Apologies for the long-form responses. I'm not entirely sure what to edit out.
ianrust wrote:Since I have no job, I may as well dominate you over the internet:
Bold words.
ianrust wrote:This is you saying I should not believe in transcendental philosophies, period. Ive seen mr. craig, he's too hung up on debating you people. It's a waste of time. The arguments below will make my position on this clear, and I will say no more after this.
Of course not. You're confusing "transcendental" with "rational." This is a basic category error. A transcendental reality can be entirely rational. It can "accord with reason or logic." "Transcendental and "rational" are not mutually exclusive.
PS Who is "you people?" You know I'm not an atheist, right? That Craig is actually debating the very same people I do, and often from the same position (that theism is rational)?
ianrust wrote:BTW, the flying spaggheti monster is an idol, and not God - you already know my position on this.
If belief in god is irrational, as you claim, then you would have no more justification to believe in God than you would in the FSM. That was the point you missed. Irrational beliefs, almost by definition, cannot be justified.
ianrust wrote:Reality is apprehended without preconception. There is no logic to it; you apply logic, as an ideal, after perception. Your perception; the experience of life, is not a rational experience. For example, an orange is not rational.
You don't understand how that would work, do you? If I manage to sneak a pair of rose-colored contacts on you while you're asleep, what then do you make of the fact that your white sheets are suddenly pink when you wake up? If reality is "apprehended without preconception" than you will have no other recourse than to accept that they somehow changed colors (though magic, by the way, since you hold that reality is not rational). After all, you cannot avail yourself of any preconceptions, can you? You would have to distrust those things because, as you say, that is not how reality is apprehended. To continue the example, you might also notice that your eyes feel differently but, because reality is "apprehended without preconception" you will have to believe that's reality since it's what you apprehend and you cannot appeal to any other preconceptions. Someone who understands that reality is correctly understood following rational inquiry will ask why things have changed and then, through a series of logical steps, will come to apprehend the actual reality of the sheets and itchy eyes: a trick played by someone with rose-colored contacts. (And just in case you think you can get around the rose-colored contacts example, what would you make of your altered perceptions while under the affects of a heavy fever. When the nurse said "you were delusional and talking about giant spiders crawling up your leg," you would have to argue that she was entirely incorrect because, after all, "reality is apprehended without preconditions." And since you apprehended the reality of giant spiders crawling up your leg but could not appeal to any "preconditions," you would have no other recourse than continue believing in those spiders.)
I really wish I could think of the classical example on this point, but it escapes. Perhaps Immanuel Can remembers.
ianrust wrote:Why argue at all? To dispel arguments. I see my arguments more as anti-arguments; like black holes of thought crunching incorrectness back into a single point of truth.
If reality is not rational, engaging in arguments is pointless. You cannot convince someone of irrationality through rational discourse (which is what "argument" would mean in this particular forum). The piece about black holes is just silly.
ianrust wrote:ianrust wrote:"an obvious or accepted fact; truism; platitude. "
axiomatic, not rational
ReliStuPhD wrote:Axioms are rational. That's one of the reasons they're axioms. We don't hold irrational things to be "general truths" because there's no way to evaluate their veracity.
Axioms may be broken down into rational components, but the axiom itself is not rational; you can hold an axiom without any rational justification. That axioms are accepted by a most sound rational argument is incorrect.
Yes, that's true. So I'll admit my error and say instead that axioms are the bases for reasoned argumentation.
ianrust wrote:An axiom is accepted for being the strongest moral position.
No. Axioms are not evaluated by their moral position, though they are certainly useful in arriving at strong moral positions.
ianrust wrote:ianrust wrote:By and large truth is not rational.
ReliStuPhD wrote:Sorry, but this may qualify as the dumbest thing I've ever heard.
IS art rational? Is creativity rational? You don't understand truth.
And what is
true about art? Creativity? By all means, enlighten me as to what is
true about these things.
ianrust wrote:IF the universe is rational, it is repetitive; it is not transcendent; the same events repeat themselves, in circulation, for eternity. Nothing changes. Therefor life is meaningless, IF life is strictly rational. But, if you stop and reflect, you will realize life is not meaningless.
Once again, you completely fail to understand what "rational" means. If the universe is rational, it means it "accords with reason and logic." Pretty much ever field of scientific inquiry has shown this to be true over and over and over. If the universe were irrational, we'd not be able to land humans on the moon, use computers to type papers,
use typewriters to type papers, etc. No, the universe is very clearly ordered and appears, for all we can tell, to proceed in a manner that we can describe using reason and logic.
ianrust wrote:ianrust wrote:Whether I bother to put the time to bring all my statements into mathematical perfection is beside the point, and dependent on my mood - I'm just not feeling it right now.
ReliStuPhD wrote:"Mathematical perfection?" That's aiming far too high for you. Just settle for basic coherence.
I don't think you're speaking very well here.
I'm speaking quite well. With the possible exception of the point about axioms, you're not being coherent.
ianrust wrote:ReliStuPhD wrote:I'm not going to bother with the other inanities you've written. If you truly believe truth is not rational, there is absolutely no helping you. You're also WAYYYYY outside the bounds of anything resembling orthodox Christianity. Perhaps even more importantly, you've just said that Jesus (and, by extension, God) is irrational, insofar as the Bible maintains "he is the way, the truth, and the light." Now, if you really want to double-down on that, then you need to fear for your very soul, because your creator and redeemer are not rational beings so you have no guarantees whatsoever (an irrational being might just decide to toss you into Hell for shits and giggles). If you want to hold that belief in God is neither logical nor reasonable, go for it. The only thing you're undermining is yourself, and the atheists here will have you for lunch (and rightly so). It's hard to believe you're so wholly ignorant of Christian thought over the past 2,000 years. You really should be a student of your own tradition.
What matters is what the belief accomplishes. The belief itself is irrational, but its implications are rational. A belief is known by its implications. The rest of what you said is a childish mood swing. You romanticize things.
Sorry, but romantization is effectively the opposite of rationality. And the belief itself is quite rational. If belief in God is not rational, then we're back to where we've started: the atheists win.
ianrust wrote:Beliefs are something people cling to because they're what make them happy; people are passionate and idealistic about their beliefs.
As much as you appear well informed and educated about your beliefs, truly you believe in them because they satisfy you - you are satisfied with apathy, ambivalence, skepticism, and a lack of will power.
You and the atheists share a great deal in common on this point, it seems. Personally, I'll stick with rational beliefs.
ianrust wrote:ReliStuPhD wrote:I'm happy to continue this conversation, but just be forewarned that as long as you hold to the belief that truth is not rational I won't be able to take anything you say seriously (which is generally how I approach irrationality that is not attached to numbers). So maybe you'll want to back off this silly train of thought and just admit that truth is rational, and that if God revealed "Him"self to humans, the concomitant belief in God would be rational as well. (And if you don't think God revealed "him"self to humans, you're not a Christian, so there's that.)
Feel free to keep talking, I'm not very interested in what you have to say.
All your responses above to the contrary.
ianrust wrote:ReliStuPhD wrote:PS Your "mood" is somewhat irrelevant here. If you're not in the "mood" to be coherent, you should probably just forgo posting here. We already have enough nonsense to go around.
I'm not interested in being dragged down further into this repetitive babbling madness, I have things I need to do.
We've come a long way from "Since I have no job, I may as well dominate you over the internet" in just one post.