Tricky
Briefly immortal
At present, that is all I know about it. I reserve the possibility that I may know more in the future. I thought I had made that clear.It is. Care to define it?
At present, that is all I know about it. I reserve the possibility that I may know more in the future. I thought I had made that clear.It is. Care to define it?
"Forbidden"? Sorry, I don't get your point.
You can make all sorts of god definitions and then try to have science address gods so defined. That is fitting the evidence to the conclusion.
True, but that's not what I am talking about. I'm not talking about a god that interacts with us haphazardly, or that gives us directions (contradictory ones), but some kind of "purpose" to the universe, or something.What does the evidence actually support? It overwhelmingly supports all god beliefs are myths of human imagination.
Wrong again. I've explained why the appeal to the cookie jar is invalid, and I'll be happy to explain why all possible definitions must end in these possibilities if the question is asked.
No, I'm seriously asking you that question.
Where do you propose such a thing would exist?
I am not claiming that everything we don't currently perceive must not exist.
Now, where would such a thing supposedly exist?
At present, that is all I know about it. I reserve the possibility that I may know more in the future. I thought I had made that clear.
It's interesting that while a number of people participating in this thread have eulegized Arthur C. Clarke as a connsumate skeptic, IIRC, in his "verdict" episode of World of Strange Powers, he gave ghosts his highest likelyhood of existing.
IMO, I think he was incorrect with that conclusion, but it again highlights the difference between actual skepticism, cynicism and belief. Rejecting things conditionally that fail to have sufficient evidence is skepticism, rejecting everything that doesn't fit into your Weltanshcauung just because it doesn't is cynicism, and dogmatically asserting things which don't fit your world view cannot possibly exist is belief.
Whatever strong atheism is in the spectrum of belief, it's not skepticism.
Me too. I see no reason to believe they exist. I think it is damned unlikely, almost, but not quite, zero possibility.Ok fair enough.
I do understand your point of view but when it comes to invisible dragons in garages I'm with Sagan.
Me too. I see no reason to believe they exist. I think it is damned unlikely, almost, but not quite, zero possibility.
Me too. I see no reason to believe they exist. I think it is damned unlikely, almost, but not quite, zero possibility.
You can claim that it is childish of Tricky to assert that scgyuhx6gtz.:y might someday be found to exist, but even so, you haven't addressed the childish question, merely dismissed it. (Note how I essentially compare those who might run to this line of reasoning as childish, while seeming to argue in their favour)
LOL. Check out this post from almost a month ago.I round that probability down is all.![]()
Great minds, an' all.I think that the philosophical differences between those who voted for 6 versus those who voted for 7 (strong vs. weak atheist) can be attributed to a rounding error.
LOL. Check out this post from almost a month ago.
I think that the philosophical differences between those who voted for 6 versus those who voted for 7 (strong vs. weak atheist) can be attributed to a rounding error.
Which is simply a semantic argument of scientific purity. Scientific philosophy never rules anything out. The scientific method proposes one cannot prove the negative.....
So yes, throwing out an undefined term is meaningless, having no truth value, for or against, until and unless a definition can be attached to it. I reserve a very small possibility of the term "god" someday acquiring a meaningful definition.
Including the absurd?Also possible. We simply can't assign a zero possibility to any future events.
Don't feel bad about playing devil's advocate. It serves to sharpen one's thoughts on a matter.Relevance is irrelevant!
How do YOU know it does not exist?!!!!!!!....
I would chalk that up to Piggy's literary license within the discussion.....
How would you respond, if given the statement, "God cannot exist," I reply, "can too, poopy pants"?
I won't deny that my position is based on my training in science.Which is simply a semantic argument of scientific purity. Scientific philosophy never rules anything out. The scientific method proposes one cannot prove the negative.
Who said I hadn't drawn a conclusion? I conclude there is no god just as much as I conclude that gravity works and that evolution has occurred. But even though the likelihood of being wrong about them is incredibly small, it is still a provisional conclusion.The mistake I see you making here is using these principles to avoid drawing a conclusion based on overwhelming evidence. Yet we draw those conclusions all the time and don't waste time arguing that the rules in science do not allow such absolutes.
LOL. Only when I get into discussions like this. But it is assumed. Still, I generally try to phrase things so as not to make absolute statements. (See, I even said "I generally try", not "I always" because the latter would be an absolute.How many times do you discuss evolution theory always careful to add the caveat, "yet we don't know absolutely", or, "but there is always a chance new evidence will refute evolution theory"? How about, "there is always the chance we could find out gravity isn't keeping us on the Earth's surface, it could be something else"?
I find that scientific reasoning works quite well when discussing woo. I say, "I have no evidence for God" and it answers or even prevents those who try to make the strawman that I am denying the possibility of God.You make a correct argument if one is merely talking about pure scientific reasoning. But how much time is occupied in your contemplation of the possibility of invisible pink unicorns or flying spaghetti monsters or that gravity and evolution theory are not 'proved'? I dare say, not much.
No, the standard is the same. I don't believe in Thor and Zeus for exactly the same reason that I don't believe in the Christian versions of God. But there is no need to get into people's faces about it. I find that little can be gained by deliberately insulting someone about their beliefs. Once you've done that, the likelihood of pleasant discourse trends toward zero too.What I see is that despite the same overwhelming evidence against the beliefs in mythical gods being real, some skeptics and scientists feel the need to apply a different standard of certainty when it comes to challenging god beliefs. You claim there might be a god (technically) but do you make the same assertion Thor and Zeus might be real? Do you make the same assertion we might find out one day people float in Earth's atmosphere, we just didn't know it?
Semantics is everything. For example, I believe "agnostic" means "without knowledge", not "tentative". Just as Martu and I only now discovered that we were actually talking about the same thing, even to the point of using the same words about it, it is critical to any philosophical discussion to make sure that people know how you are using words. That is why, in this sort of discussion, I always am specific about what it means when I say "I don't believe in God." That sort of statement is so easy to misinterpret.The semantics of purist scientific philosophy, rules, principles, whatever you want to call it, is not a reason to take the potential for the basic observations of the natural world as tentative. It is not the equivalent of the potential of discovering something new or discovering that a current paradigm was wrong. The latter is always possible. But it is not used to declare agnosticism about anything and everything we have overwhelming evidence for in the natural Universe except in a semantic argument about science.