01-13-2010, 05:11 AM | #61 | ||
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OCCUPATION 101. One would think a simple task would be, well, simple. Maybe not for simpletons. Last edited by uBeR; 01-13-2010 at 05:24 AM. |
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01-13-2010, 12:39 PM | #62 |
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I think any amount of atheism, ie. stating for certain that God does not exist, is doing exactly what many atheists find irritating about religious people. They are outright saying NO with no room really to change. That's why I think agnosticism is the only realy way to go. I'm 99.99999999% sure there's no God, but the leap to 100 makes me as ignorant and unquestioning as those on the other side.
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01-13-2010, 03:17 PM | #63 | |
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01-13-2010, 04:20 PM | #64 |
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Atheism is the absence of theism, that is, a belief in God or gods. How many things do you not believe in? Do you believe there's a magical flying teapot orbiting Neptune? Do you believe there's a talking unicorn in your room? Do you believe you're some magical cat who has the ability to appear and act like a human? Does not believing these things make you faithful? Does not believing these things make you "ignorant and unquestioning"?
Certainly these things are logically possible. You cannot deny with 100% certainty that anything logically possible is false, just as the epistemic skeptic tell us. But there's no good reason to believe in anything, merely because it's logically possible. If you don't have any evidence for the above things I listed, then you are perfectly rational to withhold belief, and I'm sure most skeptics would say so too. In fact, if you have evidence against them, e.g. you don't see or hear a unicorn in your room, then your absence of belief is even more reasonable. According to the skeptic, there is absolutely nothing you can be 100% certain of in the empirical world. You can't be certain you're sitting in front of a computer monitor reading this forum. Does the fact that you believe you are making you "ignorant and unquestioning"? That's a pretty big leap.
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OCCUPATION 101. One would think a simple task would be, well, simple. Maybe not for simpletons. |
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01-13-2010, 04:41 PM | #65 | |
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And uBeR, you're totally right. But my stance of Athosticism is more that the discussion ends up being moot and unnecessary. Whether or not there is a God shouldn't impact anything that's important in my life.
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01-13-2010, 06:02 PM | #66 | |
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01-13-2010, 07:22 PM | #67 |
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Really? My examples are outlandish, but yours are not? That's a very subjective claim. I mean, is it not outlandish, the idea that there was a guy walking around healing blind people, turning blood into wine, walking on water, resurrecting from death, etc. 2000 years ago? That's not outlandish to you?
OK, let's ignore all that and stick to just the idea that God created everything and everything is his intent. It's an equally outlandish idea, but let's ignore that. You ask, "how would we disprove that?" Well, you can disprove it through reasoning if you take time to closely define what you're talking about. If you're going to define "God" as "an all-powerful, all-good, all-seeing, etc. being," for example, then we can begin to evaluate that definition vis-a-vis logic and experience. What if we define "God" as something that cannot be known? Well, then it's completely useless to even discuss. I can, for example, claim there's an invisible and undetectable unicorn sitting in the corner of my room. The claim means absolutely nothing. It could logically be true, just as it could logically be true there's an undetectable and unknowable God, but there's no reason to suppose it's actually true. Do you suppose there's an invisible and undetectable unicorn sitting in your room? Why or why not? "Oh, that's just outlandish nonsense." But your invisible and undetectable God is not? So the logical possibility exists that there's an invisible and undetectable unicorn sitting in your room, but you lack any evidence or reason to believe there is. The rational thing to do then is to withhold belief. You don't believe there's a unicorn in your room because that's the rational thing to do. It's possible, but why even bother believing it? If you believe the unicorn's sitting there, then I think you're irrational.
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OCCUPATION 101. One would think a simple task would be, well, simple. Maybe not for simpletons. Last edited by uBeR; 01-13-2010 at 07:25 PM. |
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