DEBATE: Evolution VS Intelligent Design
191I recently heard the explanation (from an ID viewpoint) that the purpose of viruses is further the human intellect by forcing us do deal with them; i.e medical facilities, research...
Moderator: Greg
steve wrote:galanter wrote:And non-believers should be reminded that they have no legitimate claim to certainty, and their world view is also somewhat faith based as well. Rationality only confers finite wisdom.
I think you are wrong about non-believers' "faith."
It requires no faith to fail to hold a belief. It requires faith to actively hold such a belief. As has been noted before, agnosticism is a kind of atheism. It also requires no faith.
To play with the language this way, to say that my lack of a faith is a kind of faith, is a trick I run into all the time with people whose arguments are not convincing in one matter or another. They say, "well, you choose to not do this thing, and that's a choice too." No, it isn't. It is nothing. To actively do something, whether it is believe in God or to suck dicks for quarters, is to make a choice in its favor. To fail to do something is, by definition, not doing it, whether or not one does something else. I might not have considered sucking dicks for quarters, and as such have made no choice in the matter. I just haven't done it.
steve wrote:My fundamental problem with the God's existence debate is that it supposes that there is some special value in considering whether or not something so utterly un-knowable (and to my mind, indefensible as any form of reasoned construction) should get special consideration as to its possibility or likelyhood.
Of course I don't know that there is no God. Of course. I also don't know with any certainty that there isn't someone in Red China wearing his own Electrical Audio jumpsuit, sitting in the lounge of his own recording studio typing these same words as I type them. There is simply no reason for me to believe that it is so, and to spend the time it takes to consider it seems foolish and unproductive. The only reason anyone considers a God is that those who have actively assumed the mantle of faith keep raising the issue. It is their argument that I am answering, not my own.
The fact that they alone keep the "debate" alive is enough for me to brand them as desperate and delusional. I see it as an indulgence that agnostics like yourself feel obliged to pamper them with considering these ridiculous notions, and this kind of babying can get us as a race nowhere.
It weakens intellectual rigor to have to keep making these qualifications to the patently true as an appeasement, and it then becomes leverage for the theists to assert some sort of intellectual parity with people grounded in reality. They question "reality," and "truth," and the quest for advancement in many arenas stagnates.
I think that the existence of God can be shown by demonstrating what God is NOT, since God is "Pure Act" and thus our minds cannot form a concept of Him. The human mind cannot form a concept of "IS", but God "IS". He's above, NOT below, purely human intellection. This, however, is the intersection between metaphysics and faith: God is pure act: "IS"......and the name He gives to Moses in Exodus 3:14 is "I AM WHO AM". This is an overlap of reason and revelation.
A theist does not question the sheer, point-blank facts of reality and truth. They are axiomatic.
matthew wrote:I think that the existence of God can be shown by demonstrating what God is NOT, since God is "Pure Act" and thus our minds cannot form a concept of Him. The human mind cannot form a concept of "IS", but God "IS". He's above, NOT below, purely human intellection. This, however, is the intersection between metaphysics and faith: God is pure act: "IS"......and the name He gives to Moses in Exodus 3:14 is "I AM WHO AM". This is an overlap of reason and revelation.
Bradley R. Weissenberger wrote:matthew wrote:I think that the existence of God can be shown by demonstrating what God is NOT, since God is "Pure Act" and thus our minds cannot form a concept of Him. The human mind cannot form a concept of "IS", but God "IS". He's above, NOT below, purely human intellection. This, however, is the intersection between metaphysics and faith: God is pure act: "IS"......and the name He gives to Moses in Exodus 3:14 is "I AM WHO AM". This is an overlap of reason and revelation.
This is a strange double bill: "The Half-Baked Heideggers" opening for "The Half-Baked Tillichs".
I would not see either one of these bands.
matthew wrote:Very Funny!
M_a_x wrote:I think that the existence of God can be shown by demonstrating what God is NOT, since God is "Pure Act" and thus our minds cannot form a concept of Him. The human mind cannot form a concept of "IS", but God "IS". He's above, NOT below, purely human intellection. This, however, is the intersection between metaphysics and faith: God is pure act: "IS"......and the name He gives to Moses in Exodus 3:14 is "I AM WHO AM". This is an overlap of reason and revelation.
So now, let me understand, with Matthew around we get to talk specifically about the Christian God? The God of the Bible, and ..all that? Okay, just testing the parameters.
*rolls up sleeves*
The argument of negative attributes is a very common one, especially amongst (my favourite) medeival theologians. The three attributes of God - omnesience, omnipresence, omnipotence - are postulated as negatives. Instead of all-knowing, we have a God who is without ignorance. Instead of all-present, we have a God not conceptually definable in space and time. Instead of omnipotence, we have a God without limits.
But this tells us nothing, especially when we are asked to believe in God. All this ineffability leads is to a path where the Christian must say his knowledge does not come from reason - the traditional means of acquiring knowledge through sensory perception and verification - but faith, which is an entirely different means of acquiring knowledge.
There is absolutely no REASON or rationality for one to believe in a God. There is only faith, which is by it's very nature irrational.
Now, this is entirely supported...by the Christian's own scriptures. Here's a TON where the message is, very plainly - "Reason and intellect is not the way to understand/know God".
Bradley R. Weissenberger wrote:matthew wrote:Very Funny!
matthew, thanks for the compliment!
I have to say that I am impressed by your grasp of biblical Hebrew as demonstrated by your "I AM WHO I AM" comment above. Therefore, please tell us more about how the biblical authors used the unpronouncebale biblical word for God (i.e., "YHWH") as an elaborate pun relating to the biblical Hebrew verb for "to be" or "to exist".
Bonus points for working that explanation into a discussion of the name "Jeremiah".
That should nail down your point.
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