Materialism (championed by Darwinists) makes reason Impossible.

How does a chess program, for example, reason?

Well, it evaluates the position of the pieces on the keyboard, and chooses a course of action based on that, with the goal of winning the game. :)

You can even look at (one particular) algorithm here.
 
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I was pretty sure DOC was heading to something similar. I did not knew the fallacy name, thank you very much. It seems to be used very often by the "soul" proponent (can't make reason out of non reasonning component) or even the "life breath" proponent (can't make living stuff out of inanimate stuff).

This is naturally utter balderdash.

In my opinion, the fallacy of division is a much better match (wikipedia article even uses almost the same brain/neurons argument)
 
A perfect all powerful God could choose not to know the future decisions of his creations to guarantee free will. He has the ability to know them but he simply chooses not to.

I might have the ability to look up the answers of a crossword puzzle, but I may choose not to.

How could anyone possibly know such a thing?

Well Christ said I will send you the Holy Spirit who will teach you all things. So one form of knowledge could be from the Holy Spirit (to those filled with the Holy Spirit). It is believed Paul received revelatory knowledge in certain areas such as his "in the twinkling of an eye" verse.

Another way is through study of the Bible. One verse in the OT basically says God regretted making man because of man's sinning. This implies that God did not know that man would sin to the extent man did. Since we know the bible says God is perfect (able to do all things) , then God could have "chosen" not to know the future actions of man to give man the gift of free will (and not merely be a puppet programmed not to sin). All of this more suited to a "free will" thread though.
 
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From your link "1. The basis or motive for an action, decision, or conviction." Could we not argue that the chess program reasons in this way in selecting a move?

That it has a motive?

Anyway, from my link, to reason is defined:

1. To use the faculty of reason; think logically.
2. To talk or argue logically and persuasively.
3. Obsolete To engage in conversation or discussion.
v.tr.
1. To determine or conclude by logical thinking

(1) and (1) specifically mention "thinking", which seems right. I don't see how you have reasoning going on without thinking, so the question then becomes "Can computers think?" If they can, do they have minds? If they don't have minds, how does mindless thinking work? If they do have minds, what are they like? Would a calculator have a mind? A wristwatch? An abacus?
 
Well Christ said I will send you the Holy Spirit who will teach you all things. So one form of knowledge could be from the Holy Spirit. Paul received revelatory knowledge in certain areas.

Another way is through study of the Bible. One verse of the bible basically says God regretted making man because of man's sinning. This implies that God did not know that man would sin to the extent man did. Since we know the bible says God is perfect (able to do all things) , then God could have "chosen" not to know the future actions of man to give man the gift of free will (and not merely be a puppet programmed not to sin).

Please stop quoting fiction.
 
Well, it evaluates the position of the pieces on the keyboard, and chooses a course of action based on that, with the goal of winning the game. :)

You can even look at (one particular) algorithm here.

Oh, I don't doubt it follows a program. That doesn't equate to reasoning, or even knowing what a board is or a rook or that it has a goal.

10 Query "What's your name";A$
20 Print "Hello,"; A$

That's as best as I can remember BASIC on my old Commodore. A simple program that asks for your name and then addresses you by name. Is that an example of reasoning?
 
That it has a motive?

Anyway, from my link, to reason is defined:

1. To use the faculty of reason; think logically.
2. To talk or argue logically and persuasively.
3. Obsolete To engage in conversation or discussion.
v.tr.
1. To determine or conclude by logical thinking

(1) and (1) specifically mention "thinking", which seems right. I don't see how you have reasoning going on without thinking, so the question then becomes "Can computers think?" If they can, do they have minds? If they don't have minds, how does mindless thinking work? If they do have minds, what are they like? Would a calculator have a mind? A wristwatch? An abacus?

Well I am not about to argue that computers think in the self aware way that humans do, but that seems limited among living creatures anyway.

To explore the issue of motive further, do you think that we could ascribe motive to the actions of a virus, bacteria or ant?
 
Well I am not about to argue that computers think in the self aware way that humans do, but that seems limited among living creatures anyway.

To explore the issue of motive further, do you think that we could ascribe motive to the actions of a virus, bacteria or ant?

No, but I've probably derailed this enough.
 
So what? Are computers made of unreasoning chemicals? Does a computer have "mind"? If the answers are "Yes" and "No", then it proves that arrangements of chemicals can reason, and Geisler is an idiot.

I think perhaps doc doesn't understand the somewhat random nature of what goes on inside a computer processor - the huge number of tiny transactions that take place, for example, when Deep Blue plays a chess game. It seems to me that he's thinking of it more like what happens when you press a particular piano key - you get one note. Then if you press a different key you get a different note. What happens in a computer is more like what happens when Van Cliburn plays the piano, and less like a six-year old taking a piano lesson.

Which probably just confuses the conversation more than it was already.
 
So likewise we shouldn't laugh at Lucille Ball on TV because it is just made up of electronic components that aren't very funny.
Or are the individual frames and pixels of a programme or film funny, tragic or dramatic?
 
You have to read the other 420 pages of the book for that.
So you're just pimping his book them? Well if it's as awful as the excerpts suggest I won't be wasting time or money on it.

Actually Geisler has a PhD. in Philosophy and has authored over 60 books. I don't believe he or Turek are preachers.
So no qualifications in biochemistry, neurobiology or any fields actually relevant to the argument you quoted? Gee what a surprise, xian apologist spouting off on subjects they don't understand.............
 
Another way is through study of the Bible. One verse in the OT basically says God regretted making man because of man's sinning. This implies that God did not know that man would sin to the extent man did. Since we know the bible says God is perfect (able to do all things) , then God could have "chosen" not to know the future actions of man to give man the gift of free will (and not merely be a puppet programmed not to sin).


Conjecture much?


All of this more suited to a "free will" thread though.


It's more suited to a Sunday School, although I'd like to think that even most kids would recognise it for the drivel that it is.
 
Well Christ said I will send you the Holy Spirit who will teach you all things. So one form of knowledge could be from the Holy Spirit (to those filled with the Holy Spirit). It is believed Paul received revelatory knowledge in certain areas such as his "in the twinkling of an eye" verse.

Another way is through study of the Bible. One verse in the OT basically says God regretted making man because of man's sinning. This implies that God did not know that man would sin to the extent man did. Since we know the bible says God is perfect (able to do all things) , then God could have "chosen" not to know the future actions of man to give man the gift of free will (and not merely be a puppet programmed not to sin). All of this more suited to a "free will" thread though.

I don't doubt that such things are written in the bible, but that still doesn't explain how anyone could possibly have such knowledge. When some Old Testament writer says "God regretted...(whatever)" where is he getting this information from? How do any of these people presume to know the mind of God? Especially when they spend so much time telling us that no one can know the mind of God.

Don't you ever just get the feeling that these people had absolutely no idea what the hell they were talking about?
 
And even if they were preachers, that wouldn't affect the rationality of any argument they gave.
Quite right. Any argument must stand or fall on it's own merits, not the vocation of the person who presented. it.

However I have already pointed out the faulty reasoning evidenced by the quotes you provide from the book. So the argument falls on it's own merits.
 
Another way is through study of the Bible.

Another way to what? Gain knowledge?

Yes, all that scholarship on medicine, math, physics, technology . . . Wait, there's none of that. No wonder the apologists you pimp have such a poor grasp of those subjects.
 
That is not what he is saying, he is saying you can't give something you don't have. If neurons don't possess intelligence then they can't give it-- that is basically what he is saying.

But this is clearly not true, Doc.

Lumps of silicon and electrons can't do math. But if you have a bunch of them connected in the right way, suddenly they can do math.

Neurons in your brain can't think. But if you have a bunch of them connected in the right way, suddenly they can think.

Why is this any kind of a problem?

Is it just because the writer said it so it must be true?

I am confused.
 
I was pretty sure DOC was heading to something similar. I did not knew the fallacy name, thank you very much. It seems to be used very often by the "soul" proponent (can't make reason out of non reasonning component) or even the "life breath" proponent (can't make living stuff out of inanimate stuff).
This is naturally utter balderdash.

This one always gets me as we all pretty much every day see the empirical evidence for this not being true i.e. we eat - which is simply taking in "inanimate stuff" (on the whole so not including bacteria and stuff like cheese) and make it "animate". (There is an even better example of this and it is the taking of a "multi-vitamin supplement", many of these are just minerals or metals that have never been "animate".) There is no way to distinguish the "living" carbon atoms in my body from the "inanimate" carbon atoms in a piece of coal.
 

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