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02-04-2003, 12:52 PM | #31 |
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Originally posted by mattbballman :
"Depends on their view of indiviual responsibility. Mine's rather high. Society's as a whole is rather low. I think in many dimensions; most people think in only one at a time." I can't think of any remotely promising way to argue that secret free willed people chose for every one of those beams to fall down, those pipes to burst, those electrical outlets to shock the children, and for those deadly and painful diseases to afflict them. |
02-04-2003, 01:11 PM | #32 |
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Originally posted by luvluv :
"Well, is anything other than the UPD really necessary?" It shouldn't be. But I don't think it really helps much in the case of the orphans; all it seems to do is remind us of the possibility that the security guards are present. But if it really removes our ability to make any such judgment, it seems that we could make the situation as bad as conceivable without allowing us to make such a decision. Suppose it was an infinite number of orphans, and they were all infinitely painfully tortured for all eternity. According to UPD (as construed to apply to the non-deductive arguments), you still wouldn't be able to infer that the security guards probably weren't there that time. "Further, I think if your example is to be honest, that some of the children should fall out of the window and die, others go on to have fruitful and meaningful relationships with the guards (at a distance, somehow) and eventually go on to live fulfilling lives." I don't think that's necessary. God is everywhere, so even if such horrible instances are only locally rather than globally analogous, any local analogue could be said to "become" global. That is, the orphanage case is applicable to any major disaster, or even just the cross-section of the population who suffer horrible pain. "It's just a blatant appeal to emotion, in my book." That's what's necessary to illuminate the jump from (1) and (2) to (3). We make similar leaps all the time, as in the moths case. "Why not use full blown Christian theology as the thought experiment?" The theist is perfectly capable of applying it to the orphanage example. Maybe the security guards were there, but it was really better for the orphans that they all die that way. Maybe there was a really powerful evil guy hanging around who made all that happen, and the security guards decided to let him run amok for some inscrutable reason. You can append "maybes" all you want, but look for yourself, honestly, at whether you think they make it seem any more likely that the security guards were around instead of on vacation. No matter how many possible mitigating circumstances you add, they seem to produce the same increase in probability to either side, if you take my meaning. That is, the security guards' presence is consistent with the situation no matter how many of these additions you make. And you have to grant that the horrible events are more likely on the hypothesis that the security guards were on vacation -- aren't they? Or does the security guards' presence produce absolutely no guarantee that the children will be protected, in which case, what's the point of having them around at all? "I would say that there are probably no moths in your closet, or that they are dead or molting or something. But I couldn't say that there definitely were no moths in the closet with objective certainty." Of course you can't; I'm not asking for you to do the same with God either. I'm just saying it's more likely than not that the moths weren't in that particular closet, it's more likely than not that the security guards were on vacation at the time, and it's more likely than not that God doesn't exist. |
02-04-2003, 01:36 PM | #33 |
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Couldn't the same "more likely than not" argument be made for realities that support the existence of God? Couldn't it apply to the cosmological or the teleological arguments as well? Or to the argument from religious belief? If the absence or presence of evil were the only evidence available for us to discern the existence of God, then these "more likely than not" examples could be profitable. But it isn't, so they are not. The problem of evil would only be sufficient to eliminate belief in God if it functioned as a sound disproof. But the fact that it only yields (to some people, in a totally subjective fashion) a "probably not" does not mean that "God probably does not exist". There is more evidence for and against God's existence than the existence of evil in the world, and if all the P.O.E. can do (for some people in a totally subjective way) is produce a "probably not", then this "probably not" gathered together with all the other "probably not's" must be weighed against the "probably so's" before anyone can come to any such far reaching conclusion as "God probably doesn't exist."
And even then you could very easily be wrong. I'm sorry, in the end I just don't see the point of this exercise. Is this a typical exercise in philosophy? Is this kind of thing encouraged? |
02-04-2003, 02:14 PM | #34 | |
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Originally posted by luvluv :
"Couldn't the same 'more likely than not' argument be made for realities that support the existence of God?" I hope not. Sure, maybe it could. I encourage anyone to try for it. But in my experience, it hasn't happened. No one could say that the best explanation for the world's existence is that God exists, I don't think, and defend it cogently. Or that more likely than not, God exists. I mean, these are the force of most of the contemporary arguments for God's existence. I agree totally that we have to sum up the probablies and the probably nots and in the end figure out which side has more probabilistic support. Arguments from evil, unless they're deductive (and these have largely been abandoned), won't be able to answer a deductive argument for God's existence. Deductive arguments trump everything. But here, as is the case with most things, there just isn't one available for either side. (At least, not one based on the Problem of Evil.) In fact, positive probabilistic evidence for God's existence will provide reason to doubt the evidential arguments from evil. Evidence that God exists is evidence that all the suffering we observe is not in fact gratuitous. My default position for this post has been that there is no sound deductive or evidential argument for the conclusion that God exists, and therefore, the scales are even -- until I provide the probabilistic weight of the argument from evil to tip the scales in the "atheism" direction. And it's incumbent on the theist to answer that argument or to provide positive argumentation for her own side that will tip the scales back in the other direction. So. If the theist can't provide any positive evidence for God's existence, the scales remain tipped in the "probably, no God" direction (if the argument from evil is sound or strong). "I'm sorry, in the end I just don't see the point of this exercise. Is this a typical exercise in philosophy? Is this kind of thing encouraged?" It's nice when one has a deductive argument to employ for some conclusion, but it's rare. More often, it's a matter of probabilistic arguments versus other probabilistic arguments. As for these thought experiments, they're intended to make the best explanation really clearly seem to be the best. Here's a post I made elsewhere recently on the subject... Quote:
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