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Old 12-19-2002, 10:28 AM   #11
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Ojuice,

Your definition of metaphysical naturalist is incorrect. A metaphysical naturalist is one who believes that nothing supernatural exists. I hold no beliefs regarding the existence of anything supernatural, therefore I am not a metaphysical naturalist.

Sincerely,

Goliath
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Old 12-19-2002, 10:30 AM   #12
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Quote:
Originally posted by Ojuice5001:
<strong>Goliath and ReasonableDoubt,

It's the definition of "metaphysical naturalist" that I'm using, all right?</strong>
No. It is not in the least all right.
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Old 12-19-2002, 10:30 AM   #13
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If I wanted to argue over definitions, I'd talk to my brother, who is in town for Christmas. This thread is about the relations of naturalism and supernaturalism circa 50,000 BCE.
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Old 12-19-2002, 10:39 AM   #14
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Quote:
Originally posted by Ojuice5001:
<strong>If I wanted to argue over definitions, I'd talk to my brother, who is in town for Christmas. This thread is about the relations of naturalism and supernaturalism circa 50,000 BCE.</strong>
Bacteria are naturalist, by which I mean very, very tiny.
Skunks, on the other hand, are supernaturalists, by which I mean having a striped tail.
Therefore, Ojuice5001 is absurd, by which I mean neither very, very tiny nor possessing a striped tail.
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Old 12-19-2002, 10:40 AM   #15
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ReasonableDoubt,

I started a new thread for the question, What is a metaphysical naturalist? Go to it.
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Old 12-19-2002, 10:44 AM   #16
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Sorry, I don't take orders from the absurd.
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Old 12-19-2002, 11:08 AM   #17
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Ojuice5001
Your first premise is not simply incorrect, it is logically incorrect.

If you are equating metaphysical naturalists with all warm-blooded creatures, that means every single mammal and bird holds a complicated philosophical doctrine. Even if you managed to bend your mind around this concept, you'd have a difficult time convincing anyone that a tiny subset of "warm-blooded creatures," i.e. humans were ALL metaphysical naturalists.

That would indicate an analytic statement, that warm-blooded creatures are by definition metaphysical naturalists, and that is logically false, because it is a specific and technical framework of human beliefs.

Why don't you defend this premise?

~Radical subjectivist~
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Old 12-19-2002, 11:21 AM   #18
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Quote:
Originally posted by Kantian:
<strong>If you are equating metaphysical naturalists with all warm-blooded creatures, that means every single mammal and bird holds a complicated philosophical doctrine.</strong>
Nor is there any reason to limit this community to the warm-blooded - the most primitive awareness will suffice. It's absurd's little world populated mostly by single-celled empiricists.
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Old 12-19-2002, 11:55 AM   #19
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Quote:
Originally posted by Ojuice5001:
<strong>If I wanted to argue over definitions, I'd talk to my brother, who is in town for Christmas. This thread is about the relations of naturalism and supernaturalism circa 50,000 BCE.</strong>
Regardless, I am a living counterexample to your premise 1, and your argument still fails.

Sincerely,

Goliath
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Old 12-19-2002, 12:43 PM   #20
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The argument works fine if you replace "metaphysical naturalist" with "do not believe in the supernatural." I will edit the original post to say this. The edited post will, as I have said, not lose any validity, and it will gain a definition that is closer to what's normally meant by "metaphysical naturalist."
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