JoeTheJuggler
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2006
- Messages
- 27,766
It sure seemed like you're saying that since quarks exist even though we have only detected but not observed them, that it is reasonable to suppose God exists.Actually I'm outlining the observation/detection difference that is crucial to Non-Realist theories of Science. The Realists would agree with you there is no real distinction - see my objection above concerning glasses etc.
I pointed out that in that sense God has neither been detected nor observed.
If "observation" of God is merely the stories of subjective experience, then would you accept someone's experience of a vision of a quark (something the guy experienced while alone, maybe in bed at night, but not a asleep and he swears it wasn't a dream) as evidence of the quark's existence?
I don't think you're making stuff up. I'm pointing out that you're taking advantage of two different uses of the word "observed".However a look at the entry i linked on this debate
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_realism
will show that I am not simply making this up to favour my point as you seem to suggest. The Stanford entry is much better, but as usual very densely written - http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/scientific-realism/
I don't think many people ever bother to look at the links I provide, MM and Hokulele honourable exceptions, and i can understand why - reading my posts is quite a time expended in itself, and life is short - but I do try to reference my points and provide interesting links when possible to show that I am not making stuff up.
Pixy addressed this better than I can.No, of course not. Bertrand Russell's example is deliberately designed so that all the evidence can be accounted for, and absence of any evidence forms part of the theory, which is why it is rational (entirely logically coherent and internally consistent) and yet wholly unreasonable. However I can think of few other cases where this is true! Not many involve creating the whole universe to make it look like it's older..![]()
If you think something that conflicts with all the known evidence is rational because it is not logically inconsistent (in some very few formulations and ignoring the way billions of people have used the term over thousands of years), then we are definitely using different notions of the word "rational".
I would agree that logical coherence is necessary but not sufficient.
Merriam Webster says it's synonymous with "reasonable".
ETA: If all you're saying is that it's possible to come up with some definition of God that is not impossible, I would agree. I think that observation is trivial and has little to do with theists in the real world or the actual existence of the God they believe in.
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