Can atheists be rational? (not a parody thread)

Let me get this right: you don't believe in Zeus and you also don't disbelieve in Zeus*?

*And remember this is Zeus as was worshipped not a re-defined Zeus.


Completely correct. I believe that the Zeus as worshiped was a model of a deity that has been superseded by better models, in the eyes of almost all interested in the field. Not entirely though - there remains some very sincere and lovely Hellenic pagans.

cj x
 
Absolutely agreed. One of the claims I see most often about all kinds of things is "there is not evidence for X". Of course there is evidence for X, or we would not even be discussing. There is no evidence that makes X a demonstrable conclusion. There may not be enough evidence to make X even remote reasonable. It could be that all the evidence alleged for X is really explicable by Y. And so forth -- but it is still evidence.

The claim "there is no evidence for X" just attempts to delegitimatize the question of entity X - it is a rhetorical trick; if you wish to demonstrate that hypothesis X is unsound you need to explain all the alleged evidence for it by a better model or models - and even then technically you can not be logically certain which proposition is correct. Still, once you accept evidence, and realise that evidence is always data we impart a confidence to in respect of any given hypothesis, you do not need to give in to epistemological chaos - you can argue "the physical evidence for Bigfoot is extremely weak, with all that subjected to analysis found to be perfectly natural or fraudulent" or "big foot sightings appear strong evidence, but we mucst consider the knowwn history of haoxing and the problkem of eyewitness testimony". This is a little harder than asserting "ther eis no evidence for Bigfoot", but has the advanatge of being accurate and requiring you to think.

The problem is the "there is no evidence for X" formulation has slipped in to the sceptical vocabulary - i find myself using it sometimes as well - and it's a dangerous habit. There is as I pointed out evidence for leprechausn and the FSM - how much faith you put in that evidence is a personal judgement, but evidence exists for both. I just happen to think there are better mechanisms (Folklore & Satire) for explaining how the evidence arose than th eexistence of either as objective beasticles - but that doe snot mean there is no evidence for them.

cj x

I understand what you're getting at and essentially agree with it. But I think that the reason we say "there is no evidence for X" is because in the setting of this forum we are past that point. Among knowledgeable and intelligent people, it seems pointless to go over the issue of whether personal testimony is reliable every single time we discuss evidence in order to then move towards considering evidence that is reliable. That is why I like to use the word 'evidence' in the way it is used in the quote in my sig. Unreliable 'evidence' cannot serve to make an idea more or less likely to be true, so let's cut to the chase and refer instead to that information which can make a material difference.

Linda
 
How would you differentiate between "invisible goblins" and gods?


Advocating the former gets you institutionalized; advocating the latter gets you a Bishopric. Advocating both gets you a good shot at Archbishop? ;)

cj x
 
Sure, in the same way that the fossil record is only direct evidence for the fossil record, but can be used as evidence for evolution, and Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation is only direct evidence of CMBR, but can be employed as evidence for the Big Bang.

cj x


Yes, exactly. This is probably an increadibly nitpicky point, but the fossil record is not evidence of evolution by natural selection but evidence that supports the theory (in other words, it isn't "watching evolution happen"). Mystical experiences are not evidence of the divine but experiences that can be used to support that theory. There are simply other competing theories that, I think, probably make better use of all the evidence in a more coherent framework.
 
Until someone presents a rational argument for theism, atheism is the most rational position. Just like not believing people have telekinesis is the most rational position until someone shows that telekinesis is real.
 
Yes, exactly. This is probably an increadibly nitpicky point, but the fossil record is not evidence of evolution by natural selection but evidence that supports the theory (in other words, it isn't "watching evolution happen"). Mystical experiences are not evidence of the divine but experiences that can be used to support that theory. There are simply other competing theories that, I think, probably make better use of all the evidence in a more coherent framework.

Sure, the theories are underdetermined. Either example could be explained by invoking a different model to explain the data. So what we are left with is how reliable the model appears - which brings us back to Gord's point about predictiveness, or we could invoke Popper's falsification, and then try to deal with Hume's Induction Problem and the issues arising from symmetry of explanation. I expect I will have to explore each of those issues before the thread is over - but for now, do we take the red pill, or the blue pill? :)
The answer from what I am learning about heuristics, is we may not have a volitionary choice - but we will see.

cj x
 
I understand what you're getting at and essentially agree with it. But I think that the reason we say "there is no evidence for X" is because in the setting of this forum we are past that point. Among knowledgeable and intelligent people, it seems pointless to go over the issue of whether personal testimony is reliable every single time we discuss evidence in order to then move towards considering evidence that is reliable. That is why I like to use the word 'evidence' in the way it is used in the quote in my sig. Unreliable 'evidence' cannot serve to make an idea more or less likely to be true, so let's cut to the chase and refer instead to that information which can make a material difference.

Linda

I like lossleader's excellent explanation of evidence as well (I invoked it earlier in the thread) - the legal one - but it is worth remembering that law and science are rather different things. Legal cases are almost always subject to some degree of underdetermination - one can usually construct a different hypothesis to fit all the facts. The thing is we realize this, when a jury sits.

Now, my problem with the shortcut - and yes I think it makes sense - is it assumes the conclusion in the premise. Evidence is unreliable, so we therefore should ignore the existence of evidence? Almost all the evidence of modern science is at a logical leve l unrelaible - we know after all it is provisional, and subject to change at least theoretical based on new evidence - so is the fundie who rejects say all evidence for evolution on the grounds it conflicts with the "Eternal Word of God" logically correct? I would say not. It becomes a circular argument.

I'm painfully aware of the unreliability of eyewitness testimony - I have over a decade of quiet, patient experimental work in the area, and know the research literature well. I have also playfully made a spoon bend while someone held it on top of their head in fornt of audience of on one occasion 300 and the other 90 as I reall people - by trickery and misdirection. I've got people to witness fake ghosts, and explored how accurate their observations were (Tony Cornell gave me the idea with hsi pioneering research here.) I've used careful priming to set people up to see things, and conducted the interviews. Observations are unrelaible -I know that all to well. A search of the research database shows over 1800 papers in the psychology journals on eyewitness testimony and observation, and te problems thereof.

Buckout (1974) showed that given a staged attack on a professor, eyewitnesses scored on average 25% of the maximum possible score for recalling accurately. (Misidentification is rampant; it is interesting that one severe and scary problem is identifying members of other racial groups accurately in identity parades. Large numbers, I believe from one US project 85% of people who have been falsely imprisoned as subsequent DNA evidence has shown and were then released were convicted on eyewitness testimony.) Yet because eyewitness testimony is unreliable does not mean we can discount all eyewitness testimony. In fact, if I see a large brown dog attack a child, the odds are it was actually a large brown dog. With enough witnesses, confidence increases. If we simply discount all eyewitness evidence, we are in a ludicrous situation (see below) - it is a cause for caution, not rejection.

Another thing that I think is absolutely clear is that memories can be false. I'm sure we have all come across cases where something that seemed real to the witness subsequently turned out to be false. Yet generally, memory is fairly relaible - we should exercise caution, not reject the evidence of memory.

So let's take poodles. I said earlier i believed in poodles. If I said there was no evidence for poodles, people would say I was mad. Yet I can see no poodle here where i am - I am relying on my memories, which could be false, and my observations, which I know are flawed.

So while I agree that the claim "there is no evidence for X" is a shortcut, I think it is an extremely dangerous one. For example if my theory of how beliefs work, which I now know is not my theory at all but an established concept called heuristics, then the brain makes shortcuts all the time -and then uses those shortcuts as a basis for later shortcuts. Theoretically we can eventually program ourselves to not perceive the color blue, as i jokingly suggested earlier in thsi thread - out connections of axons and dendrites are configured in such a way to reject all evidence for that hypothesis.

So as usual I'm intensely cautious - mainly because I'm concerned the shortcut simply presupposes the conclusion. Many theistic argument si have encountered are completely nuts - does not mean all are. Many ghost stories i have heard are nonsense - but I can draw no wider conclusion. many atheists I have met are very reasonable people - but nothing in the definition to make that a requirement. :)

cj x
 
Last edited:
I like lossleader's excellent explanation of evidence as well (I invoked it earlier in the thread) - the legal one - but it is worth remembering that law and science are rather different things. Legal cases are almost always subject to some degree of underdetermination - one can usually construct a different hypothesis to fit all the facts. The thing is we realise this, when a jury sits.

That's why I raised the issue of constraints in the other thread. Constraints break the symmetry of several competing constructions - an idea that is constrained by the evidence is more likely to be true (further explanation here).

Now, my problem with the shortcut - and yes I think it makes sense - is it assumes the conclusion in the premise. Evidence is unrelaible, so we therefore should ignore the existence fo evidence?

No. The answer is that the extent to which evidence is given weight reflects the extent to which the evidence is reliable. Plus a healthy dose of Hume ("that no testimony is sufficient to establish a miracle, unless the testimony be of such a kind, that its falsehood would be more miraculous, than the fact, which it endeavours to establish....).

Remember that your observation of a poodle has independent support from the kind of information that is reliable.

Linda
 
Is, yet, another thread where a theist is trying to trick atheists into believing there is a god by using word magic and rhetorical play?
 
Is, yet, another thread where a theist is trying to trick atheists into believing there is a god by using word magic and rhetorical play?

Nope. If that was my intention I would simply use well known marketing and advertising techniques. :) I don't much care what you conclude on the theism/atheism issue I'm deeply concerned with the methodology though. :) As usual my interest is trying to challenge assumptions and make people question how they know things - nothing more, nothing less.

cj x
 
Looks like you're using marketing techniques to me by trying to convince people irrational arguments are rational and that unreliable evidence is reliable.
 
Good point. Just make a rational argument for the non-existence of god/ddess(e/s) then... :)
I know this is ancient history already, but I hope blobru or someone has jumped in to clarify what rational means.

Again, for myself, I take it to mean the skeptical model. You follow the evidence. So in the question of the existence of God, I don't have to come up with a logical proof for non-existence, but rather I weigh the evidence. If there is sufficient, compelling evidence, I would provisionally accept the claim that God exists. There is not, so I don't.

However, speaking of proofs for the non-existence of God: we're back to the problem of definition. Funny thing about that, billions of people in houses of worship all over the world will assert with certitude any number of characteristics that might be used for such a definition. When you ask them in this context though, you get very vague descriptions that don't work as a definition (that is, they aren't sufficient to include what belongs in the class "God" and exclude what doesn't).

Just to take some of the very widely accepted characteristics, "omniscience, omnipotence, and perfect compassion", the argument from evil is a pretty good proof that this God doesn't exist.

A friend of mine makes the point that even omniscience and omnipotence are logically inconsistent (if he knows the future, then even God himself is not free to do anything different).
 
Cj.23 if you could reply to my reply to you I'd much appreciate it.


Btw I realized something based on this thread and subsequent discussions had with a friend. The debate really is not whether an atheist believes that there is no God, but rather, does the atheist believe that YOU believe in God as you say you do. I'm realizing that what you are considering staunch atheism, "I believe that there is no God" is really not just a matter of not believing himself, but actually recognizing that the so called believer is lying when they say that they believe in God. This is why the debates rage on so much.

I'm going to start another thread though.
 
Why do we have to prove the non-existence of things that dont exist? I thought we figured out that this was impossible...

Pretty much. We've been challenged to show that a postulate that obeys the law of non-contradiction breaks the law of non-contradiction. Essentially, the OP has challenged all strong atheists to draw a square-circle or be declared irrational.
 
...snip...

. People constantly tell me there is no evidence for people seeing ghosts - there is you know, mountains of it. I have, and for all I know you may have too. That is evidence. It does not mean we ave to assume "ghosts are dead people" - it could be argued as evidence for that, but it can also be arghued as evidence for hundreds of other hypotheses. We simply admit the existence of the evidence, the data of the raw experience, then start to try and work out what the best explantory model is to fit it.

...snip...

Yet when it comes to "God" you do not follow this approach and you may be interested in this post of mine regarding ghosts: http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2219251#post2219251

From another post I made while ago regarding seeing a ghost which is very appropriate for this argument, take this point to be about your experience of "divinity":

I know that no one will be able to convince me I didn't experience what I have recounted, just like many "believers" won't be convinced that they are mistaken in their beliefs.

I'm happy to accept that you, like me in seeing a ghost, are not willing to listen to anyone that tells you that didn't experience something.

However....

...snip...

I think the difference between approaching something like this "sceptically" and "non-sceptically" is whether your conclusions (i.e. beliefs) go beyond the evidence you have access to.

My conclusion regarding whether the phenomenon of ghosts exists does not go beyond the evidence; in other words I cannot state that what I saw had anything to do with (in the instance I recount in the linked posts) a spirit, "energy" or anything like that.

Do you see how in making your claim that you experience of "divinity" is evidence of God is you taking a step that you do not have the evidence to justify? And in fact is contradicted by other evidence?
 
Cj.23 if you could reply to my reply to you I'd much appreciate it.

Sorry TrueThat, i will. I get round to replying to everyone eventually, just I'm working so I can only reply in breaks, so I tend to reply to whoever is about first. I'll have a look...

Btw I realized something based on this thread and subsequent discussions had with a friend. The debate really is not whether an atheist believes that there is no God, but rather, does the atheist believe that YOU believe in God as you say you do. I'm realizing that what you are considering staunch atheism, "I believe that there is no God" is really not just a matter of not believing himself, but actually recognizing that the so called believer is lying when they say that they believe in God. This is why the debates rage on so much.

I'm going to start another thread though.

Sorry I'm confused? You don't think believers believe in God? OK, I'll have a look at that thread...

cj x
 
How would you differentiate between "invisible goblins" and gods?
Advocating the former gets you institutionalized; advocating the latter gets you a Bishopric. Advocating both gets you a good shot at Archbishop?


I wasn't asking about the consequences of advocating their existence. I was asking how you would differentiate between gods, which you consider it sensible to believe in, and invisible goblins which you say it isn't sensible to believe in.

How do you tell whether an entity you believe in is a god or an invisible goblin?
 
Completely correct. I believe that the Zeus as worshiped was a model of a deity that has been superseded by better models, in the eyes of almost all interested in the field. Not entirely though - there remains some very sincere and lovely Hellenic pagans.

cj x


You have again evaded answering the question I actually asked you by re-defining the word Zeus. I've made it very clear that I am asking you about the Zeus that was worshipped, not your interpretation of that concept.

I've just lifted this as an example of the Zues I am talking about:

http://messagenet.com/myths/bios/zeus.html

The son of Kronos (Cronos) and Rheia, Zeus (like his father before him) deposed his aged father from the Throne of Eternity.

..snip...

Zeus was hidden and raised in secret until he was old enough to fulfill his destiny. One day he ambushed Kronos while out hunting. Zeus kicked Kronos in the stomach so hard the aged god vomited up the stone and the five divine, undigested gods and goddesses: Demeter, Hades, Hestia, Hera and Poseidon. In gratitude, and bowing to destiny, Zeus was unanimously declared leader of the immortals.

Zeus made his domain the mountain tops and clouds, where he could survey and vitalize all creation. He married his elder sister, the eternally beautiful Hera. She was jealous and vengeful of her husbands affections and his many love affairs with goddesses and mortals gave her endless worry and caused much divine wrath to be visited on the mortals.

Do you believe in this Zeus?
 
You have again evaded answering the question I actually asked you by re-defining the word Zeus. I've made it very clear that I am asking you about the Zeus that was worshipped, not your interpretation of that concept.


And further, cj, since you consider Zeus to be "a model of a deity that has been superseded by better models", do you believe that before this Zeus was superseded, he actually existed?
 

Back
Top Bottom