You insult the mulberry bush.The mulberry bush,
You insult the mulberry bush.The mulberry bush,
Ok I got it now, sorry, sometimes I am a bit dense.
Though it seems to me then, that the existence of the universe CANNOT be evidence FOR or against the existence of god because we cannot tell the difference between:
a) god created the universe in such a way that happens to look like it was not created by god.
and
b) the universe was not created by god.
You insult the mulberry bush.
Evidence please for the existence of the universe, if you mean that you are in a real universe. Or do you accept that the existence of the universe is a core assumption for which no evidence can be given?
Ya I am not going down the solipsism hole.
Call that a win if you want.
"Undetectable" is indistinguishable from "doesn't exist".I think his actual point is that there is no way to rule out an undetectable god, but there is also no need to worship an undetectable god and, in fact, it would be silly to worship an undetectable god.
"Undetectable" is indistinguishable from "doesn't exist".
"Undetectable" is indistinguishable from "doesn't exist".
Please explain.
Huh?![]()
Well said! Philosophy is porn for brain-wanking. I like it!So philosophy is kinda like cheap porn. It allows you to stay home and pleasure yourself while saving you the real work of getting a real girlfriend.
That explains a lot actually!
Some should try practicing what they preach . . .Huh?![]()
Try using reason, logic and evidence.
"Undetectable" is indistinguishable from "doesn't exist".
Well said! Philosophy is porn for brain-wanking. I like it!
It is not my belief that is rigid it's the religions you mention themselves that have rigid definitions. The RCC is quite clear as to the nature, the description, the definition of its divine god. You seem to be confusing theology with doctrine. Some theology of course ends up as doctrine but not much and it (in the case of the RC at least) can easily take a century or so to make it from theology to doctrine. (Unless a king wishes to be rid of a wife he no longer wants, then it can move from theology to burning at the stake doctrine in a matter of months. )See my later post. The belief in gods is a lot less rigid than you think it is. It's not science so everyone doesn't start by agreeing on a definition. What god/s are like is a question religions and philosophies have been debating since prehistory, there's not a single 'Religion Side' to be argued against on behalf of the 'Science Side'!
Functionally, yes.
Philosophically, no.
I think that was the point.
And around the mulberry bush we go again...Some people use words in a way that doesn't match the universe. I get it!
You use the words "describe" and "model" in such a way. That scientists can make a model of weather, doesn't mean that the model is weather.
You don't understand that describing and modeling is not always the same as that which is described and modeled.
To describe and model ethics is not the same as doing ethics.
Now start using reason, logic and so on, Darat.
Oh foolish padwa, you have much to experience... I'd say learn but no it's really just an experience.Is that distinction not merely semantics?
And around the mulberry bush we go again...
https://undsci.berkeley.edu/article/0_0_0/whatisscience_12Science doesn't make moral judgments
Oh foolish padwa, you have much to experience... I'd say learn but no it's really just an experience.
It is not my belief that is rigid it's the religions you mention themselves that have rigid definitions. The RCC is quite clear as to the nature, the description, the definition of its divine god. You seem to be confusing theology with doctrine. Some theology of course ends up as doctrine but not much and it (in the case of the RC at least) can easily take a century or so to make it from theology to doctrine. (Unless a king wishes to be rid of a wife he no longer wants, then it can move from theology to burning at the stake doctrine in a matter of months. )