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10-23-2002, 08:29 PM | #21 |
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Sure it's paradoxical, since obviously if I was 100% certain of my statement, the statement would be false.
Since I'm not, I don't see a contradiction. |
10-24-2002, 03:36 AM | #22 |
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I don't see how theist would in some way guarentee "absolute truth".
It might be part of certain theist's beliefstructure that A is right and B is wrong, and this is beyond questioning (being absolute truths). But in the end that is simply a hollow notion. I saw a claim (that the writer called proof) wich was based on this notion. It said that god exists because: Without god there is no absolute truth, and without absolute truth it is not absolutely true that god does not exist. Obviously a claim that doesn't last very long outside the believers circle. |
10-25-2002, 01:46 AM | #23 |
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Obviously a claim that doesn't last very long outside the believers circle.
Yet truth is nothing but the claim that lasts within the social circle. (you'll bear the society you belong to even when/if you're not aware of it). AVE |
10-25-2002, 02:22 PM | #24 | |
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Quote:
A "strict" interpretation of Plato's Forms comes to mind (after all the perfect "Form" of a god would be necessarily proscribed from interfering in the natural world). Also, the philosophy of objectivism is a whole school of thought (largely populated by athiests) that deals with the pursuit of "objective" moral truths (which they interpret as capitalism ). |
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10-25-2002, 03:16 PM | #25 |
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Looks like Gruve was a drive-by poster. Thanks for wasting our time.
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10-25-2002, 05:31 PM | #26 |
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Gruveguy, you would like Jainism then. It is an atheistic religion, but one of its main tenets is that anything can be true, even if improbable. So their debates do not degenerate into catfights, on the grounds that the opponenet's view can be the truth. So I suppose I should call it an agnostic religion.
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