Originally Posted by skeptigirl
Post 620. But please, Claus, read through the whole post first before you start misinterpreting my answers.
You don't need to start with character assassination. Wait for something to happen, before you complain about it.
It has already happened with your earlier replies to my points in this thread. By responding sentence by sentence before reading my comments in their entirety, you missed the points I was making.
Originally Posted by skeptigirl
Who is criticizing "what we want them to claim"? I don't get this one at all.
Deists do not claim evidence of their god. It is therefore wrong to criticize deists for claiming evidence of their god.
You are still missing the point. Just what is it Deists believe in? A god which does nothing yet they know it exists? One for which there never was any real evidence? It's impossible. Perhaps they do not recognize the evidence by which they have come to their conclusion. Anyone professing to believe in a god has
some reason for believing. What is that reason? It is unreliable evidence and they are more than likely simply denying that source of their belief. Whether it is a "feeling" which they are choosing to call the reason or whether they label it as something else, it is, nonetheless the criteria they are using to decide. And that is by definition, 'evidence'. It also happens to be invalid or unreliable evidence by scientific standards. So rather than actually examining the unreliability of the evidence, one denies they are using any evidence.
I've had a similar discussion with people about morals. Science doesn't weigh moral values. What is going unrecognized here is the mind is indeed weighing moral decisions based on some criteria. Those criteria can be identified. And once you identify the criteria, science can weigh a decision based on those criteria. Because the process of evaluating the moral decision does not consciously identify the criteria one is using to decide, most people don't consciously recognize those criteria are there. Moral decisions are not made by magic, (though science doesn't have an inherent preference on what the decision should be.)
So here we have someone deciding to believe in a deity. On what basis did they make that decision? They didn't make it based on no evidence. That is impossible unless one tosses a coin and says I'll randomly decide to believe if it is heads and not believe if it is tails. But instead, the believer denies the fact they are accepting some evidence of some kind. Beth and others actually admit to the evidence, "People's subjective feeling". The people you are describing, Claus, make the claim they are not going by evidence. But they are going by evidence. And it is not valid evidence by scientific process standards. So instead of facing the fact they are using invalid evidence, many proclaim they are using no evidence. Some admit they are using invalid evidence and some, like Beth, believe the evidence to be valid. But the scientific process has rules of evidence. You may come to an alternate conclusion, but following a skeptical philosophy, you cannot make up your own rules of evidence.
Originally Posted by skeptigirl
Again with the two definitions. To my knowledge no one claims the god in their beliefs does nothing, certainly no formal religions claim this. So you can't test for the god as defined by science, but that is not the god defined by people. Science fit the god concept to untestable scientific principles. Science did not take god beliefs as they actually exist.
Deists - such as Hal - claim that the god of their beliefs does nothing.
And deists such as Hal are using some criteria to determine that belief. I would argue that criteria is not "no evidence", that criteria is invalid evidence.
Originally Posted by skeptigirl
No one invents an astrology or psychic power definition which when defined as such, cannot be tested.
Of course. They need the "evidence" to persuade their victims.
You missed my point. By no one, I mean scientists. Scientists invented a god definition which could not be tested. That definition is not consistent with god definitions people use including Deists. Deists may claim they believe in a god that does nothing. But there is no more logic in that than believing in invisible pink unicorns. Does a Deist believe in Invisible Pink Unicorns which do nothing? Why not? What is the difference? Once you describe the difference, you no longer have "nothing".
Originally Posted by skeptigirl
There is overwhelming evidence god beliefs and religions originated from people and not because people had real encounters with gods either now or in the past. Going beyond that claiming one cannot disprove gods therefore maintaining a god belief is still within the skeptical philosophy only works if you are merely saying you cannot prove the negative. But maintaining that belief as a legitimate belief, whether you claim it is because you don't need evidence or because you believe your evidence is internal in some way is not in keeping with the skeptical view of the world.
Why not? If they don't claim evidence?
Then they are simply denying the evidence they actually believe in. Because if you really had
no evidence, you would have no reason to believe. With perhaps the exception of tossing the coin and saying heads, I believe, tails I don't.
Originally Posted by skeptigirl
In the case of god beliefs, they are incompatible. Because science follows the evidence. It doesn't say well since you cannot prove the negative I am going to believe. There is no evidence for gods.
Deists don't claim there is. That's why Deism is compatible with skepticism.
Deists claim they don't need to support their belief. That is not the same as really not having any evidence. They have invalid evidence and don't want to look at that critically. Which is fine, but it is still a blind spot in their skepticism.
Originally Posted by skeptigirl
This is great. But in reality, god beliefs are not handled quite so purely by skeptics. The two god definitions is an example.
If a god definition does not postulate evidence of the god, then skeptics have nothing to test.
And again, this is denial. They have evidence, it is invalid evidence. It amounts to excluding a portion of one's beliefs from skeptical inquiry.
Originally Posted by skeptigirl
But the evidence is overwhelming that god beliefs are inventions of the human mind. To ignore that is to ignore the elephant in the room.
Nobody is ignoring this. But I don't see where the elephant even comes into the room.
The elephant is the evidence god beliefs are myths. In other words, when one only looks at the fact gods as defined by science are untestable, it leaves all the evidence that god beliefs are known to be myths out of the evaluation. And I do think we can safely say it is a myth that the Earth is 6,000 years old, that Vishna statues drink milk, and that Zeus or Thor are up in the sky flinging lightning bolts at people on the ground.
Originally Posted by skeptigirl View Post
And just how is it you disprove invisible pink unicorns?
I said we can't disprove invisible pink unicorns.
You said one disproves gods and invisible pink unicorns
differently. I'm asking you to describe the difference.