No evidence for God - Critique of a common modern attitude

Illuminater

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All these technicalities in everyone's arguments only lead to confusion and pointless debating... I think Religious people nowadays do their best to trap you in circuitous debate with no end in site so that you can't disprove their points...

We could debate philosophy all day long but at the end of the day there is no proof for God. All this talk about scientists, quantum physics and shit doesn't matter man. There is literally no way to prove his existence no matter how hard you tried. And if this thread had proof in it then there would be no such thing as an atheist.
 

Marin

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All these technicalities in everyone's arguments only lead to confusion and pointless debating... I think Religious people nowadays do their best to trap you in circuitous debate with no end in site so that you can't disprove their points...

We could debate philosophy all day long but at the end of the day there is no proof for God. All this talk about scientists, quantum physics and shit doesn't matter man. There is literally no way to prove his existence no matter how hard you tried. And if this thread had proof in it then there would be no such thing as an atheist.
How about you actually give a glimpse or two in these "technicalities" before complaining about them? ( Or atleast if you're not going to read don't spam. ) Most of the stuff you're saying gets stopped in it's tracks as soon as the first part of my post and that which doesn't is really not even worth a response.
 

Deadlift

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All these technicalities in everyone's arguments only lead to confusion and pointless debating... I think Religious people nowadays do their best to trap you in circuitous debate with no end in site so that you can't disprove their points...

We could debate philosophy all day long but at the end of the day there is no proof for God. All this talk about scientists, quantum physics and shit doesn't matter man. There is literally no way to prove his existence no matter how hard you tried. And if this thread had proof in it then there would be no such thing as an atheist.
You clearly understand that nobody claimed to have found the "proof" of the existence of God. OP claims that there is evidence for God, and gives some arguments for sustaining such a claim. As for now, you just complained "technicalties" and just claimed that God doesn't exist without addressing any of the points OP made. So, who is more intellectually dishonest?
 

kimb

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All these technicalities in everyone's arguments only lead to confusion and pointless debating... I think Religious people nowadays do their best to trap you in circuitous debate with no end in site so that you can't disprove their points...

We could debate philosophy all day long but at the end of the day there is no proof for God. All this talk about scientists, quantum physics and shit doesn't matter man. There is literally no way to prove his existence no matter how hard you tried. And if this thread had proof in it then there would be no such thing as an atheist.
I agree with you (for the first time). They only ever argue the possibility, but never bring objective evidence. And yes, I know it's a trope, but that doesnt mean its true.

These debates never truly end since one side chooses to ignore evidence.
 

Marin

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I agree with you (for the first time). They only ever argue the possibility, but never bring objective evidence. And yes, I know it's a trope, but that doesnt mean its true.

These debates never truly end since one side chooses to ignore evidence.
That would be you since your previous post didn't bring any substance and your current one is merely riding on another member's ignorance.
 

Lrrrrr

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Of course there must be a god. How else would we have the beautiful/magnificent creature, Jensen Ackles? Science? Genes? Not good enough.
 

Sagebee

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All these technicalities in everyone's arguments only lead to confusion and pointless debating... I think Religious people nowadays do their best to trap you in circuitous debate with no end in site so that you can't disprove their points...

We could debate philosophy all day long but at the end of the day there is no proof for God. All this talk about scientists, quantum physics and shit doesn't matter man. There is literally no way to prove his existence no matter how hard you tried. And if this thread had proof in it then there would be no such thing as an atheist.
Well in my personal opinion that speaks to people being more disconnected and distracted to not really give the proper attention to really answer these questions. And most people submit to group think repetitively arguing there position is right while just leave off that the other person is just blind or dumb.

Let me ask you this does free will exist, is this a casual reality and can free will exist in a casual reality.
 

kimb

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That would be you since your previous post didn't bring any substance and your current one is merely riding on another member's ignorance.
The Kalam Cosmological theory has already been debunked by atheist, and literally has nothing to do with God. The argument is basically an assumption. It is an assertion of conjecture that is near false inference. It's constructed as a self-gratifying proposal with the presupposition of a pseudo hypothesis that NO scientist has or will ever use to formulate a hypothesis or prove a theory.

You claimed my second point was a straw man, which it wasn't. The structure of the argument is arranged so that you literally can insert anything into the second point and therefore, justify the premise.

All vampires rise from the grave.
Jesus rose from the grave.
Jesus is a vampire.


In your case, you try to argue that God exists with evidence through the Kalam C theory, so I don't see how me inserting your conclusion into your hypothesis is a straw-man, unless you weren't arguing God's existence with K.C, or you just didn't like my wording of it. Take your pick.

Then there's the Fine Tuned argument, which I disagree with the entire notion that the universe, yet alone, this planet is fined tuned for life. My guess is that only .00000000000(lots of zeros)00001%, of the universe can actually support life, while the rest of it is completely inhospitable. The universe is filled with nothing more than spare molecules, lethal radiation, giant orbiting ice rocks, and balls of burning hydrogen and helium too our knowledge. Now, I don't know if you want to argue that only the earth is fined tuned, or just drop the argument altogether. Let me end this comment with the cliche response to the Fined Tuned argument.


“Imagine a puddle waking up one morning and thinking, “This is an interesting world I find myself in, an interesting hole I find myself in, fits me rather neatly, doesn’t it? In fact it fits me staggeringly well, must have been made to have me in it!” This is such a powerful idea that as the sun rises in the sky and the air heats up and as, gradually, the puddle gets smaller and smaller, it’s still frantically hanging on to the notion that everything’s going to be alright, because this world was meant to have him in it, was built to have him in it; so the moment he disappears catches him rather by surprise. I think this may be something we need to be on the watch out for.”
-Douglas Adams

But of course you will have a reply that counters points in my argument, and then out of my pride, I have to counter points in your argument, and then you reply to that, then I reply to that, and so on, and so on, and so on. It is because this debate is endless, and truly has no victor (atheism or theism) due to a lack of complete understanding of the universe, that I identify as Agnostic. That and I honestly don't have the time or effort to involve myself in these endless debates, call me lazy.
 
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Marin

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The Kalam Cosmological theory has already been debunked by atheist, and literally has nothing to do with God. The argument is basically an assumption. It is an assertion of conjecture that is near false inference. It's constructed as a self-gratifying proposal with the presupposition of a pseudo hypothesis that NO scientist has or will ever use to formulate a hypothesis or prove a theory.
A statement of such confidence would require atleast some back-up no? All you've done here is throw unsubstantiated claims. Not only have you not provided an example of how the Kalam has been refuted nor why it is guilty of such circularity to call it a self-gratifying proposal but you've also ignored the whole notion of what it concludes which I did good effort to explain in my previous post directed to you.

You claimed my second point was a straw man, which it wasn't. The structure of the argument is arranged so that you literally can insert anything into the second point and therefore, justify the premise.

All vampires rise from the grave.
Jesus rose from the grave.
Jesus is a vampire.


In your case, you try to argue that God exists with evidence through the Kalam C theory, so I don't see how me inserting your conclusion into your hypothesis is a straw-man, unless you weren't arguing God's existence with K.C, or you just didn't like my wording of it. Take your pick.
I'm not sure if you're confused in regards to Kalam or if you're clueless on deductive reasoning in general. I believe I have explained how this type of argumentation works but clearly you either haven't read it or completely misunderstood it. I never at all inserted the conclusion in a premise as you did in your previous argument, but instead argued that given the truth of certain premises the conclusion would logically follow.

What's even weirder is that your current argument in regards to vampires doesn't at all suffer from circularity, instead it simply suffers from not being logically valid. Simply saying that vampires rise from the grave doesn't imply they are the only ones that do so, therefore one who rises from the grave may be something else entirely. The conclusion doesn't logically follow from the premises. And that's if we're being generous to the premises themselves.

What you'd need for the argument to be valid would be an additional premise "If something raises from the grave it is a vampire". In this case your argument would be logically valid (the conclusion follows logically the premises) but it wouldn't be logically sound as the premises aren't true. Namely, that which raises from the grave need not be a vampire. If we're arguing absurdities it could be a sekeleton or a zombie of some sort.

I am well aware that your argument isn't a serious attempt but a way to make logical deduction seem absurd but it does well to illustrate that you can't differentiate between basic pitfalls of someone's reasoning further discrediting your original notion.

Then there's the Fine Tuned argument, which I disagree with the entire notion that the universe, yet alone, this planet is fined tuned for life. My guess is that only .00000000000(lots of zeros)00001%, of the universe can actually support life, while the rest of it is completely inhospitable. The universe is filled with nothing more than spare molecules, lethal radiation, giant orbiting ice rocks, and balls of burning hydrogen and helium too our knowledge. Now, I don't know if you want to argue that only the earth is fined tuned, or just drop the argument altogether. Let me end this comment with the cliche response to the Fined Tuned argument.


“Imagine a puddle waking up one morning and thinking, “This is an interesting world I find myself in, an interesting hole I find myself in, fits me rather neatly, doesn’t it? In fact it fits me staggeringly well, must have been made to have me in it!” This is such a powerful idea that as the sun rises in the sky and the air heats up and as, gradually, the puddle gets smaller and smaller, it’s still frantically hanging on to the notion that everything’s going to be alright, because this world was meant to have him in it, was built to have him in it; so the moment he disappears catches him rather by surprise. I think this may be something we need to be on the watch out for.”
-Douglas Adams
You clearly have an ill-sensed view of what fine-tuning is. I say this based on the fact that you deny the universe or the planet itself to be fine-tuned despite the fact that it holds life. This however is pure nonsense. To be fine-tuned one need not support life in a considerable scale, as you insist. All a system needs to be rightfully called fine-tuned is a specific ordering of relationships between certain fundamental quantities and nature's constants.

Fine-tuning is as much of a fact as our existence so if you're going to attack the fine-tuning argument you'd be wise to attack some other premise rather than premise 1.

But of course you will have a reply that counters points in my argument, and then out of my pride, I have to counter points in your argument, and then you reply to that, then I reply to that, and so on, and so on, and so on. It is because this debate is endless, and truly has no victor (atheism or theism) due to a lack of complete understanding of the universe, that I identify as Agnostic. That and I honestly don't have the time or effort to involve myself in these endless debates, call me lazy.
Putting your inconsistency aside, your statement that a debate is endless and therefore not worth pursuing is a fallacious one indeed. No debate ever truly ends, God's existence isn't a special case at all. Don't believe me? Just look at flat-earth society. They still up to this day state that the Earth is flat so does that mean they're right? Does simply holding a view contrary to yours make the validity of your view a suspect to agnosticism? Is it then the best to be agnostic on whether the Earth is flat or not?

At the end of the day, even if you think all discussion is meaningless why waste your time? Why post in a thread clearly dedicated to discussion of such things? After all, relativity of views is the one thing certain for you so why bother? If you're not interested in having a debate then you have no business replying to anyone's arguments unless you in fact wish to have a debate and are now simply running away for whatever the reason.
 
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kimb

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A statement of such confidence would require atleast some back-up no? All you've done here is throw unsubstantiated claims. Not only have you not provided an example of how the Kalam has been refuted nor why it is guilty of such circularity to call it a self-gratifying proposal but you've also ignored the whole notion of what it concludes which I did good effort to explain in my previous post directed to you.





I'm not sure if you're confused in regards to Kalam or if you're clueless on deductive reasoning in general. I believe I have explained how this type of argumentation works but clearly you either haven't read it or completely misunderstood it. I never at all inserted the conclusion in a premise as you did in your previous argument, but instead argued that given the truth of certain premises the conclusion would logically follow.
Never said you did. I'm saying I did that.

And Man, you might as well be an atheist, your condescending tone is on point so far.

What's even weirder is that your current argument in regards to vampires doesn't at all suffer from circularity, instead it simply suffers from not being logically valid. Simply saying that vampires rise from the grave doesn't imply they are the only ones that do so, therefore one who rises from the grave may be something else entirely. The conclusion doesn't logically follow from the premises. And that's if we're being generous to the premises themselves.
"Simply saying that the universe as a cause doesn't imply god is the only possible answer". There's the flaw in Kalam, you pointed it out yourself.

What you'd need for the argument to be valid would be an additional premise "If something raises from the grave it is a vampire". In this case your argument would be logically valid (the conclusion follows logically the premises) but it wouldn't be logically sound as the premises aren't true. Namely, that which raises from the grave need not be a vampire. If we're arguing absurdities it could be a sekeleton or a zombie of some sort.
Notice how you bring up skeletons and zombies as if "VAMPIRES" are not the only possible conclusion to this hypothesis. Now wrap your mind around this; "Maybe, that's the argument I'm making". Sit on it for a while and get back to me.

I am well aware that your argument isn't a serious attempt but a way to make logical deduction seem absurd but it does well to illustrate that you can't differentiate between basic pitfalls of someone's reasoning further discrediting your original notion.
"you're wrong" is not an argument. bad meme




You clearly have an ill-sensed view of what fine-tuning is. I say this based on the fact that you deny the universe or the planet itself to be fine-tuned despite the fact that it holds life. This however is pure nonsense. To be fine-tuned one need not support life in a considerable scale, as you insist. All a system needs to be rightfully called fine-tuned is a specific ordering of relationships between certain fundamental quantities and nature's constants.

Fine-tuning is as much of a fact as our existence so if you're going to attack the fine-tuning argument you'd be wise to attack some other premise rather than premise 1.
Saying "you're wrong" or "you don't know what you're talking about", isn't really a counter argument. bad meme



Putting your inconsistency aside, your statement that a debate is endless and therefore not worth pursuing is a fallacious one indeed.
When you believe neither side is right of an argument is right because they lack the knowledge to prove the other side of the argument wrong, I think it's safe to wait until further evidence is found. When religious apologists can only bring logical arguments to the table that question what science has not yet answered, I think it's only reasonable to wait until science answers them. Physicists, who provide the basis for the fined tuned argument (ironically), lack complete knowledge of physics, so for you to come and answers the physicists conundrum with "It was god", only sets us back. No true scientist touches that answer with a 10 foot pole. Richard Dawkins doesn't even give religious apologist the pleasure of even spending 1 minute on questioning the possibility of god.

No debate ever truly ends, God's existence isn't a special case at all. Don't believe me? Just look at flat-earth society. They still up to this day state that the Earth is flat so does that mean they're right? Does simply holding a view contrary to yours make the validity of your view a suspect to agnosticism? Is it then the best to be agnostic on whether the Earth is flat or not?
That's a faulty argument, one side of the argument (the flatter-earthers?) believe the earth is flat while ignoring evidence that debunks the entire premise.....oh wait, that's not too far off to atheism vs theism actually. Maybe you're on to something. Now you've got me talking in a condescending tone, lol

At the end of the day, even if you think all discussion is meaningless why waste your time? Why post in a thread clearly dedicated to discussion of such things? After all, relativity of views is the one thing certain for you so why bother? If you're not interested in having a debate then you have no business replying to anyone's arguments unless you in fact wish to have a debate and are now simply running away for whatever the reason.

To indulge myself, to challenge my beliefs, to point out flaws and fallacies in others arguments, to test whether or not any of my arguments hold any buoyancy and see where I can perfect them, etc. I'm someone who likes to keep his beliefs constantly in check. I may enter a discussion that I find interesting, throw in my input, and see reactions and responses; then I readjust my beliefs accordingly should I find them based in logic and reasoning. If I'm not content with the responses I receive, I persist until I receive a satisfying response whether it be for or against my beliefs, or realize that I will not receive a satisfying response (at least from this one argument), and go about my way. But some people mistake my honesty for fallacy, me not wanting to argue because I can't. Nah mate, I prefer losing to winning, it benefits me in the long run.

Atheists and theists try to give answers to questions beyond human comprehension and claim they're correct based on theories that coincide with reality (in most cases), but these theories do not prove the existence of God nor do they disprove the existence of god. You'd think theism would be dead after the theory of evolution conflicts with every timeline of every major religion on this planet, but that does not seem to be the case. Since you make the time, I'll do the same. I honestly don't care for neither side of the argument, which is why I avoid this debate. But if me choosing not to debate jeopardizes my integrity in your eyes, I'll continue this debate for the sake of my pride.
 
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Marin

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I looked into the videos you provided and will reply to the points raised in them right after making a notice. It being both a proclamation and a warning. I am all up for answering whatever objections you may have to anything I said but writing down the objection and simply linking me to random videos are two very different things. I could in the very same fashion simply link you to some other video (a 2 hour debate right next to it for example!) and we could keep doing that only to have the thread closed for spam.

If you wanna make a point do so in your own words. It's not practical to make notes in a mostly fluff-conversation that may not even touch on the topic and it is pretty lame as we would just be linking videos until they don't have anything to do with each other at all. For these and more reasons I am not inclined to share, please do not link any other videos unless absolutely necessary. I take the time to write sentences down, I expect my opponets to do the same.

Having said that I will now first focus on the Peter Millican video you provided which is actually an excerpt from a debate with William Lane Craig. He raises a multitude of points most of which I strongly disagree with. First to deal with his attacks on the premise 1.

He says that we never really witness anything coming into existence but only matter rearranging. This, I find to be merely a semantic delay. If you're going to say that rearrangements of matter are the deal than all I have to do is say that no rearrangement of matter occurs without a cause, going back right where we started. A bit contradictivelly, he goes on to say that quantum mechanics give an account of creation ex nihilo (which btw isn't required for a theistic origin of the universe) and this one is uncaused so the only occurance of it we have happens uncaused therefore crushing the intuitions underlying the support for belief that all beginnings have a cause.

This is false on 2 fronts:
- Quantum mechanics don't show something coming out of nothing. The "spontaneous" creation is merely caused by the sea of energy that is quantum flunctuations. Energy is not nothing. It's a whole lot of something.
- These flunctuations aren't uncaused, they're simply indeterministic. Causalty doesn't imply determinism.

His further objections include noting that time began with the Big Bang therefore making causation (concieved as temporal) an inappropriate concept. However, causation need not be temporal. A cause may coincide with the effect it produces it simply needs to be logically prior to it. For example, a ball on a cousion will cause pressure on the cousion simultaniously with it being placed on the cousion. The cause here being the placement of the ball, the cause is simultanious with the effect. A real absurdity would be the effect preceeding cause, which doesn't even happen in the Big Bang.

He also makes a distinction between our universe and a greater multiverse, stating that the Big Bang only applies to our universe leaving matter and energy as eternal origins tied to the non-temporal multiverse. This is completely unsound to me. If we're going to accept the Big Bang how can we say matter and energy existed prior to it? Matter and energy are our universe and they are what makes our spacetime. Talking about a multiverse would require a transcendant cause which is exactly what the Kalam postulates. If you wish to avoid this, you can say that the multiverse has matter and energy but this intuitive view would bring back the problem of infinite time as matter and energy are crucial to space and you cannot have space without having time. Atleast not if you're talking matter and energy in a sense we're aware of and if you aren't why call it matter and energy at all?

As for what Dawkins says, his case is a lot less interesting (as I come to expect from him). He basically raises 2 points that aren't science fiction:

1. Saying "God did it" doesn't provide a viable account for fine-tuning and is therefore not helpful as a true explanation would give insight to how things happened
2. The chance argument doesn't apply if we're to consider the notion of a multiverse which would create every combination of constants possible one of which would allow for sustaining of life

The first statement I find very misguided. What the argument from fine-tuning does isn't explaining how fine-tuning occurs but rather why it occurs. It is a metaphyisical question rather than empirical. In such circumstances there is no conflict.

The second statement I find equally poor. The very notion of the multiverse would do no more than simply set the question one step back from "Is our universe fine-tuned" to "Is the multiverse fine-tuned" which I would say it logically has to be since it is what permits the combination of life-permitting constants to occur in our universe which would in turn allow for the origin of life.

Never said you did. I'm saying I did that.

And Man, you might as well be an atheist, your condescending tone is on point so far.
But you clearly did:

"You claimed my second point was a straw man, which it wasn't. The structure of the argument is arranged so that you literally can insert anything into the second point and therefore, justify the premise."

You said that it wasn't a straw man therefore that I actually have commited the fallacy you made in your argument. That's what not being a straw man means. You've also called the argument circular and self-gratifying which means exactly that - assuming what one intends to argue for.

"Simply saying that the universe as a cause doesn't imply god is the only possible answer". There's the flaw in Kalam, you pointed it out yourself.
It isn't a flaw as I clearly mentioned already. Re-read (assuming you've read it the first time):

"The argument, as presented here, indeed doesn't lead to a direct conclusion that God is the cause of the universe but rather that given the nature of the universe and what we know so far, the cause (whatever it is) would have to be one of a transcendent kind. The argument's purpose here is to merely illustrate that God fits perfectly in the category of things that could've caused the universe and is as such a viable option to take. But this doesn't mean we don't have evidence for God, on the contrary, this is a basic example of circumstantial evidence. (That is to say, we can interpret it in multiple ways all of which are, given the isolated case, supported equally by the matter at hand.)

Circumstantial evidence is more than enough to justify a belief and refute the notion that there is no evidence."


"you're wrong" is not an argument. bad meme

Saying "you're wrong" or "you don't know what you're talking about", isn't really a counter argument. bad meme
I feel like you didn't even read what I wrote in those paragraphs. How exactly is my response inadequate and even more so how on earth do you equote it with casually dismissing anything you sad?

When you believe neither side is right of an argument is right because they lack the knowledge to prove the other side of the argument wrong, I think it's safe to wait until further evidence is found.
Again with "proof". What else can I do but redirect you to the first part in my essay?

When religious apologists can only bring logical arguments to the table that question what science has not yet answered, I think it's only reasonable to wait until science answers them.
Why exactly is logic inappropriate? Have you even bothered to refute my points before disagreeing with them?

Physicists, who provide the basis for the fined tuned argument (ironically), lack complete knowledge of physics, so for you to come and answers the physicists conundrum with "It was god", only sets us back. No true scientist touches that answer with a 10 foot pole. Richard Dawkins doesn't even give religious apologist the pleasure of even spending 1 minute on questioning the possibility of god.
"True scientist", really? And who would that be? A naturalist? A materialist? Do you even know how subjective this sounds?

As for Dawkins, I really hold his opinion to be of little worth seeing how his greatest work on matter of theism is The God Delusion which is no more than a museum of mistakes.

That's a faulty argument, one side of the argument (the flatter-earthers?) believe the earth is flat while ignoring evidence that debunks the entire premise.....oh wait, that's not too far off to atheism vs theism actually. Maybe you're on to something. Now you've got me talking in a condescending tone, lol
Indeed, they do ignore it, that's the point. Simply ignoring other people's legitimate infference doesn't make yours true and likewise it doesn't mean both are wrong. Theism and atheism are mutually exclusive. Either there is or isn't a God. No middle position. That said, this isn't even a question of whether there is or isn't a God. Such a question can indeed never be answered but that doesn't mean we shouldn't refute fallacious accounts for either side, which is exactly what my thread aims to do - criticize an attitutude I find dishonest and lazy.

Proving God is something I have no intention of doing, be it through philosophy or some other means.

To indulge myself, to challenge my beliefs, to point out flaws and fallacies in others arguments, to test whether or not any of my arguments hold any buoyancy and see where I can perfect them, etc. I'm someone who likes to keep his beliefs constantly in check. I may enter a discussion that I find interesting, throw in my input, and see reactions and responses; then I readjust my beliefs accordingly should I find them based in logic and reasoning. If I'm not content with the responses I receive, I persist until I receive a satisfying response whether it be for or against my beliefs, or realize that I will not receive a satisfying response (at least from this one argument), and go about my way. But some people mistake my honesty for fallacy, me not wanting to argue because I can't. Nah mate, I prefer losing to winning, it benefits me in the long run.
Then this attitude if nothing else should convince you to not dismiss all debates as pointless as you have when agreeing with Illuminater right there. It is this exact rational discourse that helps us shed light on these matters even if we will never know anything with certainty.

Atheists and theists try to give answers to questions beyond human comprehension and claim they're correct based on theories that coincide with reality (in most cases), but these theories do not prove the existence of God nor do they disprove the existence of god. You'd think theism would be dead after the theory of evolution conflicts with every timeline of every major religion on this planet, but that does not seem to be the case.
We seem to be on the same page here yet completely disagree on anything at the same time (if that makes any sense at all). I too believe these questions are far above our capacity to understand and I too believe there can be no definite resolution but I repeat for the uptenth time: I do not aim to prove God, I simply advocate rationality of basic theistic belief.

As for evolution, it has never bothered me and I find it of no threat what so ever to my religious beliefs. In fact I find it all the more in tune.

Since you make the time, I'll do the same. I honestly don't care for neither side of the argument, which is why I avoid this debate. But if me choosing not to debate jeopardizes my integrity in your eyes, I'll continue this debate for the sake of my pride.
I indeed doubt the integrity of people who casually dismiss things but if you're debating out of pride you can stop right away. I have no interest in debating for the sake of it.
 

kimb

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I looked into the videos you provided and will reply to the points raised in them right after making a notice. It being both a proclamation and a warning. I am all up for answering whatever objections you may have to anything I said but writing down the objection and simply linking me to random videos are two very different things. I could in the very same fashion simply link you to some other video (a 2 hour debate right next to it for example!) and we could keep doing that only to have the thread closed for spam.

If you wanna make a point do so in your own words. It's not practical to make notes in a mostly fluff-conversation that may not even touch on the topic and it is pretty lame as we would just be linking videos until they don't have anything to do with each other at all. For these and more reasons I am not inclined to share, please do not link any other videos unless absolutely necessary. I take the time to write sentences down, I expect my opponets to do the same.

Having said that I will now first focus on the Peter Millican video you provided which is actually an excerpt from a debate with William Lane Craig. He raises a multitude of points most of which I strongly disagree with. First to deal with his attacks on the premise 1.

He says that we never really witness anything coming into existence but only matter rearranging. This, I find to be merely a semantic delay. If you're going to say that rearrangements of matter are the deal than all I have to do is say that no rearrangement of matter occurs without a cause, going back right where we started. A bit contradictivelly, he goes on to say that quantum mechanics give an account of creation ex nihilo (which btw isn't required for a theistic origin of the universe) and this one is uncaused so the only occurance of it we have happens uncaused therefore crushing the intuitions underlying the support for belief that all beginnings have a cause.

This is false on 2 fronts:
- Quantum mechanics don't show something coming out of nothing. The "spontaneous" creation is merely caused by the sea of energy that is quantum flunctuations. Energy is not nothing. It's a whole lot of something.
- These flunctuations aren't uncaused, they're simply indeterministic. Causalty doesn't imply determinism.

His further objections include noting that time began with the Big Bang therefore making causation (concieved as temporal) an inappropriate concept. However, causation need not be temporal. A cause may coincide with the effect it produces it simply needs to be logically prior to it. For example, a ball on a cousion will cause pressure on the cousion simultaniously with it being placed on the cousion. The cause here being the placement of the ball, the cause is simultanious with the effect. A real absurdity would be the effect preceeding cause, which doesn't even happen in the Big Bang.

He also makes a distinction between our universe and a greater multiverse, stating that the Big Bang only applies to our universe leaving matter and energy as eternal origins tied to the non-temporal multiverse. This is completely unsound to me. If we're going to accept the Big Bang how can we say matter and energy existed prior to it? Matter and energy are our universe and they are what makes our spacetime. Talking about a multiverse would require a transcendant cause which is exactly what the Kalam postulates. If you wish to avoid this, you can say that the multiverse has matter and energy but this intuitive view would bring back the problem of infinite time as matter and energy are crucial to space and you cannot have space without having time. Atleast not if you're talking matter and energy in a sense we're aware of and if you aren't why call it matter and energy at all?

As for what Dawkins says, his case is a lot less interesting (as I come to expect from him). He basically raises 2 points that aren't science fiction:

1. Saying "God did it" doesn't provide a viable account for fine-tuning and is therefore not helpful as a true explanation would give insight to how things happened
2. The chance argument doesn't apply if we're to consider the notion of a multiverse which would create every combination of constants possible one of which would allow for sustaining of life

The first statement I find very misguided. What the argument from fine-tuning does isn't explaining how fine-tuning occurs but rather why it occurs. It is a metaphyisical question rather than empirical. In such circumstances there is no conflict.

The second statement I find equally poor. The very notion of the multiverse would do no more than simply set the question one step back from "Is our universe fine-tuned" to "Is the multiverse fine-tuned" which I would say it logically has to be since it is what permits the combination of life-permitting constants to occur in our universe which would in turn allow for the origin of life.



But you clearly did:

"You claimed my second point was a straw man, which it wasn't. The structure of the argument is arranged so that you literally can insert anything into the second point and therefore, justify the premise."

You said that it wasn't a straw man therefore that I actually have commited the fallacy you made in your argument. That's what not being a straw man means. You've also called the argument circular and self-gratifying which means exactly that - assuming what one intends to argue for.



It isn't a flaw as I clearly mentioned already. Re-read (assuming you've read it the first time):

"The argument, as presented here, indeed doesn't lead to a direct conclusion that God is the cause of the universe but rather that given the nature of the universe and what we know so far, the cause (whatever it is) would have to be one of a transcendent kind. The argument's purpose here is to merely illustrate that God fits perfectly in the category of things that could've caused the universe and is as such a viable option to take. But this doesn't mean we don't have evidence for God, on the contrary, this is a basic example of circumstantial evidence. (That is to say, we can interpret it in multiple ways all of which are, given the isolated case, supported equally by the matter at hand.)

Circumstantial evidence is more than enough to justify a belief and refute the notion that there is no evidence."




I feel like you didn't even read what I wrote in those paragraphs. How exactly is my response inadequate and even more so how on earth do you equote it with casually dismissing anything you sad?



Again with "proof". What else can I do but redirect you to the first part in my essay?



Why exactly is logic inappropriate? Have you even bothered to refute my points before disagreeing with them?



"True scientist", really? And who would that be? A naturalist? A materialist? Do you even know how subjective this sounds?

As for Dawkins, I really hold his opinion to be of little worth seeing how his greatest work on matter of theism is The God Delusion which is no more than a museum of mistakes.



Indeed, they do ignore it, that's the point. Simply ignoring other people's legitimate infference doesn't make yours true and likewise it doesn't mean both are wrong. Theism and atheism are mutually exclusive. Either there is or isn't a God. No middle position. That said, this isn't even a question of whether there is or isn't a God. Such a question can indeed never be answered but that doesn't mean we shouldn't refute fallacious accounts for either side, which is exactly what my thread aims to do - criticize an attitutude I find dishonest and lazy.

Proving God is something I have no intention of doing, be it through philosophy or some other means.



Then this attitude if nothing else should convince you to not dismiss all debates as pointless as you have when agreeing with Illuminater right there. It is this exact rational discourse that helps us shed light on these matters even if we will never know anything with certainty.



We seem to be on the same page here yet completely disagree on anything at the same time (if that makes any sense at all). I too believe these questions are far above our capacity to understand and I too believe there can be no definite resolution but I repeat for the uptenth time: I do not aim to prove God, I simply advocate rationality of basic theistic belief.

As for evolution, it has never bothered me and I find it of no threat what so ever to my religious beliefs. In fact I find it all the more in tune.



I indeed doubt the integrity of people who casually dismiss things but if you're debating out of pride you can stop right away. I have no interest in debating for the sake of it.
Glad we're on the same page.
 

Marin

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I originally didn't plan on responding to this one but I've changed my mind.

On serious note, there are 2 kinds of people:
"It has more evidence therefore I believe in such and such"
Basically reasonable people who understand what does and what doesn't justify a belief or atleast have a little insight to what constitutes evidence if not in philosophical then in purely practical matters.

and

"There is no proof for it therefore I will not believe it"
Basically the same ignorant attitude which I've spent the whole thread criticising.

You keep intermixing the 2. All your arguments are in the mercy of "Is the person willing to entertain the idea of evidence or not"
I'm mixing nothing. I see the difference between these 2 groups quite clearly (in fact I see it clear enough to know that there are more than just these 2). The bolded makes for a terrible (and self-refuting) claim which really put me off from originally responding to it. To call an argument being at the mercy of an ignorant person's mood is some hard core postmodern stuff and postmodernism, as you may (or may not) know has quite a fair share of problems.

Simple presence of analytic truths automatically renders the epistemic relativism underlying your statement invalid, unless ofcourse you're simply saying that one should either entertain a fool or leave him be which brings little to the validity of my essay.

You can even divide the first one into 2.

"one who follows and forms beliefs of supposedly "logical' positioning, e.g "existence with cause"
One who understand and follows basic rules of logic? There's a shocker!

and

'it brings in no scientifically reaction therefore it's nothing but philosophy" <=== 90% scientist are here... They don't believe in existence without existence "meta physical", "miracles"... for example they believe in "I poke and it reacts regardless of its creation."
Again, the very same dumb attitude I've spent a third of my post criticising. Saying "it's just philosophy" proves you to be ignorant on the same level as people who say "it's just a theory". Implying philosophy is less worth than science is an approach hardly any reasonable scientist takes. I'll leave you with a quote from Daniel Dennett (a new-atheist btw):

"There is no such thing as philosophy-free science; there is only science whose philosophical baggage is taken on board without examination."

So that whole bulk of text you written will only entertain thoughts of 25%(1 of the 4 divisions) given the belief types and don't be naive to make them to prove you wrong first without you disproving their premises
1 of 4 divisions? If you think your miserable sketch provides an accurate depiction of the variety of views on epistemology you're as wrong as one can be.

@bold: I'll be returning those words right at you seeing how you simply reiterated the very same points I criticised while dancing around the majority of my post (assuming you've read it at all).
 
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