Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
04-03-2002, 03:15 PM | #11 |
Regular Member
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: San Diego, CA, USA
Posts: 281
|
Tercel -
The problem with that sort of reasoning is that ANYTHING which is unknown can be taken as a 'miraculous supernatural occurence'. This is, of course, the crux of the problem when dealing with supernatural claims. How does one determine if in fact, a supernatural event has ACTUALLY occurred? The answer? One CAN'T determine that a supernatural event has occurred - one can only determine that a supernatural event has NOT occurred - and that can only come from examining naturalistic possibilities that we can in fact test in the natural world. This is the point behind Mal's wonderful synopsis "Supernaturalism cannot, by its nature, be a "missing piece"; it is merely the observation that a piece is missing." The only thing that an event which has no known explanation can show is that there is no known explanation for it. Any so called "supernatural event" must be a priori ASSUMED to have happened - because without knowledge of how an event happened, the only logical conclusion is that "We don't know" - e.g. a "piece is missing". This should be OBVIOUS to anyone who has studied the history of science. For an example, only a few centuries ago, a supernova was ALWAYS taken as a divine sign. Why? Because supernovas are rare, and behave very differently from normal stars. No KNOWN agency could cause a star to suddenly flare brightly, then dim beyond the ability to view it. Ergo, goddidit. Yet today, we have sufficient knowledge about stellar life cycles that supernovas are perfectly explainable WITHOUT needing divine intervention. Without claiming perfect, omniscient, knowledge, YOU cannot make a claim that a supernatural event has happened - because to do so, you would have to be able to show, either the supernatural agency behind the event, or that no natural agency could have caused that event. You can only make the claim that "we don't know how this event happened." That, of course, is the problem with the God of the Gaps, since the amount of things that we can make the claim that "we don't know how this event happened" shrink daily. While it's certain in my mind that there WILL always be a gap somewhere in human knowledge, it's a poor argument, because you constantly have to move God from one gap into another, smaller gap, as God is displaced from his previous niche by the advancement of human knowledge. Cheers, The San Diego Atheist |
04-03-2002, 06:42 PM | #12 | ||||||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 1,315
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Apart from restating the assertion that "One CAN'T determine that a supernatural event has occurred" are you going to present ANY evidence for it? Quote:
Quote:
A useful rule is that we should not infer a supernatural event from what we don't know but only from what we do know. Only if an event is in contradiction to a well-known and well-understood area of natural law should we even consider pulling in the supernatural explanations. Examples: The people in your above example knew stuff all about stars except that they weren't often observed to explode. Thus their falling back on a miraculous explanation for their observations is simply God-of-the-gaps. We know that people dying on a cross absolutely dodn't naturally rise to life and walk through locked doors. Hence the use of a supernatural explanation is not God-of-the-gaps. We are sufficiently knowledgeable of medicene etc that we know broken bones absolutely don't spontaneously heal themselves naturally and neither does brain tissue spontaneously regenerate naturally. Hence a supernatural explanation is not God-of-the-gaps. We should conclude supernaturalism only from what we do know, not what we don't. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Tercel |
||||||||
04-04-2002, 12:18 AM | #13 |
Regular Member
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Wellington, New Zealand
Posts: 484
|
Thinking that there are supernatural agents would undermine your confidence in natural laws and explanations in general. How do we know that mass and energy/mass is conserved or it is God just having a joke with us. God just makes energy/mass be conserved for the last five hundred years on the planet earth. At all other times and everywhere else in the universe energy is actually increasing over time. Newton's Laws, the Laws of Thermodynamics, and evolution could also be something that God deceived us into believing were true over immense periods of time. So the existence of God just undermines our ability to explain things generally in times and places that we can not directly access ourselves.
What is miraculous may vary on which theist you ask. Something like creation in general would have been thought to have been miraculous. But now many of our gaps in understanding about the universe's formation has been filled through natural explanation. The creation of humans and the earth would have thought have been miraculous but these events are now thought to be explainable by natural laws. The theists fighting for the existence of the supernatural keep on ceding grounds to natural explanations. Theists started out saying that all creation was attributible to God, but they now only have a small part of creation that they say is attributable to God. Something like the miracles performed by Moses, Jesus, or Muhammad if believed, would start presenting evidence for God. But anything that says we are ignorant about this, therefore Zeus must exist to explain this situation, is wrong argument. To prove that Zeus existed you would need to have clear evidence that Zeus presented himself to people through the ages. Something that is vague like sea breezes is not proof of the existence of Zeus. |
04-04-2002, 12:24 AM | #14 | |||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2001
Location: Vienna, Austria
Posts: 2,406
|
Quote:
Quote:
How can a supernaturalist ever decide between a vision and an observation of an actual event, without referring to a pre-conceived faith ? Quote:
Quote:
When I see something rising from the dead, at least one of the following hypotheses must be wrong: 1) Dead people stay dead. 2) Photons travel in straight lines and are not generated in midair. 3) Rods and cones react only when struck by photons. 4) The optic nerve propagates impulses only when excitated by retina cells 5) No supernatural power influences my brain in some other way. 6) I haven't taken a drug which produces hallucinations 7) I am not the victim of a mental disease 8) This is not a trick of David Copperfield's .... Even if I think that I have successfully excluded naturalistic explanations like 6) to 8), is there any non-arbitrary reason why I should pick specifically 1) as false ? BTW, if I have a perception which seems to be inconsistent with the regularities of nature, I might reconsider - after consulting a psychiatrist, of course. Right now we are dealing with reports of other people's alleged perceptions. Quote:
it's not that my perceptions disagree with naturalism. Apologists make a claim that a report of someone else's perceptions 2000 years ago disagrees with naturalism, and suggest one specific supernatural explanation. In order to infer this specific explanation, they exclude not only plain "measurement error" (which would be my explanation), but also supernatural intervention which do not fit into their pre-conceived mindset. Regards, HRG. [ April 04, 2002: Message edited by: HRG ] [ April 04, 2002: Message edited by: HRG ]</p> |
|||||
04-04-2002, 05:13 PM | #15 | |||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 1,315
|
Quote:
I can but echo Kenny's statement: I feel that my belief and confidence in these natural laws finds its justification in and is most at home in my theistic worldview. I see no reason to believe in such things if the Ultimate is nothing more than blind chance and brute necessity. Quote:
Even more, I am of the opinion that major tricks by a deity can/must be a priori disbelieved for pragmatic reasons. Quote:
|
|||
04-04-2002, 05:51 PM | #16 | |||||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 1,315
|
Quote:
Quote:
Of course, either would serve to disprove naturalism/atheism. I'd be happy with that for starters... Clearly you can't absolutely prove it was the Christian God and not some trickster deity. (Unless of course you define the Christian God as "the deity who did it") This is where faith (aka trust) comes in somewhat. Well, faith along with a few pragmatic considerations as well: Commiting ourselves to a belief in the existence of a trickster deity isn't very helpful as it only serves to undermine our entire grasp of reality since any thought, memory or experience could thus be non-factual and only a result of the deity tricking us. Hence, I believe that pragmatically we can ignore the trickster deity option and go for belief in whatever deity is implied by the context of the miracle. Quote:
Quote:
My theism implies reliable perceptions it implies reliable thought it implies natural laws it implies consistency in the universe it implies the sucessfullness of science. Telling me I need to assume naturalism to get these things is simply a bad joke: It's my very acceptence of supernaturalism which has me believing these things. Quote:
But to answer your question: yes. I think there some compelling pragmatic reasons (I gave an example of one above) for accepting that what we are seeing accurately models reality. Hence upon ruling out 6 and 8, 1 is to be preferred as an explanation over any of the others (lacking other evidence of course). If however there exists evidence to suggest that it may really have been one of the others that happened then by all means we can accept that. As you pointed out: "BTW, if I have a perception which seems to be inconsistent with the regularities of nature, I might reconsider - after consulting a psychiatrist, of course." Quote:
Quote:
Can anyone say "naturalistic presuppostionalism"? Tercel |
|||||||
04-04-2002, 11:15 PM | #17 | |
Regular Member
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Wellington, New Zealand
Posts: 484
|
Quote:
For each miracle that God performs your confidence in a regular universe goes down for you see a violation of a natural law, a natural regularity. Each miracle shows that God does not have natural laws applying consistently. If God still performs miracles in the future we may not know which physical regularity that God wants to flout next. Unintentially, God is a trickster. For someone might grow up and they might think that dead bodies never come back to life after a day or two. But then someone believes that God resurrects Jesus. So God mislead us into thinking that resurrection was impossible. He might also have mislead us into thinking that people can not walk on water. For his next miracle God might have mislead us into thinking that pigs do not fly until we see a pig flying as proof of God's existence. God could make day into night to demonstrate his existence. He could make black become white to demonstrate his existence. You could be a Deist and not believe that God performs miracles and so the violations of natural laws goes away. But since most theists believe in miracles they must believe that God does act inconsistently with natural laws at least for some of the time. |
|
04-04-2002, 11:39 PM | #18 | ||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2001
Location: Vienna, Austria
Posts: 2,406
|
Quote:
Quote:
I observe those laws, consistencies, as well as they can be observed. It is obvious that all observations (especially those which rely on alleged and unobtainable "witnesses") may suffer from errors; that's why there are sophisticated statistical methods to deal with them. Quote:
Quote:
Regards, HRG. |
||||
04-05-2002, 12:40 AM | #19 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Singapore
Posts: 3,956
|
Well Tercel, according to physicists, God play dice so isn't it true that God is having a joke with us?
|
04-05-2002, 01:39 AM | #20 | ||||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Sweden
Posts: 2,567
|
Quote:
If you open your mind to accept explaination such as "Your god doesn't exist, my god just made you believe that he existed" you also reach a logic dead end where you really doesn't know anything. That's why I find the idea to claim that a specific omnipotent god exists logicaly false, since an omnipotent god can supposedly change reality after it's own will. To specify that god's attributes is nearly impossible. Quote:
If we were confronted by superior an ETI it could be mistaken to be god. And the technology it possess would probably be mistaken as "magic" or "supernatural" since it defies all natural laws known to man. There has been a thread about this before. I find the task to accept god as existing to be virtually impossible. Since by doing so you also open the door to a bilion other explainations, equally possible. Assuming supernaturalism as being a valid explaination makes it impossible to specify the source. I think that's why christian miracles only happens to christians, and muslim miracles only happens to muslims. Quote:
Weither this means that god can't help them, or doesn't wan't to is irrelavent. It all comes down to that he doesn't protect anyone. And if you examine the source of the trust. 1. If god speaks to you, how do you know wich god it is? Remember the trickster god. 2. If god doesn't speak to you, then it's not really god you put your trust in. Quote:
It's probability is atleast as high as for the truthful deity. Quote:
Quote:
|
||||||
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|