JoelKatz
Recipient of a Custom Title
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2011
- Messages
- 734
I am dismissing the claim because it does not vouch for a valid proposition. Because the proposition is invalid, I can likewise dismiss it as incapable of being true. (You can, of course, make an argument that the proposition itself is also incapable of being false.) My point is that the claim is false, not just meaningless, because every claim claims to claim something.In other words you dismiss the claim, "there is a god" because that claim requires knowledge that nobody can have, but you aren't dismissing the proposition, "there is a god".
I have, I have dismissed the proposition as invalid and thus the claim as false. Remember, the proposition we were talking about was one that purported to claim that there was one state of affairs rather than another where those two states of affairs are, in principle, completely indistinguishable. In principle, nothing could confirm, refute, or bear on the proposition in any way. To put it in logic terms, 'X' is a valid proposition because it refutes '~X'. But '' is not a valid proposition.That's a very nice semantic argument you've constructed, but since you haven't dismissed the proposition you can't make the claim, "there is no god" because, by your semantic argument, you can't have the knowledge which is required to make that claim. Thus your claim to be a strong atheist is destroyed by your own argument.
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