RandFan
Mormon Atheist
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2001
- Messages
- 60,135
I wasn't trying to commit a tautology. It's a take off from "parts is parts" or, in other words, all beliefs, being beliefs, are equal.I don't believe "beliefs are beliefs", lest that is not clear. Well actually it is probably not, because on another level I do believe "beliefs are beliefs".
I accept, as Dan Dennett posits, that all human endeavor is in fact natural. I'm reasonably certain that I've made no such distinction.I suspect that even if religion can not be demonstrated to meet criteria i, that is to have objective proof with reference to an external utility, for religious beliefs to work at all and propagate they must possess option ii, utility. This could get very complex, and my refinement of my model will hopefully clarify m thinking here, but I suspect a major issue may be the divide you make between human culture and thought and the natural world, which to me is a curious distinction. I regard New York City, an operetta or say our current economics models as inherently natural and part of nature, as natural as a beaver's dam or an ant colony f'r instance.
If I were George Bush, son of George H. W. Bush and Barbara Bush, I would be President of The United States. I am George W. Bush son of George H. W. and Barbara Bush. I amHowever you imply rationality is not a property of the religious argument. on the contrary, I think one can make a perfectly rational case for say theism or atheism, because rationality is a property of an arghument, not a conclusion. The reasoning can be completely sound but mistaken, unless we possess all relevant evidence, as the history of say science demonstrates. I don't think religious people or atheists are rational - I think individual arguments made by each may or may not be rational, in that they are logically internally consistent. An argument can be completely rational and yet completely wrong, if the premises are incorrect.
It's a rational argument but there is no rational basis to believe that I am George Bush.
That's where you go south. Religious people can make rational arguments in support of their beliefs but is there a rational basis to accept their premises?
Yes, but you make a qualitative judgement here...
- I am Napolean ruler of France.
- I am not Napolean ruler of France.
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