FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > IIDB ARCHIVE: 200X-2003, PD 2007 > IIDB Philosophical Forums (PRIOR TO JUN-2003)
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 05:55 AM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 04-11-2003, 03:13 PM   #71
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: In the land of two boys and no sleep.
Posts: 9,890
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by Christopher13
There is something humorous though about [Wyz_aub10]'s remark about atheists not involving themselves in the God question. What exactly does he think he's moderating? Atheists, above all, are interested in the God question. Everyone should be interested in it, so I don't fault them for the slight hypocrisy.
There is nothing hypocritical (and certainly nothing "anti-intellectual", whatever you mean by that) about my response.

Badfish stated that gnostics and atheists were "diametrically opposed", when compared to each other and to agnostics.

They are not.

My statement:

Quote:
‘Gnostics’ and ‘agnostics’ are really the ones diametrically opposed. Atheists don’t involve themselves with whether knowing god is possible or not.
...is quite appropriate. An atheist doesn't debate whether is it possible to know god in the context of gnosticism.

A gnostic says - "god talks to us". An agnostic says - "no, god does not talk to us."

An atheist does not believe in god, so the question is moot.

Do you understand?

I'm well aware of the fact that atheists challenge the gnostic and agnostic positions. But they are not "diametrically opposed" to gnosticism. (that would imply that atheists believe that god exists "to be known")
Wyz_sub10 is offline  
Old 04-12-2003, 07:10 AM   #72
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Colorado Springs
Posts: 6,471
Default

Quote:
I recall Diana above acting as if I had made a preposterous request that someone help me out by reading Aquinas. To think that someone needs convincing that the great thinkers in the history of philosophy might be worth a gander is discouraging. I was talking about Aquinas after all, not some second-rater like, for example, Sartre.
I dunno, Christopher. (Nice to see you're still around, btw.)

"I think, therefore I am" seems much more reasonable to me than "Everything that moves is moved by another and infinite regression is impossible" (which, as I've painstakingly explained, are mutually exclusive premises).

I fail to understand how my reading Aquinas will make this basic problem go away. You certainly haven't.

d
diana is offline  
Old 04-13-2003, 04:21 AM   #73
HRG
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: May 2001
Location: Vienna, Austria
Posts: 2,406
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by Christopher13
[B]Jobar, when confronted with modern scientific theories (and, HRG, fifty years is still what I call recent),
50 years ? Absolute space and absolute time were dead the moment Einstein published "Zur Elektrodynamik bewegter Körper" and Minkowski introduced space-time with the Lorentz metric. IMHO - although you'll disagree - strict causality was dead with the experimental confirmation of Bell's inequality.
Quote:
I can only say that the proof of individual beings is before our eyes. Everyone likes to bring up quantum theory, and these kinds of discoveries do impact philosophy, but showing the randomness of things, while problematic for Aquinas' fifth proof (the one from intelligent design), does not show that things are uncaused.
True. We can always invent leprechauns which make indistiguishable pions decay in different modes.

QM does, however, put the burden of proof on those who insist that all things are caused, and want to derive other propositions from this basic claim.
Quote:

Nothing happens without reason/cause.
Please tell us how you arrived at this universal - and at least for me, rather surprising - claim. I'm afraid that calling it "metaphysical insight" is not convincing for those who do not share your metaphysics.

Regards,
HRG.
HRG is offline  
Old 04-13-2003, 02:22 PM   #74
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Colorado Springs
Posts: 6,471
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by diana
"I think, therefore I am" seems much more reasonable to me ....
This has been here a day or two and no one has called me on it. (Shame on y'all. )

I was thinking of Rene Descartes, immortalized in Monty Python's, "Rene Descartes was a drunken fart: I drink, therefore, I am."

My point still stands, though. Discussion of Sartre (or Descartes) is a red herring. We're lambasting Aquinas here. Let's keep our eyes on the ball.

d
diana is offline  
Old 04-13-2003, 03:48 PM   #75
Banned
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Southern California
Posts: 3,018
Thumbs down

Wyz says:
Quote:
Darwin wasn’t trying to make any comment on god. He did have personal views of god, of course, but they were irrelevant to the validity of his work.
Not according to Darwin and his good friend, the geologist, Charles Lyell, whose sedimentary rocks analysis give Darwin the millions of years he need for his theory to be imaginatively viable. In 1830, Lyell wrote to Georges Scrope:
Quote:
… this idea came to me five or six years ago, that if the Mosaic geology can be dismissed without upsetting anyone, it would be a historic blow… Let them feel it and draw their own conclusions” (Lyell, 1881, p. 138).
Darwin wrote:
Quote:
Lyell is firmly convinced that without ever having said a word against the Bible he has been effective in shaking belief in the Deluge (Darwin, 1877).
Hardly the paradigm of disinterested, scientific objectivity, eh, Wiz? Care to recant? -- Sincerely, Albert the Traditional Catholic
Albert Cipriani is offline  
Old 04-13-2003, 09:51 PM   #76
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: In the land of two boys and no sleep.
Posts: 9,890
Default

Albert Cipriani:

What do any of your quotes have to do with my comment on Darwin?

To repeat, I stated:

Quote:
Darwin wasn’t trying to make any comment on god. He did have personal views of god, of course, but they were irrelevant to the validity of his work.
You supply some comments relating to Lyell. I fail to see the relevance to Darwin's intentions in formulating his theory.
Wyz_sub10 is offline  
Old 04-14-2003, 02:09 PM   #77
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: SW 31 52 24W4
Posts: 1,508
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by Christopher13
Silent Acorns ... Can you be more specific about why you insist on the being/event distinction?
In order for the first cause to be "consistent with what people generally understand to be God" the first cause has to be some kind of being. You have said yourself that "Events, to get a little technical, are not beings ... are not things with their own intrinsic forms, but artificial arrangements of parts which have their own forms". My interpretation of Aquinas' third way is that beings can cause events but events can't cause beings. In rder to support this claim one has to be clear about what makes something a "being" and another thing an "event".

What does "individual existant" mean? Is it any single "thing" that exists? I assume I would qualify as a being. Would my goldfish? A rock? If a rock qualifies, why not an unstable quantum singularity?

Suppose for a moment that the Big Bang was uncaused (and just to be clear, the Big Bang includes the beginning of time - i.e. there is no such thing as "before the Big Bang"). This scenario is completely consistent with Aquinas' third way but there is no God (except the pantheist's - the Universe is God).
Silent Acorns is offline  
Old 04-21-2003, 06:15 PM   #78
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: In the land of two boys and no sleep.
Posts: 9,890
Default

I don't usually bump threads for an answer, but I answered two challenges - one from Albert and one from Christopher.

Considering how one accused me of anti-intellectualism and the other wonder, in light of his evidence, if I would recant, I thought I'd at least get acknowledgement.
Wyz_sub10 is offline  
Old 04-21-2003, 06:34 PM   #79
Banned
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Southern California
Posts: 3,018
Default

Dear Wyz,
Sorry. I didn't think this was too important since we’re half in agreement over your Straw Man that Darwin's atheistic beliefs did not affect "the validity" of his work. Of course; what is true or untrue is not related to one's beliefs.

But you say that Darwin wasn't trying to make any comment on God. Neither you nor I can know the motives anyone. We're lucky enough to accurately divine our own. But I posted a quote of Darwin's buddy that explicitly revealed that this buddy was motivated to advance as scientific theory a timeline that could be used to debunk the bible. This qualifies as circumstantial evidence that Darwin’s motives could have been the same in that finches of a feather flock together. -- Cheers, Albert the Traditional Catholic
Albert Cipriani is offline  
Old 04-21-2003, 07:56 PM   #80
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Colorado Springs
Posts: 6,471
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by Badfish
What caused the Universe to move? If it is moving, and all indications from radio telescopes indicate that it is expanding (and headed into a state of entropy, seemingly), then it is a fair assumption that there was a first cause.
Just as fair as it is to assume that the "first cause" was also "moved by another." Why is this so difficult for people to grasp?

Quote:
Either the Universe created itself ("First Cause") from a singularity with all the ingredients and building blocks to create life, or an intelligent designer caused a "First Cause".
This is the fallacy known as Excluded Middle (or Either/Or, methinks). I'll get back to that shortly.

Quote:
Science and laws of thermodynamics demand that a first cause is necessary for matter to be put into motion (energy)
So...motion is all that was required? Why does this posited "first cause" (that for reasons that are commonly brushed over is not a slave of science and the laws of thermodynamics) have to be intelligent? Maybe some deaf, dumb, blind and drunk being in another dimension bent over to get another omnibeer out of the 'fridge and knocked something over with his butt, thus creating the motion that was required, and he's snoozing on his omnisofa and occasionally scratching his privates and expelling gas for eternity (which would explain Uranus), oblivious to the furor his drunken, mindless act created.

How would you know?

Quote:
On one hand we have the pure speculation that the Universe created itself or has always existed, or we have some evidence (historical document) that a being caused a first cause who claims to have always existed.
The religious scribblings of primitives is historical? It's evidence of a "first cause"? How so?

I find it easier to assume the matter and energy in the universe has simply always been here than I do to believe an all-powerful (etc) being has always been and created it from nothing.

BTW...why do you accept the contradictory pennings of the Hebrews as "historical" and "evidence" but reject all the other creation myths?

Quote:
We have the testimony and alleged written witness of God, we have nothing to base any Alpha Universe or evidence or observations that nothing can arise from nothing without a first cause.
I've written a few posts to Christopher on the myriad problems with this argument. Perhaps you'd like to take a stab at a proper rebuttal, instead of simply asserting "there had to be a first cause" in so many words.

C'mon. Let's see what you've got. I'm your huckleberry. That's just my game.

d
diana is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 08:22 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.