Can theists be rational?

And a sidestep past the first and most important part of my comment.

You still haven't supplied to definition for your use of the letters "g", "o" and "d" combined into the word "god". Until you do so your statement is meaningless.

The difference is between people who think we know, pretty much, how the universe works, and people who think we don't - and the name for the ignorance is God. To demand that we give a precise definition of the things we don't know is contradictory. An ant can't describe fiscal policy. Nevertheless, it exists in the ant's universe. It's not necessarily irrational to think we understand about as much of the universe as an ant.
 
Can I play?

But the question was this:
Is the fact that the sun rose yesterday, evidence that it will rise tomorrow?​
That's a very simple question. And it has absolutely nothing to do with your answer. I don't think I have to explain the question--just answer it. It's phrased very precisely. It's asking about what it is asking about. It's not asking about what it is not asking about.

No. It is evidence the sun rose yesterday. One can make an inductive case from that evidence, but it is not evidence for the same occurring tomorrow.

cj x
 
The difference is between people who think we know, pretty much, how the universe works, and people who think we don't - and the name for the ignorance is God. To demand that we give a precise definition of the things we don't know is contradictory. An ant can't describe fiscal policy. Nevertheless, it exists in the ant's universe. It's not necessarily irrational to think we understand about as much of the universe as an ant.


So the definition you was using for god was "ignorance of how the universe works", plugging that back into your original statement:

Original statement:

I don't think that it's surprising that materialism as a viewpoint has problems with God's interaction with the world. However, if the universe is viewed as a direct manifestation of God's will the problems seem to disappear.​

Statement with "god" replaced by the definition you state above:

I don't think that it's surprising that materialism as a viewpoint has problems with the [ignorance of how the universe works]'s interaction with the world. However, if the universe is viewed as a direct manifestation of [ignorance of how the universe works]'s will the problems seem to disappear.​

That doesn't make any kind of sense at all so I don't think that can have been the definition you meant when you used terms like "God's interaction" and "God's will".

And I am not being pedantic or trying to make some smart-Aleck semantic piddle, this point is at the heart of these kinds of discussion, people use the word "god" as if it has some precise meaning i.e. that you can make a meaningful statement about "god". However that all depends on providing the definition for this word, god, that has so many different meaning for different people. Often when you approach it from this angle you see that statements (such as yours) that appear to be correct and coherently formed statements are actually meaningless.
 
Can I play?
Well, it's really a custom made question, but I don't see why not.
No. It is evidence the sun rose yesterday. One can make an inductive case from that evidence, but it is not evidence for the same occurring tomorrow.
Are you saying the sun won't rise tomorrow? Or that your belief it will rise tomorrow has nothing to do with it rising yesterday?
 
I don't see any point in a mini-god - the kind that seems to be favoured by the fundamentalists. Either have a full-scale god that covers everything, or don't bother with the concept.

Indeed. So such a god wouldn't be worth our time.

A god that is bound by the laws of physics does indeed seem to be internally inconsistent.

That's not what I was arguing. I said a god that isn't bound by those laws is inconsistent, by definition, with the laws of physics. A god that is constrained by physics isn't a god, at all.

A god that is responsible for the laws of physics is another matter. A consistent god would not be part of the physical universe - the physical universe would be, in effect, part of god.

But then you'd have no way to distinguish between the universe and god. "God" would become a meaningless term.
 
But then you'd have no way to distinguish between the universe and god. "God" would become a meaningless term.

The universe is a plate spinning act. God is the man spinning the plates. We can only see the plates. Maybe there is nobody spinning them, but if there is, we can distinguish between him and what he's doing. He encompasses the universe, not vice versa.
 
I don't think I've implied anything about what the Bible says. I said that there is some scientific evidence to support the notion that there is no extra terrestrial intelligent life, and that whether or not aliens* exist doesn't really have much to do with whether or not a god exists.

-Bri

* The use of the term "aliens" is not meant to conjure thoughts of UFO's or anything like that. It's shorter than typing "extra terrestrial intelligent life."


Ok, sorry I misread your intend and even the writing! My bad!

; }>
 
Belz said:
Indeed. As I've stated more than once, we each have our woo. Theists can be rational so long as the subject at hand doesn't pertain to their particular woo. Same for each of us.

Theists. All theists? Most theists? Many theists? Some theists? Etc. Your statement is too vague to have merit, with all due respect.

However, some of us are trying to get rid of our woo. Others dwell on it.

Why is woo bad? Does this site have a TOS item against woo? Does woo detract from the IQ of an individual? Does Woo subract from the general intelligence of anyone? Or does woo just irritate those ‘some’ hat you mention?

What the hell is that, anyway ?

Its two things. One an anti spam thing and two it’s a icon of me, I am 6-0 goateed, shaved head, tattooed, pierced, degreed and had my rabies shot. I cant figure' a way to get all that on the icon, so you only get the goatee and my smilie teeth (in the icon). Wait I am wooing all over myself...

VerySmall.jpg


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It primarily means having compelling evidence to support it, but in the absence of clear evidence for a particular claim, the existence of other support that involves a similar causal chain could serve as a compelling reason to believe something is so. So, for instance, the belief that there is likely life elsewhere in the universe rests on the evidence that life arose here and that we have similar causal influences out there in the universe and that there are plenty of other stars that could potentially support life if all the conditions apply.

What do you mean that "we have similar causal influences out there in the universe and that there are plenty of other stars that could potentially support life if all the conditions apply?" Couldn't the same be said of teapots orbiting Jupiter? Does that make the idea rational? The part in bold is important. There is no evidence that all the conditions that exist here apply elsewhere. Without that evidence, you cannot form a conclusion one way or the other.

We can use the causal ideas that we have here and apply them elsewhere to arrive at a hypothesis -- life probably exists on other worlds.

The evidence of whether life exists (particularly intelligent life) is inconclusive. I don't know what "causal ideas" you know of that would lead you to a conclusion that's not supported by evidence. Sure, you can form a hypothesis about just about anything. In this case, it's unfalsifiable. You can similarly form hypotheses for "a teapot orbits Jupiter" or "a god exists."

Right, but it was in the context of discussing dualism, which has as its bases the existence of the mental and the physical as separate realms.

...

I thought you understood that we were discussing that issue as it relates to the unexplainable mechanism, not just **** happens, as in quantum foam.

You have defined a phrase "it's magic" (meaning "it's mechanism is unexplainable") that is fairly general, but then you claim that it only applies to dualism and not to other things (for those things, you use a different phrase "it just is"). That definitely sounds like special pleading to me (and not any definition of "magic" that I've ever heard of).

The whole reason that I use the word 'magic' and not the word 'random' is because dualism is not based in random occurrences. Instead it is based in a mental world that interacts through some "whatever" according to intentionality. That "whatever" gets us nowhere.

Quantum fluxuations are just something random. They are not in any way equivalent -- not only because there is no teleology behind quantum fluxuations but because that issue does not involve interaction between two entirely different kinds of substance.

Nobody was equating "random" to "magic" -- that they are being compared is a straw man. You said that the mechanism that causes quantum randomness is unexplainable. Similarly, the mechanism that causes gravity. You defined "magic" as applying to something for which the mechanism is unexplainable. So why aren't quantum randomness and gravity "magic" by your definition?

As I said, though, if you want to label that magic, I don't have any real objection. I hope you can see the difference.

According to your definition, they are magic. No, I don't see the difference unless your claiming that your definition only applies to dualism (which seems like special pleading).

But that is idealism or materialism. They are indistinguishable, really. Doesn't matter what label you want to put on it, it's a monism. There is no interaction problem with monism. That's why I like it.

The interaction problem arises with dualism.

What I'm suggesting isn't idealism since it doesn't imply that we only exist within God's mind and that our universe isn't material. Perhaps it qualifies as materialism, although it doesn't imply that God is material unless you expand the notion of "material" beyond what we currently believe it to mean. I don't think many theists would object to the idea that the natural universe is a part of a supernatural God. I believe I read somewhere that Jewish theologists speak of the natural universe as being a subset or part of God.

-Bri
 
The universe is a plate spinning act. God is the man spinning the plates. We can only see the plates. Maybe there is nobody spinning them, but if there is, we can distinguish between him and what he's doing. He encompasses the universe, not vice versa.

You're contradicting yourself. Is the universe encompassed into God, or separate from him ?
 
Theists. All theists? Most theists? Many theists? Some theists? Etc.

All theists. All atheists. Everyone. Didn't I mention everyone ?

Theists, like everyone, have a great deal of difficulty being rational when the subject of their pet woo is brought about. This isn't hard to understand. Same thing for obsessive gamers.

Your statement is too vague to have merit, with all due respect

"Stuff exists" is both vague and has merit.

Why is woo bad?

I didn't say that. You are trying to put words into my mouth.

Now, I'll say it, however: Woo is bad.

Does this site have a TOS item against woo?

When the hell did this become about Star Trek ?

Does woo detract from the IQ of an individual?

No, but it makes people do things based on non-existent entities that may detract from their health or education. I consider that bad, though to varying degrees.

Does Woo subract from the general intelligence of anyone? Or does woo just irritate those ‘some’ hat you mention?

Does it matter ? You seem to take offense at my statements.
 
Welcome to the thread, and to the forum. Given your background, it might be interesting to hear what you feel is the best cosmological argument for a god. To get you up to speed without your having to read hundreds of posts, we've been discussing a Bayesian argument having to do with fine-tuning and using it to compare other beliefs that are often considered "rational" (primarily the belief in the existence of extra terrestrial intelligent life, but others as well) in order to answer the question of whether there is some definition of "irrational" by which someone could say that belief in a god is necessarily irrational without resorting to special pleading.

-Bri

I am aware of the fine tuning argument.Its not my favorite but is well supported by some scientists who happen to be believers. I don't think that the fine tuning argument uses special pleading, its not an argument that ignores all unfavorable evidence. I am curious, why use the word 'irrational' to express the point you are attempting to make? Its confrontational and misleading (if you are using the common definition).

Anyway, my favorite logical and reasonable arguments for the existence of God are the KCA as expressed by William Craig ThD PhD. Its a first cause argument. BTW there are 20 (!) arguments for the existence of god that are considered worthy of professional 'academic' consideration.

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(1).... irrational ir·ra·tion·al

ir·ra·tion·al [i ráshən’l, i ráshnəl]
adj
1. lacking in reason: contrary to or lacking in reason or logic
2. lacking in logic: unable to think logically
3. unable to think clearly: lacking the normal ability to think clearly, especially because of shock or injury to the brain
4. mathematics containing irrational number: used to describe an expression that contains an irrational number
5. poetry containing metric irregularity: used to describe an irregularity in the meter of a classical poem, usually where there is a long foot instead of a short one


n (plural ir·ra·tionals)
1. irrational person: somebody who is unable to think and reason clearly or logically
2. mathematics See irrational number

Encarta ® World English Dictionary © & (P) 1998-2004 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
 
And I am not being pedantic or trying to make some smart-Aleck semantic piddle, this point is at the heart of these kinds of discussion, people use the word "god" as if it has some precise meaning i.e. that you can make a meaningful statement about "god". However that all depends on providing the definition for this word, god, that has so many different meaning for different people. Often when you approach it from this angle you see that statements (such as yours) that appear to be correct and coherently formed statements are actually meaningless.
That is one reason some of us ask, "Which so-called god".

Paul

:) :) :)
 
Well, we start by looking for life on other planets or satellites. And those with atmospheres and solvents. And those which are close to an energy source. And those which are generating ordered electromagnetic radiation. Etc.

Really? Which planets is SETI looking at?

Well, I don't think SETI confines itself to listening, either.

Which planets is SETI targeting?

See above.

You didn't answer my question, which was:

OK, where are people looking for extra-terrestrial intelligent life? Where is it more likely to be found, and what evidence is there to determine where it is more likely to be found?​

A reference to which planets SETI (or anyone else) is actually looking, why they are looking there, and how they are looking there would be fine.

What about all the scientists that have been listed as proposing and supporting the fine-tuning argument?

What about them? Have I indicated that such an argument is any more scientific or unscientific than a similar logical argument for the existence of aliens based on Drake's equation? There is no compelling evidence to support the premises of either argument. Both are based on unfalsifiable hypotheses. Neither explains any observation. In short, both are equally "scientific" or "unscientific."

If there were scientists (or anyone else) searching or listening for a god or for teapots orbiting Jupiter, that endeavor would be equally "scientific" or "unscientific" to what SETI does.

Can't the same thing be said about our galaxy?

I'm not sure what you're comparing here. I don't know of any paleontologists who base their work on the hypothesis that there are no dinosaur bones in Tasmania. Like I said, paleontologists typically search for bones to support falsifiable hypotheses such as "dinosaur X was an herbivore," they tend to search for bones based on evidence that the bones they're searching for actually exist where they're searching, and the bones they're searching for are often used to explain observations.

I was under the impression that we were discussing whether the search for aliens was good science.

Sure, compared to the search for gods or teapots orbiting Jupiter. I don't care if you want to call SETI "good science" or not, but I don't think there's a relevant distinction between what they're doing and other similar "science," certainly not enough of a distinction to state unequivocally that the belief that aliens exist is "based on scientific theory" but other comparable beliefs aren't.

God (with the caveat that it isn't a formal hypothesis or theory).

First, the hypothesis "a god exists" is as much a formal hypothesis or theory as "aliens exist" (however you wish to define "formal hypothesis or theory").

Second, in what say isn't the hypothesis "a god exists" not formed by considering what gave us the idea in the first place? What gave us the idea about aliens in the first place (and how do you know)? What gave us the idea about a god in the first place (and how do you know)?

Why do you say that God is supernatural?

Because that's how it was defined near the beginning of the discussion. Why was it defined that way? Because the presumption of the fine-tuning argument (as an example) is that a god is a being with the power to change the universal constants, which would imply that the god could not be a part of the natural universe, yet couldn't be entirely separate from the natural universe, hence the term "supernatural."

-Bri
 
What do you mean that "we have similar causal influences out there in the universe and that there are plenty of other stars that could potentially support life if all the conditions apply?" Couldn't the same be said of teapots orbiting Jupiter? Does that make the idea rational? The part in bold is important. There is no evidence that all the conditions that exist here apply elsewhere. Without that evidence, you cannot form a conclusion one way or the other.



The evidence of whether life exists (particularly intelligent life) is inconclusive. I don't know what "causal ideas" you know of that would lead you to a conclusion that's not supported by evidence. Sure, you can form a hypothesis about just about anything. In this case, it's unfalsifiable. You can similarly form hypotheses for "a teapot orbits Jupiter" or "a god exists."


There is a causal nexus in this universe. We observe causation. We have seen that life arose on this planet. It is rational to suppose that life could arise on other planets similar to our own, given the causal nexus resulting in life forming here.

I'm not talking about a conclusion. I'm talking about generating hypotheses. It is rational to suppose that life exists elsewhere in the universe because we have evidence of it here and we know that the same causal account could apply elsewhere.

Why do you keep turning this into "forming a conclusion" when I haven't used that phrase. I am speaking of conjecture based on previous experience and a foundation of causality. We do it all the time. What is the problem?



You have defined a phrase "it's magic" (meaning "it's mechanism is unexplainable") that is fairly general, but then you claim that it only applies to dualism and not to other things (for those things, you use a different phrase "it just is"). That definitely sounds like special pleading to me (and not any definition of "magic" that I've ever heard of).



Nobody was equating "random" to "magic" -- that they are being compared is a straw man. You said that the mechanism that causes quantum randomness is unexplainable. Similarly, the mechanism that causes gravity. You defined "magic" as applying to something for which the mechanism is unexplainable. So why aren't quantum randomness and gravity "magic" by your definition?



According to your definition, they are magic. No, I don't see the difference unless your claiming that your definition only applies to dualism (which seems like special pleading).


What? Special pleading? Please explain yourself because you look to me like you are tying yourself in knots. I'm most definitely not saying that there is something special about dualism that has not been discussed by countless others in the history of philosophy. This problem -- the interaction problem -- is a very serious issue. It does not go away by invoking quantum weirdness; nor is it a problem with my using the word 'magic'.

We were discussing dualism. I said that dualism works by magic because we cannot, by the nature of interaction of completely different substances, explain the interaction. Dualism, as it is defined, includes the mental and the physical. This isn't new or difficult stuff. If you don't know what these terms mean, then there is no sense in having any sort of discussion with you. By it's very nature we are talking about the interaction of the mental with the physical; that interaction, by the way it is defined, has no explanation. How in the world can you claim special pleading when I am only describing the nature of the issue that dualists define in the first place?

This is an interaction issue, where the interaction involves a mental program that influences the physical realm through an unexplainable mechanism. And you want to draw a parallel with quantum foam with particles appearing and disappearing randomly, as though they are somehow equivalent? That something may occur randomly is not the same as an interaction between separate realms that cannot have an explanation. How can you not understand that?

Quantum weirdness is not an interaction between different substances. It does not involve discovering a mechanism for interaction. This issue involves interactions between substances.

You seem to be focusing on a single phrase "can't be explained" and neglecting the rest -- that we are discussing interactions between incommensurate substances.

'Magic' is a descriptive word to denote the interaction problem. It is not an argument.

If you want to ignore half an issue, you can build any sort of straw elephant you want.

I don't have time for such games.



What I'm suggesting isn't idealism since it doesn't imply that we only exist within God's mind and that our universe isn't material. Perhaps it qualifies as materialism, although it doesn't imply that God is material unless you expand the notion of "material" beyond what we currently believe it to mean. I don't think many theists would object to the idea that the natural universe is a part of a supernatural God. I believe I read somewhere that Jewish theologists speak of the natural universe as being a subset or part of God.

-Bri

Yes, it does imply that God is material if he is made of the same stuff. What makes you think we have a definition of matter that makes sense or is not circular? For that matter, what makes you think that there is a difference between idealism and materialism? Examine the ideas in detail and I cahllenge you to find a difference -- if there is only one substance there can be no difference, in large part because we cannot know all the characteristics of the ur-substance. All we can do is describe how it acts. The rest is pure conjecture.

It doesn't matter if theists would object to pantheism (Reform Judaism does not but Orthodox Judaism certainly does -- they excommunicated Spinoza in the 17th century. They do though, fairly often, especially Christians. Their God is personal. The issue at play here is not monism, as I've mentioned several times, but dualism. This is a non-issue.

This whole debate is not about pantheists; it concerns theists. Theists, by most common definitions, believe in a personal God.
 
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Quid pro quo. You haven't answered my question yet.

Your response was this:

But the question was this:

Is the fact that the sun rose yesterday, evidence that it will rise tomorrow?​

That's a very simple question. And it has absolutely nothing to do with your answer. I don't think I have to explain the question--just answer it. It's phrased very precisely. It's asking about what it is asking about. It's not asking about what it is not asking about.

I answered the best I could without complete information. Please clarify whether you mean "today" instead of "yesterday" since your question doesn't seem to be particularly meaningful otherwise. If it rose yesterday, and didn't rise today, then of course there would be no reason to assume that it will rise tomorrow. If it rose yesterday and did rise again today, then yes that would be (weak) evidence that it will rise again tomorrow. If it rose a thousand days prior and never failed to rise, that would be stronger evidence that it will rise again tomorrow.

-Bri
 
Bri:

You see, your problem is that you are emphatically ignoring the salient differences. When you say "comparable beliefs", you mean specifically "able to be compared", and are absolutely blindsighted by the similarities.

There's a difference, that's significant, and relevant. We can get to it if you stop ignoring it, stop straw manning everybody, and stop obsessing about what happens not to be different.
 
Belz. said:
All theists. All atheists. Everyone. Didn't I mention everyone ?Theists, like everyone, have a great deal of difficulty being rational when the subject of their pet woo is brought about. This isn't hard to understand. Same thing for obsessive gamers.

With all due respect I must disagree. The word "All" means 100%. . I have had the pleasure of witnessing many theists such as professional debaters having no problem being rational in debate.

” Stuff exists" is both vague and has merit.

We can agree to disagree. I think your post was too vague.

I didn't say that. You are trying to put words into my mouth.
Now, I'll say it, however: Woo is bad.

Your intent was clear, you simply proved me correct by admitting it.

When the hell did this become about Star Trek ?

You err. TOS means terms of service agreement.

No, but it makes people do things based on non-existent entities that may detract from their health or education. I consider that bad, though to varying degrees.

Your logic is faulty. You have no way of knowing of the entities exist. And you even use the word 'may'. Many theists are highly educated. I have a MA in comparative theology which may not qualify as highly educated , but I am sufficiently educated. I might add that it was because of my belief in God that I decided to obtain my Masters. I was curious, and wanted to teach (which did not happen) hence the MA. So I feel that again most of your statements are too indistinct and overextended to have significance in this discussion.

does it matter ? You seem to take offense at my statements.

Yes, you are correct, I do take offense at many of your anti religious/metaphysical statements. I however, mean nothing personal, its just an a fact.

; {>
 
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