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01-30-2003, 06:57 AM | #111 | ||||||||||||
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I'm glad you like Randi, too. But he does do religious testing all the time. He has tested faith healers. It is not restricted to ESP and psychics. Quote:
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I don't understand why you are arguing against science when you yourself are saying, "The fact that there is no evidence is quite sufficient to justify positive disbelief". What evidence? If not scientific evidence, what? And if the evidence is supernatural or "immune" to science and reality or "beyond human comprehension", then how are you going to understand it? You also say, "But this is itself an extraordinary claim, and the burden of proof is on them." What proof? If not scientific, then what? If it is "immune" to the laws of science, then how would you know it was proof? The only way is to measure it using science in the first place. Figure out how the claim or test holds up to the laws of science. Quote:
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01-30-2003, 08:24 AM | #112 | |
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The universe's existence is "a fairly significant consequence of" quantum mechanics, not God. |
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01-30-2003, 09:34 AM | #113 |
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Matter
Energy and matter is undestroyable. That is evidence enough to show that it will exist in eternity. And because it can't be neither destroyd nor created, that is enough evidence I need to assume it has existed eternally. If the universe existed eternally, than it had no creator.
I don't even need QM to disprove a creator. |
01-30-2003, 09:44 AM | #114 |
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bd, Hawkingfan, please start another thread if you want to continue this discussion. It's not precisely off topic, but I don't think it's a profitable direction to explore in understanding theistic belief.
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01-30-2003, 09:52 AM | #115 | |
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In the mean time, if you are interested in my perspective on the relationship between science and religion, here is a written version of a talk I gave about it my senior year of college to some of my fellow college students as part of a program sponsored by a Christian organization I belonged to. Other than that, I do not wished to be side tracked from the topic of this thread by engaging in a discussion of that issue. Bd-from-kg, sorry its taking me so long to produce my response. It’s been a busy week. I’m about half done at the moment. God Bless, Kenny |
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01-30-2003, 10:52 AM | #116 | |
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01-30-2003, 11:22 AM | #117 | |
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God Bless, Kenny |
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01-30-2003, 04:07 PM | #118 | ||
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Jobar, ReasonableDoubt, Selsaral, The AntiChris, Kenny:
Thanks for the great compliments and the vote of confidence. When I seem to be taking on everyone in sight it’s nice to know that some people, at least, think that I’m making sense some of the time. Jobar: OK, I’ll just take a couple of Hawkingfan’s representative statements and answer in a way that relates clearly to the original question. Hawkingfan: The following exchange, I think, illustrates your confusion as well as anything: Quote:
Now to answer your question. Of course I think science describes reality better; in fact, I don’t think religion describes reality at all. But this is an opinion. I don’t claim to know with “100% certainty”. In fact, if you were as dedicated to scientific methodology as you pretend to be, you wouldn’t claim to know anything with 100% certainty. Science can only discover (and only claims to be able to discover) the “simplest” or “most elegant” or “most parsimonious” hypotheses that “fit the facts”. I believe that it’s rational to accept such hypotheses (pending further evidence) because I believe in the validity of Ockham’s Razor. But I can’t prove it, nor am I 100% certain of it. And Ockham’s Razor is not a “discovery” of science; it’s an essential presupposition of the scientific enterprise. This is another illustration of a point that Kenny and I have been making for some time: it is clearly justified to believe some things without evidence. Science itself requires certain presuppositions or assumptions just in order to “get off the ground”. If one insists that no belief is justified without evidence, you wind up with radical skepticism – the position that no beliefs of any kind are justified, period. You have to start with some foundational assumptions (a.k.a. presuppositions) in order to be able to justify any conclusions. If you take the position that these presuppositions are not rationally justified, you’re forced to take the position that all of the conclusions are at least equally unjustified: even a clearly valid argument cannot make the conclusions more justified than the premises. What you’re really doing here is an elaborate form of question begging. Plantinga and other theists (like Kenny) are basically arguing that it is justifiable to presuppose certain things (in particular the existence of God) which are not (or at least not obviously) essential presuppositions of the scientific enterprise. What your argument amounts to is that these presuppositions are not conclusions that can be arrived at by the scientific method. Well, of course they’re not conclusions, at least not in that sense; that’s why they’re called “presuppositions”. Whether a given presupposition is rationally justified is not a scientific question; it’s a philosophical question. It can’t be decided scientifically – i.e., via observation and experiment - but only by philosophical arguments. Quote:
As for invisible pink unicorns, the IPU hypothesis is superfluous – i.e., it is not part of the most parsimonious explanation for what has been observed to date. Reasonable persons will conclude from this that there almost certainly are no IPU’s. But (Plantinga and others will argue) the God hypothesis is fundamentally different from the IPU hypothesis; it is reasonable (they say) to accept it independently of any evidence, as part of the set of fundamental presuppositions which one uses to understand and interpret reality, and not a conclusion based on a set of presuppositions which does not include it. Needless to say, I reject this argument. I regard it as a clever but sophistical attempt on the part of theists to shift the burden of proof (which they know they cannot meet) onto nontheists (who can’t meet it either, but who don’t have the burden of proof in the first place). But before you reject an argument, it’s best to try to understand what the argument is. |
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01-31-2003, 12:25 AM | #119 | |||
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bd-from-kg...
First off, I'm sorry for the extreme delay. I've been having difficulties with my account. If you feel you are not up to discussing this topic, or if you have forgotten the arguments then I understand. This is a post that has been lying around on my harddrive for almost a week. Quote:
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01-31-2003, 05:51 AM | #120 | ||
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bd-from-kg, First of all, I apologize for seeming to have fallen off the face of the earth. I've been on a work related road trip... Now, to the points you make above, a couple of comments. The general principle that 'the further a claim is removed from ordinary experience, the more evidence we will demand before believing it' is, on most counts, a good one. But is theistic belief of this sort? That is to say, is theistic belief of the sort that is "removed from ordinary experience"? To say that an omnipotent being or a being with all the claimed attributes of God is beyond all human experience runs exactly counter to the claim of theistic belief in general and Christian belief in particular. The claim of the Christian (and I'm in that camp) is that we humans can and do experience God every day. His attributes are not considered impossible to imagine at all. To argue that these claims about God are beyond all human experience seems to beg the question. There is no a priori self-evident reason why we must accept that any claims made about God are beyond our experience. Millions of our fellow humans (myself included) would claim that they've had just such experience with God. They would further claim that such experiences of God are perfectly ordinary. The objection, then, doesn't seem grounded in whether or not concepts of God are beyond all human experience; rather, the objection seems to be grounded on whether or not such claimed experiences are, in fact, experiences of God. That is a very different issue. If I understand your objection correctly, you seem to be saying that theistic belief is just the sort that is beyond ordinary human experience and therefore requires extraordinary evidence (about which, more to folow). But the theistic claim (or the Christian claim, at least) is that such belief is perfectly ordinary; that it is, in fact, what we were designed for. That is, I think, the essence of Alvin Plantinga's argument in his book "Warranted Christian Belief". The real objection seems to be that the source of such claimed experiences of God isn't God at all, but something else; something that, by definition would fall well within the bounds of the material. Just what that 'something' would be, though, has never been satisfyingly made clear. Quote:
Thanks much, K |
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