matthew wrote:thanks Weissenberger....just try not to pander too much
I will continue to pander as long as you continue to substitute self-serving assertions for evidence and logical rigor.
Moderator: Greg
matthew wrote:thanks Weissenberger....just try not to pander too much
matthew wrote:No, faith is neither subrational nor irrational, but superrational. It informs and contains human reason.
Reason ALONE cannot come to know God. Reason enlightened by faith can lead us towards Him. We need God to know God, and that is why Christ came into the world- because he is both God and Man: He shows us The Father......read John's Gospel.
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.
...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.
scott wrote:So Steve, you seem to assert a position similar to what Gramsci so aggressively asserts over and over, namely that people who believe in God are more or less mentally deficient, and uncapable of rational thought... that believing in God is something done by dummies who are not grounded in reality. It feels like that's what you cats keep saying, but with more and bigger words.
M_a_x wrote:The Law of Identity : If any statement is true, then it is true.
The Law of Contradiction : No statement can be both true and false.
The Law of Excluded Middle : Every statement is either true or false.
So this is what we mean by RATIONAL - a rational means of acquiring knowledge. An irrational means of acquiring knowledge is easier to delineate - I wake up, imagine a magic elf on my shoulder (something which has no basis in sensory perception, or information gleaned and processed from my environment) and believe it as fact.
What the heck is SUPERRATIONAL?
Gramsci wrote:No, no, no, no my friend. I am not saying that. Well, not entirely. I would put theists into three camps:
People who don't know any better. Children, people that haven't been exposed to the idea of critical thinking etc.
People who are wishy-washy, you know, who don't really think about it, but say things like, "I believe in something...". They can be forgiven because they don’t really give a shit and if pushed generally will side with secularism.
And then there are people like Matty. Who's arguments are so inconsistent and blinded by a very narrow and exclusive form of dogma that mental flexibility and critical thought has been crushed either by an act of will or by a natural extension of my first point.
scott wrote:Gramsci wrote:No, no, no, no my friend. I am not saying that. Well, not entirely. I would put theists into three camps:
People who don't know any better. Children, people that haven't been exposed to the idea of critical thinking etc.
People who are wishy-washy, you know, who don't really think about it, but say things like, "I believe in something...". They can be forgiven because they don’t really give a shit and if pushed generally will side with secularism.
And then there are people like Matty. Who's arguments are so inconsistent and blinded by a very narrow and exclusive form of dogma that mental flexibility and critical thought has been crushed either by an act of will or by a natural extension of my first point.
I assume then that you put a guy like C.S. Lewis in the third "Matty" camp? Where is the fourth camp for people whose arguments *aren't* inconsistent? Where is Descartes? Where is the Dalai Lama?
scott wrote:How about light moving as a wave... and a particle? It's a wave when you don't look at it, and when you do look at it, it's a particle? How does that fit in? It's okay because it's only one of the two contradictory positions at any given instant? Or when you're looking at it, one statement is true and the other false, and then they switch validities when you're not looking at it? So it's not really true and false at the exact same instant?
What scientific measurements were used in coming up with theories about time dilation? When some dumbass woke up one morning and imagined that time comes to a stop at the speed of light (something which has no basis in sensory perception, or information gleaned and processed from [his] environment) and believed it as fact, what rational means of acquiring knowledge was employed?
If there's no big-C Creation, and no intelligent design, and the Universe just happened to come together the way it has, how do you resolve that against the scientific concept of Entropy, which says that things *don't* arrange themselves into more complex and more intricate systems over time, but rather do the EXACT OPPOSITE? Are you comfortable suspending disbelief long enough to say that the idea of Entropy applies to everything in the presumedly-closed system that is the physical, material world, *except* for living things that can reproduce? And also that those living things somehow spontaneously came into being and grew over time to be more complex and more diverse, the very idea of which seems to go against Entropy?
BTW, I think that the three laws you spelled out here are rubbish. If you can't see how they are, then that's fine. At the very least, I would hope you can recognize that there are a virtually unlimited supply of statements that can never be proven as true or false, thus rendering these laws as pure speculation. For example, take my statement, "The smartest person on the planet is a woman". Is that true or false? And what if, hang with me here, the smartest person on the planet is an archetypical hermaphrodite? Then the statement is both true AND false, in a sense. I'm sure there are countless better examples. This one was just fun.
Gramsci wrote:Anyway the Dalai Lama is an atheist, assuming that he is a Buddist.
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