Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Oct 31, 2019 2:26 pm
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Thu Oct 31, 2019 5:53 am
My argument only work for the majority.
[A]theists are a minority [you agree could be 5%] do work with my model.
I'm sorry, it just doesn't work for anything, at all.
If it depended on majority, then there's absolutely no possibility it would work for Flew...because Deists are a vanishingly small minority of the population, even smaller that the Atheist 4%. Christians are also in the minority, relative to all other ideologies. So there isn't a group for which it DOES work, if you actually require a majority.
Read my argument again;
viewtopic.php?p=430875#p430875
I mentioned 'deists' as well in the argument.
It cover all religionists [theistic, deistic, non-theistic, agnostic].
Somehow you are always one step back and I have to get you back to alignment with the point.
All you have to do is ask people why they believe, and do the sociological data-gathering. And if they give an explanation such as Flew gave, one based on his reasons not his fears, then you'd have to either say, "Well, he's just lying," or else you'd have to accept that you were wrong. And you could, as I have, talked to a great many more Theists who would tell you similar stories of alternate motives for belief.
It's just a bad theory.
Do you understand the subliminal effect?
In the subliminal advertising issue, a consumer may think he bought a can of 'pepsi' instead of 'coke'. If ask, the consumer will insist he likes pepsi and give all sort of reasons to justify why he prefer 'pepsi' over 'coke'.
But the reality with the subliminal effect, is the consumer has been subconsciously driven by hidden subliminal messages [e.g. "buy pepsi, its good for you"] which is not heard in pepsi's advertising to buy 'pepsi'.
Such subliminal advertising is now banned, since it is subtle brainwashing.
I have given links to zombied-ants, where the ants are controlled by parasites in the brain to climb up to the tip of grass only to be eaten by cows, goats to assist the parasite in its life-cycle. If such ants can talk, they would likely to say, they like to sun tan not knowing they are controlled at the subconscious level by parasites.
As for people who believed in a God that is illusory [no convincing evidence and proof], and when asked why they believe, they will give all sorts of answers. These theists do not realize, like the zombied-ants, they have been driven by the existential crisis to believe in a God.
Note my arguments;
viewtopic.php?p=430875#p430875
why theists are driven to believe in a God.
we have to define 'faith' empirically which is what is stated in the dictionary,
Well empirically, people report that they do not have that kind of "faith." You have no better source of empirical evidence. So empiricism is manifestly against the theory.
When a person believed a proposition [view] without evidence, proof nor justified reason, that is 'faith' as defined.
This is very evident empirically as observed in ordinary life, e.g. a parent may insist his son [studying in a uni 1000 miles] will do well in an examination without seeing how he had studied for it, the father's conviction is based on faith [as defined].
There are so many examples one can observed by "faith" is practiced empirically.
The degree of faith will depend on the degree of available evidence and strength of justifications.
In the case of theism, it is so obvious there is no convincing evidence to justify God exists since the idea of God emerged thousands [10s and 100s] of years ago. As such, this would be categorized as 100% faith or blind faith.
At the extreme we have scientific theories which are supported with evidence and justifications, as such we can rate them as based on 1-5% faith.
An empirical God is possible to be empirically real.
What do you mean "empirical God"? I know of no Theists or Deists who affirm the existence of a 'god' that merely exists in the way that a rock or a tree does. So what kind of "existing" are you positing there?
There are different kinds of "existing."
If I say to you, "This rock exists," picking it up and handing it to you, I mean, "exists as a bounded physical entity, as an object for your manipulation." If you say, "I wonder if there's anyone who can free-climb Mount Everest," and I say, "I think such a person exists; would you like to meet him?" I mean something quite different than the bounded concreteness of the rock. If, on the other hand, you have a bad relationship and become depressed, and I say to you, "Cheer up; love exist," I don't mean it "exists" as an object for your manipulation, but as a dynamic you will have to observe by observing the relationship between two other people, and inductively perceiving it from that.
So in what sense are you using the word "exists"? In one of the above senses, or in quite a different one? Because I can't weigh your claim until I know what you mean, and what you expect by using the word "exists."
That you know of none, do not mean there are none who do believe in an empirical god.
Any theists who believed their God can listens and answers prayers or other empirical acts, such a God is an empirical God.
Theists who believed their God has Anthropomorphic qualities are empirical in nature which are common in primitive religions.
The question is where is the empirical evidence to justify the existence of the empirical God.
I would say it does. But you'll have to specify what you mean by "exists," and what you regard as adequate empirical evidence to show that fact.
- Exist = have objective reality or being.
Google Dictionary
To have objective reality means be able to be justified empirically [scientifically] and philosophically [logically, critical thinking, rationally, wisdom].
If a thing do not exists as real, then it does not "exists" at all as a thing.
When a thing do not exists as real, what exist as real are merely the thoughts and neural activities that support such a thought that give rise to an illusion.
E.g. a square-circle do not exists as real, what is real are merely the neural activities that support such a thought of a square-circle.
Thus the basis of theistic belief is merely psychological confined to activities within the human brain.
Note when a theist claims his God exists as this or that, no other persons [theist nor (a)theist] can observe that God that he is claiming to perceive.
What is really going on is merely thoughts and neural activities that is confined to the brain of the theists.
Such neural activities can be empirical represented by specific activities of neurons in the brain which is common to all theists who are experiencing God.
Point is those who claimed to have had experiences with God but are mentally ill [schizo, etc], those with brain damage, those who took hallucinogens and other drugs, meditators, etc, also display similar specific pattern in their brain.
Thus it is possible those who insist they genuinely experienced God could also suffer from some kind of mental problems or that whatever is an experienced of God is merely a mental activity involving certain parts of the brain.
We can go deeper??
Example of an empirical God is the bearded man in the sky
Well, that depiction evokes quite a different type of "existence." It "exists" only in the sense of "existing" mythologically. That is, among myths, it's one that has (limited) circulation, but which refers to no actual entity -- a fourth way things can be said to "exist."
But everybody knows that. So it will help us to understand one another if you specify what you're looking for, when you say you doubt God "exists".
Nope, in the olden days the majority would have believed there is real empirical-based "bearded man in the sky" who is supreme, created the universe and ruled over humankind.
In some old tribal cultures, theists still believe in such an anthropomorphic God.
I have stated there are two main categories of God, i.e.
- 1. the empirical based God or
2. the ontological God
If your God exists as an empirical God, then bring the empirical evidence to justify its empirical existence.
But I have stated, the empirical God is an inferior kind of God no rational theists will accept to avoid their God being an inferior god to another greater God. Thus theists will end up with the ontological God where nobody's God can be greater than another.
If your God is the ontological God [a deist would definitely believe in such a God] then such a God is impossible to be real empirically [scientifically] and philosophically [logically, critical thinking, rationally, wisdom].