The Norseman
Meandering fecklessly
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2008
- Messages
- 8,449
….I wonder how many times the exact same questions will have to be answered?
What many of these arguments boil down to is this peculiar assumption that we can say anything about anything with equal veracity (if you can say God created the universe then I can say a maggot on my dog’s urethra achieved enlightenment by way of a archetypal divinity meme named Jesus Buddha and regurgitated reality within a bottle of Kraft peanut butter). How anyone comes to this conclusion I do not know (I could speculate, but it wouldn’t sound very complimentary), but it is one of the basic tenets in the anti-God dialectic (as is obvious here).
The response is very simple. We either have conceptual rules or we don’t (Wasp has demonstrated these with truly glacial patience…not too many people seem to grok either the effort or the understanding). In other words, human truth, of some variety, exists (that may, by definition, be a ‘slight’ leap of faith…but imo the evidence does implicate exactly that). We use it to decide what is right or wrong, valid or questionable, sensible or nonsensical (it is also the foundation of all science). We didn’t create these rules (as Mr. Fincher accurately points out)…we merely attempt to adjudicate their existence and apply them.
Wasp has painstakingly explained the conceptual rules by which ‘big toes’ cannot represent divine creators. They are the exact same conceptual rules that preclude a physicist from inserting the word ‘dog’ for electron, or a mother from assuming it is rational to hit her kid over the head with a frying pan.
You had just passionately argued for the illogicality of human thought and how science (and by implication, logic) must take a hands-off approach.
What it comes down to, very simply, is that the existence of ‘it’ does not occur in a way that is amenable to either your adjudication or that of science. Why, exactly, should it?
…all of this is, in fact, tangential to what Wasp was saying. You still haven’t understood that. There is no consistent understanding or definition of God. You need one so you can have something to argue against. There isn’t one, especially not in any sense that your arguments can challenge. Human beings are NOT rational or evidence based. Entirely legitimate realities are known about which science has nothing to say and can have nothing to say (what was the line in Contact..."...do you love your father...?....prove it!.."...a trivial thing that...love...).
As Noam Chomsky said: " Our understanding of human affairs is thin and likely to remain so." There are significant reasons for this. Continually trying to fit a round human into a square science will not change this fact.
And I probably don't disagree with what you said.