless was able to atone for our sin. Jesus' resurrection from the dead demonstated his righteousness, his victory over death for us, and his divinity. So yes, Jesus died and then rose from the dead. Kent |
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08-26-2002, 02:54 PM | #223 | |
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Either death is terrible or its not. Christianity teaches that death is not terrible if you go to heaven afterwards. Jesus apparently died in the certain knowledge he was going to heaven, then afterwards came back to life, proving he could choose whether or not to be dead. In the end he gave up life as a persecuted capenter to go back to eternity in heaven So I ask again WHERE'S THE SACRIFICE? To make a sacrifice you must lose something permanently - what exactly did God/Jesus lose? |
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08-26-2002, 04:58 PM | #224 |
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Kent,
You have said repeatedly "that when atheists use the laws of logic they are not acting in accordance with their own worldview." If I understand you correctly, you said that you could not prove that your worldview is the only consistent worldview. However, your worldview was the only worldview that you have conceived that was consistent. So, for both of our sakes, can you point out how I am not "acting in accordance" with my worldview? My worldview: I do not accept your "necessary being." I see no reason to believe he exists. I am an atheist. My presupposition is that the universe that we observe exists. Math and logic are human creations to model and explain observations about the universe that I presuppose exists. When I create a model ship, I can test the flow of water around the hull; so that when I build the real ship, I build the best design. When I use mathematics to model the flow of water around the hull of the ship, I am doing the exact same thing. Math is symbols, or models, that represent aspects of our reality. The number 3 represents what I have when I am holding 3 coins. It is a mind model just as my model boat is a physical model. Logic is another form of math. It is a system for modeling behavior in the world. It is a system to model relationships that have consistently proven to be true - just as 2 plus 2 equals four in math. When you have taken two coins and added two more to them, our world consistently presents us with four coins. We learn this rule of math by observing our world. We learn the rules of logic in the same way. The rules of logic are our models of the universe. Their existence is a combination of three factors. The first factor is the existence of the universe, which I have presupposed. The second factor is a human to make the observation. I know humans exist because I have observed them, and I myself am one. The third factor is human reasoning deducing that it can model its reality and doing so. Again, I know I can reason because I have observed myself do it. I know I can create models because I have done it. I have even created new forms of math and logic that assist me in predicting the behavior of our universe that I observe. It turned out later that someone else had already invented them, but I didn't know that at the time. My graphical models made predictions much faster than the teacher trying to use algebra. My models of infinity made much more sense to me than what the teachers were trying to teach using sets. So help me please. Show me where I am logically inconsistent. I have a bad habit of creating my own logic, so I very well may be logically inconsistent by world standards. If so, I am unaware of it. [ August 26, 2002: Message edited by: acronos ] Sorry, I posted a little too quickly. [ August 26, 2002: Message edited by: acronos ]</p> |
08-26-2002, 05:27 PM | #225 | |||||
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Kent
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Moreover, you have not explicitly set out what it even means to “account” for order, nor have you set out how postulating the existence of an infinitely complex being can possibly explain complexity. Since you have based so much of your argument upon these assumptions, I think it’s fair that you should at least explain what you’re talking about. Quote:
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Like an architect who insists that the earth is his foundation without regard to how it actually holds up the house, you are insisting that gods explain logic without the faintest notion of how God would be possible without any logic. Regards, Synaesthesia |
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08-26-2002, 05:36 PM | #226 | ||||||
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Hi acronos,
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I'm just trying to give you an idea of where I'm coming from. I will let you clarify your position and then we can go from there. Thanks Kent [ August 26, 2002: Message edited by: Kent Symanzik ]</p> |
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08-26-2002, 06:13 PM | #227 |
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Hello Kent- welcome to EoG. I confess I have not read all this thread; but after reading the last two pages, I want to point out what I see as a huge hole in your reasoning. You have said, in several places and various phrasing-
"We know that God does not change because he tells us so. " As you are a Christian, I know you are referring to the Bible. I contend you have no reason to believe this; the Bible is no more the "word of God" than any other book. There is nothing miraculous, or indeed extraordinary, about it. There is nothing telling us it is the word of God save itself; no messages written on the sky in letters of fire, or on the moon in patterns of craters; no least breath of evidence beyond the written words of men. Men who can be mistaken; men who can lie through their teeth. I am a strong atheist with respect to Jehovah- I can say with complete confidence he does not exist, because as he is most commonly defined- omniscient, omnipotent, omnibenevolent- he is self-contradictory in several ways. (A God of infinite love *cannot* co-exist with suffering.) As to my own world view- as far as I can tell, I only pre-suppose that my senses give me a good representation of an externally-existing universe. I am not a solipsist. I do not see that I need assume anything beyond that. |
08-26-2002, 06:32 PM | #228 | ||||
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However, the human capacity to reason is just a part of being human. It evolved the same way that the rest of us did. The ability to model the world to make predictions was a useful trait. Our ability to use symbols to model the world is a huge component in our intelligence. However, the rules of the universe exist outside of the existence of humans. These rules are part of the presupposition that the universe exists. Quote:
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I am drawing a distinction between human reasoning and the actual rules of the universe. The law of gravity exists in the absence of human observation. Once a human was there to observe it, then he was able to create a model that we call the Law of Gravity. The model is an example of logic, but the universe and its laws existed before it was observed. The universe existed before the reasoning of man created logic. The reasoning of man evolved. Quote:
[ August 26, 2002: Message edited by: acronos ]</p> |
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08-26-2002, 09:05 PM | #229 | |
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1. Are you asking the atheist to provide a justification of induction? There are always new attempts to digest, but to my knowledge, there is no naturalistic justification of induction. Are you hinting at a transcendental argument from epistemic foundations? If you are, I may offer in response the possibility that the atheist believe in Epistemo, a non-god whose existence causes epistemic foundations to obtain. 2. As for ethics, of course there are several secular ethical theories. To adopt some forms theism actually removes one's ethical footing, especially if one adopts utilitarianism or divine command theory. Are you familiar with transcendental moral argument from evil or with the Euthyphro dilemma? 3. It is patently false that the atheist "worldview" cannot countenance abstract universals. You are correct that conceptualism faces some difficulties, but one could be an atheist who believes in Plato's heaven, or, of course, a nominalist of any stripe. Of course, I believe conceptualism may also be defended fairly plausibly. |
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08-27-2002, 12:42 AM | #230 | ||
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"If my assumption that my God is the ultimate authority is true, then ..." BTW, by which authority did you assume that your God is the ultimate authority ? Regards, HRG. "Man is the measure of all things" (Protagoras) |
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