erowe1
Member
- Joined
- Sep 7, 2007
- Messages
- 32,183
RCA is going to need a beer after all of this is said and done.![]()
I was thinking that sobering up might do him well.
RCA is going to need a beer after all of this is said and done.![]()
I agree.
Yes we do, and we prove it by our behavior all the time. Of course we can't reason our way into this knowledge from a blank slate, like the people I sometimes encounter who imagine they never accept anything by faith. But we know it because our creator designed us to know it. We accept certain things axiomatically, and are absolutely warranted in doing so, because at the end of the day, we're all theists.
If that were true, babies and the very young would automatically know, for example, not to run out into the street with a car coming, or to not touch hot things.
RCA is going to need a beer after all of this is said and done.![]()
Sometimes the argument is misunderstood and it is paired down to "oh, so you don't trust your senses?" No, that's not the argument. The argument is that an argument based on the senses cannot ever logically be valid. Arguments from sensation can never bring down the conclusion that something is true. Why? Because no one has universal observation of all events, past present and future. So to make an argument from the senses, one must engage in the inductive fallacy. Therefore he is illogical.
To get beyond this, they then appeal to "science" or the scientific method, but this too fails because all scientific experiments assert the consequent. Confirmed hypotheses in no way can determine truth. Correlation does not imply causation.
Other atheists generally bash anyone with any belief in anything they consider "supernatural" and will say "You're not a real atheist." But, the strict definition of atheist just says you do not believe in a God or gods. It is literally, "Not Theistic." So this goes back to your original post, and your annoyance, over the fact that some people arbitrarily have decided that the concept of an afterlife is inseparable from the concept of God.
In my opinion, yes you absolutely can believe in ghosts and/or an afterlife without having to believe in a God, and you can therefore still be an atheist. (I think most atheists have sort of redefined the term and have turned it into an all-encompassing disbelief in anything they cannot hold in their hand or measure with scientific instruments, when that is not what the word actually means.)
And that's exactly the point of this thread. That the majority of either side says its all or nothing. Religions say if you believe in a God or an afterlife you must also join our organization. And atheists say if you believe in anything supernatural you are religious. I want to see false dichotomy broken up as much as I want to see the false left-right paradigm broken up in the political world.
True. People often have a hard time with anything in-between. They like things black and white; there are too many shades of grey and it's easier to stick with all or nothing. Apparently.
True. People often have a hard time with anything in-between. They like things black and white; there are too many shades of grey and it's easier to stick with all or nothing. Apparently.
And that's exactly the point of this thread. That the majority of either side says its all or nothing. Religions say if you believe in a God or an afterlife you must also join our organization. And atheists say if you believe in anything supernatural you are religious. I want to see this false dichotomy broken up as much as I want to see the false left-right paradigm broken up in the political world. They both are slowing progress in each respective area of discipline. If we can break the political false choices, we can get to a truly free world. If we can break the false choices about the supernatural maybe we could get to a true understanding of the universe.
Are you absolutely certain of that, WhistlinDave?
How can you break the "false choices of the supernatural" in the world when you haven't dealt with the questions and challenges to your naturalistic worldview in this very thread? Erowe1, Sola_Fide, and I have been asking you question and addressing issues about your belief system, your approaches to knowledge, and your assumptions about things in the universe that you have not answered satisfactorily. If you think that your opposition is just going to go away with the kind of evasive approaches and insulting remarks that you post in threads like this one, then you obviously have no idea about what you are up against.
You are clearly demonstrating your low reading comprehension. If you re-read the entire paragraph, I'm saying the false choice regarding the supernatural is that you must belong to a religion IN ORDER to believe in the supernatural not that the belief in the supernatural is itself false, but again you would know that if you knew what this post was about, but you've clearly demonstrated you did not know from the outset.
True. People often have a hard time with anything in-between. They like things black and white; there are too many shades of grey and it's easier to stick with all or nothing. Apparently.
I think you've missed the point about belief in the supernatural. Beliefs about the supernatural are, themselves, religious. Even beliefs about the supernatural that reject the idea that supernatural beings or events exist are religious. There is no way one can prove that "supernatural things don't exist" without faith in other things. If a person believes that "science is the only way to prove things factually," then naturalism is that person's starting point, and therefore, that person's religion.
In my opinion, the discussion about whether there is a supreme being or not should be a totally different subject than whether or not there is an afterlife.
We are citizens of the cosmos.Literally we are stardust. Every Atom () in your body came from a star that exploded. And, oh yes...to dust you shall return. So then the correct dialogue would be the infinity of the universe "eternal life/afterlife" instead of folklore and other iron age historical indoctrination mechanisms that really only serve for use in social control of the masses.
In my opinion, the discussion about whether there is a supreme being or not should be a totally different subject than whether or not there is an afterlife. I don't see any reason to believe in a supreme being, but an afterlife might be plausible considering it could have a scientific leaning as it relates to other dimensions, etc. I also think that organized religion is in itself a third topic that should be separate from both God and an afterlife since it has more to do with doctrines, ancient published works, rules, etc. than the actual topics of a higher power or an afterlife or third dimensions. Does anyone else get annoyed at this? I see it from both sides. The religious always take ownership of all the related topics, while the non-religious always reject the same topics when they are mutually exclusive from one another.
How do you know what you know?
Circular reasoning (also known as paradoxical thinking[1] or circular logic), is a logical fallacy in which "the reasoner begins with what he or she is trying to end up with".[2] The individual components of a circular argument will sometimes be logically valid because if the premises are true, the conclusion must be true, and will not lack relevance. Circular logic cannot prove a conclusion because, if the conclusion is doubted, the premise which leads to it will also be doubted.[3] Begging the question is a form of circular reasoning.[4]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circular_reasoning
^ Ironic.