juryjone
Refusing to be confused by facts
- Joined
- Mar 7, 2002
- Messages
- 879
I have no formal training in logic, and it's taken me quite a while to get through this thread. However, I'd like to take a stab at the particular case of special pleading that JetLeg seems to be making here.
A: Logic applies to everything material, i.e., things that we know about.
B: God is immaterial and unknowable.
C: Therefore, logic does not apply to God.
The trouble comes with the premise A. A only talks about the material and knowable. It states nothing about any properties of that which is unknowable. So it is a fallacious argument to state that logic would necessarily have nothing to do with God.
How'd I do?
A: Logic applies to everything material, i.e., things that we know about.
B: God is immaterial and unknowable.
C: Therefore, logic does not apply to God.
The trouble comes with the premise A. A only talks about the material and knowable. It states nothing about any properties of that which is unknowable. So it is a fallacious argument to state that logic would necessarily have nothing to do with God.
How'd I do?