Piggy, the points proffered here are an assortment of arguments that may be relevant to the debunking of particular God-theories. They can't be used to generally prove the non-existence of God.
I'll do my best to take each in turn.
In doing so, you attempt to deny the forest by examining each tree.
Of course if you isolate each part of the argument and examine it without reference to the others, you're going to conclude that none of them is sufficient, especially if you take them out of the larger context as you do here.
So let's try to examine your post in context....
Piggy said:
1. The idea has its origins in myth and superstition. Unlike other potentially verifiable entities whose existence has been posited by the human imagination (such as black holes) it was not derived as a necessary consequence of verified models of the world. Rather, it was derived from models of the world which have since been overturned – models of the world inhabited by intelligent creators, angels shining in the heavens, sentient beings which cause weather and disease and other natural phenomena. The world-view which engendered God has been debunked.
Begs the question. If God does not exist, then the God-theories would originate from myth and superstition. If God does exist, the myths & superstitions may originate from him.
The relevance of point 1 is that the concept of God is not derived from any requirements of any verified models of reality.
Contrast this with black holes. These were originally imagined because our models of gravitation and mass implied them. As our models became more complete, they became a necessary feature.
So it is reasonable to demand that we accept black holes as potentially real -- we must admit that it's possible that there are some out there.
This is not proof that there is no God. But it is not offered as the proof. It is listed as one of the most significant faults of GOD theory.
And since God is an unanchored concept, it is significant.
(I won't belabor the circularity of the "God created the myths about God" argument, because that feature is not particularly important, but I will stress that there are explanations for these myths which fit perfectly well with accepted naturalistic theory, so to posit the unsupported God-theory as an alternative is redundant and unproductive.)
Piggy said:
2. There is no valid evidence of God.
Argument from ignorance. Absense of evidence does not imply evidence of absence.
Your objection would only be relevant if I were offering point 2 as my proof. I am not.
Yet when we examine this concept, it is crucial that we recognize that the concept lacks any evidentiary support. For me to ignore this point would be inexcusible. It must be mentioned.
Piggy said:
3. The concept of God is incoherent. The category “god” in its broadest sense (which I will render as GOD here, to avoid confusion) allows an infinite variety of entities – such as YHVH (and Baal), Hephaestus, the deistic First Cause, Krishna, animistic spirits, Osiris, Buddhist suchness, the objects of ineffable mystic experience, new age universal energy, and so forth – which may be mutually exclusive. These various Gods/gods may have created the universe or not, may have taken corporeal form or not, may be capable of taking corporeal form or not, may be currently believed in or not, may be exclusive or not, may interact with our world or not, may be loving or not, may answer prayers or not, and so on.
Illogical. Demonstrating the incoherence of the uber-concept of God does not speak to the coherence of any one particular concept of God.
Yes, I know. And my post was perfectly clear on that point.
Yet we must recognize the incoherence of GOD. We cannot proceed logically if we do not.
Piggy said:
4. As rational inquiry and naturalistic models of the world have advanced, God has retreated. In all cases where the 2 have clashed, God has never won. The stars are not a heavenly host of angels. Divine creation myths are false. Prayer does not influence the events of the world. Consciousness is mapped to the activity of the brain. Everything which God was once supposed to have done has turned out to be a function of natural forces, or a trick of the mind.
Extrapolation. Just because God's on a losing streak, one may not conclude that he will never win one.
Argument from ignorance. Having no evidence of the power of prayer does not mean that prayer has no power.
Regarding prayer, we do in fact have evidence that prayer has no power, except to comfort and calm the one who prays, in the same way that guided imagery and other sorts of mental exercises do. Many experiments have been done on intercessory prayer and other similar types of prayer, including TM. The only one that showed an effect was a study which revealed that heart patients who knew that others were praying for them had a greater incidence of complications -- perhaps because of a type of performance anxiety.
The fact that God has lost every test is significant. It is also significant that these tests struck at vital principles of the traditional concept, leading to the jerry-rigging, gutting, and overhauling we've seen over the centuries.
Piggy said:
5. The rational/naturalistic model of the universe is able to account for the origins and persistence of God concepts. The human brain is a relentless pattern seeker, and will impose pattern where there is none rather than be without it. The human brain generates feelings of purpose and meaning. People whose brains do not adequately perform this function have very difficult lives, and many do not survive to old age. The human brain seeks out human qualities and motivations – we even speak in human terms often when discussing non-human things, such as speaking of what a plant “wants” or what a computer “thinks”. Human beings have a deep desire, even a need, to be loved and valued, especially by parental figures. Given these facts, it would be strange if the human mind did not have a tendency to perceive a higher intelligence ordering the world.
Lack of proof. Presentation of an alternate theory of the genesis of the God-theory does not refute the competing theories.
It does when the alternate theories fit with confirmed models of reality, while the God-based theory lacks any support whatsoever. If the alternate theory were also totally unsupported, just ideas in someone's head, then it would be equivalent with the God-based hypothesis. But these qualities of the human mind are well established experimentally.
Piggy said:
6. As rational inquiry has advanced, theories of God have had to continually reshape themselves in order to avoid outright contradiction with known fact (although these contrary-to-fact conceptions of God are still around, as evidenced by the fundamentalist Christian movement in the US). This is not the sort of revision which valid theories – such as Darwinian evolution – undergo, in which valid questions are answered yet the core theory is confirmed. Rather, it’s the kind of revision which bogus theories – such as geocentrism – undergo, in which the core features are jerry-rigged or replaced in order to avoid fatal contradiction with fact.
Ad hominem. calling a theory bogus does not make it so.
Overgeneralization. Only applies to a subset of God-theories.
Uh... there ain't no hominem here.
Now, you're right that traditional theories of God still survive. But their inability to change has merely rendered them contrary to observed fact.
When we examine the history of religious thought, we find a continual retreat from once-central qualities of God in order to avoid outright contradiction with newly established truths.
(I'm reminded here of Ezekiel's invention of the ancient equivalent of the Holy Ghost after the destruction of the First Temple.)
Piggy said:
I can think of no other theory which has not been discarded as false at this point.
Argument from ignorance.
It would be preferable here if you pointed out a counter-example.
There is good reason why notions which have all these strikes against them are thrown out of the game.
Piggy said:
A theory which was generated from now-debunked assumptions, which is not required by any validated models of reality, which lacks any valid evidence whatsoever, which has lost every testable challenge, which has no agreed-upon core qualities, which has required reworking at each validation of competing theories, whose most prominent functions have been replaced by other entities (such as natural forces) or exposed as illusory, and whose very persistence is explained perfectly well by the prevailing model of human psychology… this is no theory at all.
You can say all of the above about life on other planets; yet would you say that this proves that ET life does not exist?
No, you cannot say all this about life on other planets.
The theory of life on other planets did not arise until we understood that there are other planets. By that time, we had a basic understanding of terrestrial biology. It was reasonable to conclude that life elsewhere may be possible. This theory did not arise from debunked assumptions, but from valid ones, and was a reasonable conjecture derived from these valid models.
ET life has lost no testable challenges. It has a well-defined set of core qualities which everyone agrees on, even if there is a lot of debate over the details. There has been no need to gut or jerry-rig the concept.
It is perfectly reasonable to posit that life -- even intelligent life -- may be possible elsewhere. The 2 concepts are not at all comparable, and I think the fact that you make this comparison demonstrates how poorly you've considered my argument, and the subject in general.
Also, you seem to have gone back to debunking the uber-concept - talking of the theory, as opposed to all theories. I don't think you can do this; as others have said, you must take each theory separately.
Again you reveal that you have not read my post with any care whatsoever. I can't "go back" to the GOD concept at this point, because we have not left it. It is important -- in fact, necessary -- to first demonstrate why GOD theory fails. Not only because that is the natural place to begin, but also to establish certain flaws which any sub-theory must be careful not to reproduce.
Piggy said:
It is perfectly reasonable to discard the concept at this point. It doesn’t work. It has no merit – in fact, it does not even have any substance.
In what sense? From a practical standpoint the God-theory does not inform my life - the idea that God has not been proven impossible bears no impact on my day-to-day decisions; I live as though there is no God. I have discarded the concept as a practical matter.
Philosophically, scientifically, and intellectually I don't think you can say that it is 'impossible that God exists.' Within the purview of these arenas I don't think that there's any justification for making such a strong statement.
Pick your poison.
It is reasonable to discard GOD with reference to the question at hand: Can this thing be meaningfully said to exist?
Have you forgotten that this is the issue?
GOD theory has no merit and makes no sense. It cannot be meaningfully claimed to correspond to something actual.
Piggy said:
And yet, the claim is made that the theory cannot be discarded.
The justification for this claim is that it is possible that one of the sub-theories under the larger umbrella of the GOD concept could be said to correspond to something which may possibly be real.
Now, this claim, by itself, is not a claim at all. Unless a particular God-theory is identified as a candidate for describing an entity which might possibly be real, there is no way to evaluate, much less test, this notion.
And yet, there appears to be no valid option for any of these sub-theories.
Argument from ignorance.
Please don't interrupt.
As I was saying....
Piggy said:
Dead theories of god – such as Zeus – are no longer credited by the theistic community. It is unreasonable to expect anyone else to grant them the potential for existence.
Agreed.
Piggy said:
Traditional theories of God – such as the creator God of Genesis 1-2 – are contradicted by confirmed observation. It is unreasonable to demand that anyone grant them the potential for existence.
Agreed.
Piggy said:
Anecdotal theories of God – that is, claims based on miracles, intuitions, personal experiences and testimonies, and the like – lack valid evidence, and are explained perfectly well by the verified naturalistic paradigm. It is unreasonable to demand that anyone concede that they must be potentially real.
Disagree.
Just because a valid alternate theory exists does not in itself invalidate a God-theory. For example, a claimant's inability to prove an intuition came from God does not prove that it didn't. The fact that one may reasonably explain the intuition as a result of normal psychological processes is not proof positive of that interpretation.
Nor does it need to be.
When 2 theories are proposed to explain a phenomenon, and one theory fits with established and verified models of reality, and another lacks any support whatsoever, it is unreasonable to ask that the unsupported theory be preferred.
Piggy said:
Transcendent theories of God – which propose beings said to exist in hypothetical realities, absent any clear notion of how these relate to non-hypothetical reality – are unanchored concepts (see issues 1-6 above) said to exist in imagined worlds. It is unreasonable to demand that anyone accept them as in any way “real”.
Piggy, this looks like a straw man. Of course hypothetical realities existing in imagined worlds are not 'real'. I suspect you haven't accurately represented mainstream Trancendent God-theories, though I will admit to being out of my element here.
Transcendent theories, by definition, require hypothetical realities. In fact, some of these realities are defined so weakly as to be inherently unknowable and indescribable.
Piggy said:
When these options are eliminated, the only choice left is to posit a God which is indistinguishable from the impersonal forces of nature as described by science. And such a conception of God is not only antithetical to mainstream views of God, it also renders God redundant, and therefore dispensable.
Redundant as a practical matter, Piggy. Occam's razor can be used to ontologically dispense with this type of God-theory except in the case where the God-theory itself is being investigated; thus it can't be used to disprove the theory outright.
I mean redundant in the sense that it is non-different from what is contained in the naturalistic model. Occam's razor does not apply to this type of redundancy, because in this case, God adds nothing at all to the model, so the model is not complexified.
A redundant God is no God at all.
Piggy said:
So what is left?
Nothing.
As I said, we know enough now about the world to state without reservation that God is not real.
What you have eloquently stated above certainly reinforces the position of weak atheism as I've seen it defined - "I don't believe in God." You have left me without a doubt (not that I had any to begin with) that this position is fully rational. I will likely use all of these arguments to defend my position in the future.
However, it still seems to be inadequate as proof of the non-existence of God. You imply such yourself when you make the statement
Piggy said:
I can think of no other theory which has not been discarded as false at this point.
A proof cannot logically contain a statement such as this. What you have presented is the theory that God doesn't exist. Your theory is almost certainly correct.
Cannot contain a statement like that? Cannot? Why not?
Remember, this is not a logician's proof, any more than it's a mathematician's or scientist's proof.
But that said, there is another angle to the proof that I'd like to elaborate on, because I feel I haven't adequately dealt with it in my previous post.
But that will have to wait til tomorrow b/c I have to get to bed.