The Norseman
Meandering fecklessly
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2008
- Messages
- 8,449
Do you deny that x exists?No, that's not at all how logic works.
To deny that God exists requires the same burden as to assert that he does.
Do you deny that x exists?No, that's not at all how logic works.
To deny that God exists requires the same burden as to assert that he does.
And we're back down the "God exists has to be answered differently from literally any other question" rabbit hole.
Yep, but this rabbit hole is a derail.
Doesn't matter. For some reason we're just not allowed to answer the question "Does God Exist" without a 50 part digression about types and levels of opinionation (that's a word I just invented) that we don't have about anything else.
I don't at all think it's unreasonable to doubt that God exists, but one can't pretend that the burden lies with so called positive claims.Only that isn't what's going on at all. I don't believe the claims that one exists, there is a very big difference here.
Your example fails because we can investigate that claim, We can send a deep space probe and find out.
This is not so with god claims, Worse yet the "evidence" brought forth almost always boils down to 'Well you just have to believe'.
Doesn't matter. For some reason we're just not allowed to answer the question "Does God Exist" without a 50 part digression about types and levels of opinionation (that's a word I just invented) that we don't have about anything else.
I don't at all think it's unreasonable to doubt that God exists, but one can't pretend that the burden lies with so called positive claims.
I don't at all think it's unreasonable to doubt that God exists, but one can't pretend that the burden lies with so called positive claims.
Some are digressions, sure. But OP still fails at the first hurdle — no rational, coherent, meaningful definition of 'god' has been put forth; there is really no justification to show some sort of proof until that has been met.I agree and sypathise, but as long time posters on this site we could try to keep this one on topic and stick to Buddha's rather grandiose claim. It's our fault we let them spark these digressions.
"Affirmative" claim might be better terminology, as "positive" and "negative" can me mistaken to mean the is-there-or-isn't-there dichotomy.
"There is a God," is an affirmative claim. "There is no God," is also an affirmative claim. As stated, each would have a burden of proof. Informally we say you can't prove a negative because the burden to prove universal absence is usually impractical if not practically impossible to carry. But for that reason, when dealing with existential questions, the most reasonable position seems to be to presume (not affirm) non-existence and require direct proof of existence.
I presume there is no God. And if someone says he can prove to me deductively that there is, I take that as an affirmative claim. If, as usually happens, it gets reversed into my having to prove my presumption, then I walk away.
Well, I am an atheist, and I take this position
1. By default, god does not exist unless there is sufficient evidence for its existence, at which point
2. I will accept that god is a possibility, then there would need to be proof of its existence, at which point
3. I will accept that God exists and is real.
So far, I am firmly at stage 1, and have been for all of my adult life. I have never seen any evidence whatsoever that gods of any kind exist.
Fairy tales are not evidence.
The scribblings of 1st century itinerant goat herders are not evidence.
Weeping Madonna statuettes are not evidence.
Images of Jeebus on slices of toast and in the fur on dogs' arses is not evidence.
The gaps in scientific knowledge is not evidence.
Some are digressions, sure. But OP still fails at the first hurdle — no rational, coherent, meaningful definition of 'god' has been put forth; there is really no justification to show some sort of proof until that has been met.
The burden of proof is not to distinguish between affirmative and negative statements, but to apply it to statements that claim the existence of something.
What requires a proof is the existential proposition, not any affirmation.
P+7
This thread started a week ago, the 9th of July. The fact that the OP hasn't even attempted to begin presenting his claimed proof is noted.
Except in the case of a limited and accessible group of elements ("complete inducción") or flagrant contradiction you cannot prove that X does not exist. This is so because of the incomplete nature of all induction.No, the burden of proof applies to any affirmative statement. .
Your criticism is noted. It is relatively easy to prove that a person is not hallucinating if his blood, for example, is tested for drugs.
Well, the simple short answer is that all known genuine evidence is now very strongly against a God of that sort (a supernatural creator) ...
... and that's really all that anyone needs to say on the matter. In fact, it's probably also all that an educated honest person can say.