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03-13-2003, 01:10 PM | #21 | ||||
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it includes any form of "god" concept, since this concept in the abstract is boundless. One way to deal with this is to dispense with vague undefined and abstract "gods" and categorize atheism and theism as they relate to the acceptance or non-acceptance of specific God concepts. This is what I attempted to do in my previous post. This is a very useful approach, because which gods a person accepts and which they reject is far more revealing than simply knowing than whether or not they accept something, anything, that could be construed to fit into an ill-defined, infinitely vast "god" category. An alternative is to limit the general god concept, so that it includes only a subset of possibilities. For instance, something only counts as a "god" if it is a "personal" god and conceived as a kind of conscious entity with its own mind, motives, will, etc. Thus, whether a person uses a term like "god" is irrelevant. Theism here would be defined by whether the concept of the god they accept falls within the finite boundaries. I still think the above approach is more useful, but at least now we can reasonably determine whether or not a person accepts the existence of any entities that fall within this bounded "god" category. Quote:
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It makes more sense to define religion according to whether the accepted beliefs are arrived at via faith based revelation, versus logical inference from empirically valid premises. Thus, deism may be theism, but it is not religion. Defining religion according to its epistemology rather than content is both theological valid and consistent with non-scholar intuitions about what constitues "religious" belief. Quote:
only have useful meaning to the extent that they refer to specific concepts that have identifiable boundaries. The idea of "god" in the abstract lacks these qualities, so terms which refer to the acceptance of such an ill-defined idea have little meaning. |
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03-13-2003, 01:43 PM | #22 | ||
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that his own explicitly stated argument about what theistic assumptions are rationally warranted, exclude the assumption that god responds to prayer. He's very clear that "god exists" is the only assumption that is not a human invention. Quote:
Which is why I suggested that since evolution provides an non-theistic alternative to "how did we get here?", and Paine seemed to accept Deism only b/c it provided the only answer to this question, it is likely that Paine and other Deists would have either had to become non-theists or be hypocrites in terms of their claim to a rationally based theism. Type II Deism may have existed, may have been widespread among the founders and my even have been Paine's view. However, it contradicts Paine's and others arguments that deism makes only the needed universal and rationally based assumption that god exists. |
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03-14-2003, 11:58 AM | #23 | |
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