Greta wrote: ↑Mon May 14, 2018 8:29 am
The statement you criticised appears to be valid. Is it wrong to say, "I won't say an asteroid cannot destroy my house this year, but I don't don't believe that one will."? It is an informal statement of an observer's assessment of approximate probabilities, expressed in English rather than numerically.
Yes, but what are the odds? That is even less likely than a perfectly formed human brain appearing out of nowhere, which is theoretically possible but the probabilities are said to be far more than the number of atoms in the universe over one. [/quote]Reflex wrote:Saying he does not exist is saying he cannot exist, but that brings to bear some interesting problems for the atheist; i.e., if you argue that the universe emerged from a state of infinite possibilities, you can't exclude the possibility of God emerging.
The modal ontological argument goes like this:
Hence, no soft-peddling allowed.Premise 1: It is possible that God exists.
Premise 2: If it is possible that God exists, then God exists in some possible worlds.
Premise 3: If God exists in some possible worlds, then God exists in all possible worlds.
Premise 4: If God exists in all possible worlds, then God exists in the actual world.
Premise 5: If God exists in the actual world, then God exists.
Conclusion: Therefore, God exists.
What's interesting about this argument is that it attempts to show that if God's existence is merely possible, then it would be necessary. Or to put it another way, the only way God couldn't exist is if his existence is impossible. Thus if Plantinga is right, any atheist who says "I don't believe God exists but it's at least possible" would, if he properly understands the argument and Plantinga's definition of God, be logically compelled to change his mind.
If the argument holds, it would also mean we can't say there's a 50%/50% chance of God existing, or that the odds are 10% or 90%. The only possibilities are 0% or 100%. Either God's existence is impossible (0%) or it's possible and therefore necessary (100%).
Among others, yes. I like to say, "We are gods in embryo." Many theists see this as a valid biblical concept.That is the God concept as an ideal and IMO an intuition and imagining of evolution's potential, a la de Chardin.Reflex wrote:However, if the God-concept is necessary in order for us to grow towards something, practically speaking it doesn't matter.