Again, the question must be is it rational to use ANY EQUATION under conditions where it cannot give valid results. Why the special pleading here?
...snip...
Here's a hint for you: Can theists be rational? That is known as "the topic of the thread".
Again, the question must be is it rational to use ANY EQUATION under conditions where it cannot give valid results. Why the special pleading here?
...snip...
Even if you want to pretend that the natural universe is defined by the laws of physics and not the other way around, a being that can adjust the constants of the universe controls the laws of physics and is not governed by them.
Such a being is not inconsistent with the known laws of physics, which relate only to the natural universe.
-Bri
Here's a hint for you: Can theists be rational? That is known as "the topic of the thread".
...snip...
-Bri
Calling it the "natural universe" rather than just "the universe" is rather flippant.
It presumes that there is at least some marginally rational reason to believe in the simply yet to be discovered supernatural part, including the yet to be discovered "being".
Is there any reason to believe in this supernatural part, other than the fact that some humans have conceived of a theoretical concept that, by its very nature, can never be disproven?
No, it's just accurate. That we don't have compelling evidence of anything supernatural outside of the natural universe doesn't make it theoretically impossible.
No, it just doesn't presume that the supernatural is impossible.
The existence of aliens can't be disproven either, but that doesn't necessarily mean they are impossible or that we shouldn't consider the possibility of their existence.
-Bri
All well and good but has nothing to do with what I posted which was answering your question (albeit that you had misused the term "special pleading").
Why are you discounting the non-supernatural, non-natural universes?
Again, the question must be is it rational to use ANY EQUATION under conditions where it cannot give valid results. Why the special pleading here?
That depends what you consider "valid."
These are all examples where the validity of the premises is subjective. Any time the premises of an argument are subjective but reasonable, the results will be "controversial" -- meaning that reasonable people can disagree. This occurs when there is a lack of conclusive evidence upon which to base the premise. It's not unreasonable to conclude that Joe was speeding, but that doesn't mean that someone would necessarily be irrational if they concluded otherwise.
-Bri
I don't think you answered my question, which was a fair question directed at Linda. I asked why she would consider the use of a mathematical equation in a logical argument different from every other logical argument that similarly uses a mathematical equation.
And, yes, objecting to the use of a specific equation in a specific argument without consideration of every other argument that uses mathematical equations in the same way would be special pleading.
...snip...
No, it's just accurate. That we don't have compelling evidence of anything supernatural outside of the natural universe doesn't make it theoretically impossible.
No, it just doesn't presume that the supernatural is impossible.
The existence of aliens can't be disproven either, but that doesn't necessarily mean they are impossible or that we shouldn't consider the possibility of their existence.
-Bri
I said nothing about any teapots.If your point is that we don't know of the existence of anything beyond the natural and therefore the supernatural can't be used to explain anything, I agree. The same can be true of aliens or teapots orbiting Jupiter though. I don't mind defining any belief for which there is no conclusive evidence irrational as long as you're consistent.
-Bri
Well, I realize that we are now on page 34, so you may have forgotten what this thread is about, but the title is "Can theists be rational?" and in response to that question, cj.23 presented what he called a rational argument for theism which involved the use of Bayes' theorem under conditions where it was not possible to form valid premises. I don't consider it a case of special pleading to directly address an argument that was directed toward the thread topic.
Does that mean that you agree that the use of Bayes' theorem was not rational - that is, the fine-tuning argument does not constitute a rational argument for theism?
I told you earlier that I was referring mostly to external validity - i.e. the extent to which a finding can be applied to settings other than those which are the direct subject of the argument, the extent to which the premises are based on measurable properties (subjective or objective, doesn't matter), the extent to which the premises reflect a real setting.
These examples all refer to situations where it is possible to form valid premises (even if you have tried to avoid doing so).
Does that mean that no examples are available (other than the fine-tuning argument) of situations where Bayes' theorem is used when it is not possible to form valid premises?
Good job she never did that then wasn't it.
I said nothing about any teapots.
There is proof of life on a planet, this planet also has no special place, and no special laws of physics. Also on this planet life has shown that it can live under all types of conditions, and more are being learned all the time. So why the hell is it so hard to understand that this is not the only planet where life can be?
And I'm still waiting for what a so-called god answers.
See my response to Darat. I might not have been clear with what I meant since both of you apparently misunderstood, but my question was why you would consider the use of a mathematical equation in a logical argument different from every other logical argument that similarly uses a mathematical equation.
I don't know how you're using the term "irrational." If you agree that every argument for which there isn't conclusive evidence is irrational, then I will agree that at least you're being consistent. If that's what you're proposing, let's discuss whether such an argument can be considered necessarily irrational or not.
If you're saying that only the fine-tuning argument is irrational, then I'll need more information about why you consider it irrational if not because the premises are not supported by conclusive evidence.
External validity to me means whether or not an argument is consistent with what we know about the universe, but you seem to be using it differently here. For example, what do you mean by "the extent to which the premises reflect a real setting?" It sounds like what your getting at is whether the premises are supported by evidence, but if you mean something different then please clarify.
Again, if you mean that the premises are supported by evidence, sure. Of course, if you have no idea whether Joe was 1 or 3 miles away, then the premises aren't supported by evidence and it is not possible to form a valid conclusion from them.
No, I gave you examples (including the one about whether or not Joe was speeding) and pointed out that the validity of the premises is often subjective rather than objective. If Joe is in court being tried for speeding, and the eye witness thinks that Joe was 3 miles away but isn't sure, you'd have to guess as to how reliable that witness is. "Reasonable doubt" isn't an objective cut-and-dry term, otherwise jury deliberations would be much easier than they often are.
-Bri
No substitute needed, that is a straw-man.I never said you did. It's an analogy.
Substitute "teapot" for "life" and "exist" for "live" in that argument and you'll see why I made the analogy.
What's it supposed to answer?
-Bri
...
Funny when you put the two together, huh? It wasn't hard to connect though--you didn't separate them far enough apart.
More special pleading. I'm not assuming God has to be created through evolution--that's just the only thing being put on the table.
But God damned well has to exist, doesn't he? If he's going to start creating life and such?
Remember... you are trying to show your belief is rational.
I agree, Malerin. It's an even worse problem. It appears that even if we should discover life is inevitable, even then, you'll try to put God into it, by asking, "but why is it such a way that it's inevitable?" I think this betrays a sort of absolute bias.
Can you imagine a scenario where you wouldn't put God into it, and please tell me what it looks like?
And all I'm demanding is that you add this into your set of possible universes, in your Bayesian equation. Why? Because you haven't ruled it out.
But if you want to exclude it, fine. You get to exclude one possibility you hold to be extremely remote from the equation, and I'll pick another extremely remote possibility to remove. Fair trade, right? Guess what I'm picking.
Do you really suppose they have actual probabilities? They don't even have a full standard model yet, much less an idea of how universes get created. You're focused on what the parameters are again... this part is about arguing what the chances are that the parameters are that way.
Well, yeah. But that's what the actual case is. We don't know. Are you supposing those physicists do know how the universe got those parameters? Then cite me quote mines about their model (and a supporting word or two about their discovery).
Do you just not understand the question or it's relevance?
What's even more strange that the atheist, who is saying "we don't know for sure, do we?", applies it to everything that we actually don't know for sure, where the theist is surgically applying it only to the existence of God, and absolutely refuses to apply it to convenient factoids.
Everything else, that slants his way... we're certain of, even though he doesn't even have so much as the model any of these quote mined scientists are using.
Isn't that strange? And right after you ask me if they are picking these out from a vacuum... it appears Linde and Hawking, who you're trying to beat me over the head with, are not jumping onto the God hypothesis.
Boy... that's convenient.
Then why is it not relevant what they think of the fine tuning argument for God?
A very easy model, very quickly. Science progresses through observations. We don't have much about how universes are created. So we are, legitimately, ignorant of the matter. The parameters of the universe seem to be such that we ourselves could be here. We don't know why, because we have no viable working scientific theory of how universes come into being.
Why does something have to creat the universe, and if so what created the creator, it just around and around and nothing comes of it.Huh? The hypothesis "Something create the universe" means the only thing being put on the table is some lifeform that evolved? "Something" can apply to anything capable of creating a universe and fine-tuning it, including God.
I'm using the term 'rational' as described by Blobru:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=4322700#post4322700
I consider it not rational because the premises don't make reference to something that is the result of systematic observation or hypothesis testing.
That fits as well - whether or not the premises depend upon what we have or can observe about the universe.
The idea that Joe was some distance away and that it took him a certain amount of time to cover that distance isn't a particularly difficult thing to understand.
I'm telling you nicely that this example has nothing whatsoever to do with what I'm talking about, so it really doesn't help for you to continue to mention to it. Your example is fairly straightforward, whereas cj.23 is wondering whether Joe travelled to your house on the IPU.
In other words, the notion of a supernatural being violates the laws of physics.