Ichneumonwasp
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- Feb 2, 2006
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What do you think? How do you define "pixies?"
-Bri
Magical fairy-like creatures that muck up the works.
Irrational to believe in them. What is your answer?
What do you think? How do you define "pixies?"
-Bri
So you're answer to my question above would be that God is not physically possible, since physically possible is defined as that which is possible according to the rules of physics? Supernatural is certainly not natural.
He is, however, logically possible.
And the argument has been shown to be seriously flawed and not "logical" or "rational" at all. (What about that big fat old contradiction it results in on the value of P(B) where B is something like "the universe is inhabitable"??)cj.23 at one point posted a logical Bayesian argument (i.e. one that uses Bayes theorem) for the existence of a god based on evidence of fine-tuning.
And I agreed that if someone used the Drake Equation in the way you described to conclude that aliens exist, it would be an irrational argument. I disagree that SETI is proof that people have argued that way. I also disagree that the Drake Equation itself is useless (as is the god argument cj posted).This was compared to a hypothetical logical argument for aliens based on the Drake equation to see if a valid difference could be found.
Belz's sig said:"You can't test whether or not aliens exist any more than you can test whether or not a god exists -- it's unfalsifiable." - Bri
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?
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'.
I said that dualism works by magic because we cannot, by the nature of interaction of completely different substances, explain the interaction.
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?
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.
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.
Belz--I don't think the Bri quote in your sig is as bad as it sounds. Maybe it's not so well worded, but I think Bri's point here is valid as it pertains to statements like, "There are alien intelligences in the universe."
You can't falsify that claim until you have somehow searched every last corner of the universe. You can falsify the complementary claim, "There are no alien intelligences in the universe" by finding one instance of an alien intelligence.
My own take is that even if alien intelligences are relatively abundant, we're not likely EVER to find one (just because stuff is so spread out in space and time). Failing to find one does not disprove the statement, "There are alien intelligences in the universe."
My issue with Bri is that I don't know of anyone who is making the statement, "There are alien intelligences in the universe." As with Sagan's statement, I'd be surprised if there weren't, but we have no evidence, so that statement is not substantiated.
Also, it differs markedly from the statement, "God exists" because while we do have one certain example of intelligent life in the universe (perhaps more than one depending on how you define "intelligent"), we have absolutely no certain examples of gods.
The one statement assumes that something that has happened at least once will or has happened more than once. The other statement assumes something there is no reason to think has ever happened.
They're both assumptions, but the former is based on the assumption that the laws of physics and whatnot that led to our existence probably work the same way through in other places, while the latter is based on nothing.
Ah, I see where you're getting at.
So we have supermass (a.k.a gravity), superphoton (a.k.a. electromagnetism), superboson (a.k.a. weak force), etc.
But clearly your supernatural is subject to investigation by science,
whereas Bri says that his/hers isn't. So thanks for jumping in I guess, but we'll have to leave it to Bri to answer my question since you guys are talking about two different things.
Linda
That seems to be a fair summary. A god that's physically possible isn't really a god at all.
We have looked at samples from the moon, Mars, and meteors for evidence of life.
You said that nobody is searching for God and claiming it is science. I agree that it isn't actually science, but it really seems to me that people are claiming that it is. Otherwise, why would it be presented as a rational argument for God that involves empirical inputs?
Earlier you suggested that statements of a certain type were unfalsifiable and therefore couldn't be science. It now seems that you have backed down from that assertion.
So you agree that it was a perfect example of 'begging the question' in that this discussion has centered around what it is that distinguishes good science from pseudo- or non-science.
You simply keep asserting that SETI is pseudo- or non-science because those characteristics which apply to pseudo- or non-science also apply to SETI, without ever addressing whether SETI actually has those characteristics. It's kind of funny, actually.
I define formal hypothesis or theory in the way that they are used as technical scientific terms.
Of the modern concepts of God that we have been considering (mostly sorta variations on Deism, I think), we start with God and look for something for it to do - like create the universe, fine-tune the universe, control/represent universal consciousness, etc.
I think God was proposed in response to the questions I list below, but our scientific exploration of those observations that gave us the idea of God led to non-God explanations. If we were to start fresh - that is, if we started with the understanding that we have achieved through science - what would lead us to propose God de novo?
Probably the discovery of other planets and then other stars and galaxies.
Probably questions like 'what is it that controls the weather?', 'what are those lights in the sky and why do they move in patterns?', 'why do humans seem unique among animals?', etc.
I don't understand the implication. If God has the power to change the universal constants, and the universal constants are part of the natural universe, wouldn't that make God part of the natural universe? Why would it have to be separate?
Your definition of "magic" said nothing about dualism or about it only applying to the case of the immaterial interacting with the material, nor does there seem to be any use in redefining a term that already has a definition in such a way that it only applies to a specific situation. Maybe it will help if I illustrate this conversation from my perspective:
You: Kangaroos are milk.
Me: Milk? How are you defining "milk" in that context?
You: Milk - an animal with a pouch.
Me: Oh, OK. So a opossum is milk.
You: How can you compare a kangaroo to an opossum? They're totally different! The word "milk" only applies to kangaroos!
Me: I never compared a kangaroo to an opossum. I used the word "milk" as you defined it. As you defined it, an opossum is milk.
You: Why do you keep comparing a kangaroo and an opossum? They're totally different!
Me: To say that only a kangaroo can be milk as you defined it would require special pleading.
You: What? Special pleading? Please explain yourself because you look to me like you are tying yourself in knots.
If you want to insist that "magic" only applies to dualism, then you'll need to redefine "magic" in some way other than how you defined it. Using the definition YOU gave, quantum randomness and gravity are "magic."
I don't have a problem with your saying that dualism is problematic (I agree). My problem doesn't have anything to do with quantum randomness. My problem is with your use of the word "magic" to describe an unknown mechanism for dualism, but not using the same word to describe other unknown mechanisms.
You have yet to show that it would be impossible to explain the interaction. You have also yet to show how quantum randomness or gravity are not "magic" using the same definition you gave earlier (having an unexplainable mechanism).
The special pleading refers to your use of the term "magic" only to dualism but not to anything else to which your definition also applies. I suspect that you know that the usual definition of the word "magic" has specific connotations that aren't in your definition, which is why you don't want to use the term to describe other things to which it applies.
Ummm...no. I've said repeatedly that I didn't draw any parallel between quantum foam and interactions between the immaterial and material other than that they are both meet your definition of "magic," which makes it silly for you to use that term to describe only one of them but not the other.
Your definition of "magic" didn't mention anything about interactions between incommensurate substances, and if it did then it would be a pretty useless term (and an example of special pleading since it would only apply to a single situation for no apparent reason whatsoever).
I'm not talking about pantheism. In the scenario I described, God is not the same as nature. God is supernatural, and nature is a subset of the supernatural. The natural universe is a part of the supernatural, but is not the same as the supernatural. The idea I'm talking about has been around longer than Spinoza or Reform Judaism.
-Bri
But clearly your supernatural is subject to investigation by science, whereas Bri says that his/hers isn't. So thanks for jumping in I guess, but we'll have to leave it to Bri to answer my question since you guys are talking about two different things.
Magical fairy-like creatures that muck up the works.
Irrational to believe in them. What is your answer?
And the argument has been shown to be seriously flawed and not "logical" or "rational" at all. (What about that big fat old contradiction it results in on the value of P(B) where B is something like "the universe is inhabitable"??)
It's also a validating argument in that you could put anything in for the word "God" and come out with the conclusion that that thing probably exists.
(This is why people keep asking you things like, "Is it rational to believe in pixies?" We no more have to define what is meant by a pixie than you do God in the argument cj posted.)
And I agreed that if someone used the Drake Equation in the way you described to conclude that aliens exist, it would be an irrational argument. I disagree that SETI is proof that people have argued that way. I also disagree that the Drake Equation itself is useless (as is the god argument cj posted).
Bri, I have no desire to continue in circles about this. This entire discussion of "magic" transpired in the context of talking about dualism. I do not now, nor have I ever, thought that merely something happening without explanation constitutes 'magic'. My definition, in the context of this discussion, has always included the idea of a particular something -- the mental -- affecting the material without a possible causal explanation. "Magic" in the way that I have been using it is merely a way to denote this problem with dualism, so it does not apply to other situations. I have always discussed it as a problem with interaction between different substances and in no other way.
For something like quantum weirdness I prefer a different word - mysterious -- rather than magic because magic implies that there is a mind behing the interaction.
Can we let this go now? If I did not express myself clearly, I apologize; but you clearly misunderstood the point I was trying to make.
If the natural is a subset of the supernatural (and for God to be separate from nature), then we must be discussing either a form of substance dualism or property dualism.
There are a few different scenarios possible -- we and God are made of the same substance, but nature is made of another. But since our bodies are clearly made of the same sort of substance as the rest of nature, then we are stuck with typical mind-body dualism.
God is made of one substance and we and nature are made of another -- but that is just the same dualism we have been discussing.
God is made of one substance and we (and nature) are made of the same substance, which is pantheism (which you deny).
God is made of one substance and we and nature are made of the same substance, but God has different properties than we and nature.
That is property dualism (one form is seen in neutral monism, which is just dualism in a dress), which suffers from similar problems as substance dualism but not as dire. How can you account for the different properties between God and nature?
The problem is that any form of dualism, either substance or property, has a central problem that cannot be explained. That is why I prefer monism. That problem disappears.
And still just because we don't understand a lot about the universe does not mean we need a so-called god for the gaps knowledge. It is useless, it only divides people into, "We are right about this so-called god and you just don't get it".What is the central problem, other than that there is something that we don't understand (yet)? There's a lot we don't understand about the universe yet, monism or not.
-Bri
I think the confusion is that you said "whether or not". And the statement "There are no alien intelligences" is falsifiable. I'm pretty sure that's what Belz found. . . .curious.Thanks Joe. Yes, that's exactly what I meant (and that's generally what "unfalsifiable" means).
So you think Sagan and SETI scientists are lying? Why?Again, I don't disagree, except I think that Sagan and SETI members probably are of the opinion that alien intelligence exists whether they admit it outright or not.
We know the likelihood of events and conditions that gave rise to life on Earth is 1 in 1. For the assertion that that's not possible to happen anywhere else does imply that the laws of physics (chemistry, etc.) don't work the same anywhere else.Close...but not quite. The issue has nothing to do with whether or not the laws of physics work elsewhere. It has to do with how likely the conditions and events that gave rise to life on Earth are to have occurred elsewhere, which we simply don't know (and probably can't know until we know the conditions and events that gave rise to life on Earth, which we don't).
I've only seen conjecture. Also, since we don't know whether other conditions could be suitable for abiogenesis (not like those that led to life on Earth), we really don't know much of anything about its likelihood throughout the universe.There is evidence (not conclusive evidence by any means, but evidence nonetheless) that those conditions and events were extremely rare.
Bri: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.
Pbbbt! And what makes your geodesic so special?The sun only appears to rise because we are on a sphere orbiting towards it each day and away each night.![]()