But ... what do you think is the strongest natural evidence for the existence of a god? (No worries if you don't want to answer.)Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon May 04, 2020 4:37 pmPeter Holmes wrote: ↑Mon May 04, 2020 6:45 amI'm happy to go with surreptitious57's definition of 'natural' for now. And I endorse the request for your take, rather than a link to a book.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon May 04, 2020 4:05 am
Done.
https://www.wiley.com/en-ca/The+Blackwe ... 1405176576
I've read it, cover to cover. If anyone else has a serious intention of knowing what the best current "natural"-type arguments for the existence of God are, here they are, and they can grapple with them too. The book is academic, documented, and precisely argued, in an edited, peer-reviewed source, published by one of the top philosophy publishers in the world, Blackwell.
I doubt you'll find a better source anywhere. If you do, let me know...I'll want to read it too.
I think you'll find the book better than any synopsis anyone could possibly supply in these spaces. And I sense your skepticism will require significant proof, which this provides, rather than one individual's gloss on somebody else's best version of the argument.
I find the arguments therein very winsome; and they're presented by some of the world's leading experts, as well. Some of them involve things like String Theory, at which I have to confess myself a relative novice, so there are arguments in there that others are better to judge. But those that fall within my competencies, I find excellent.
The point would be this: you said that "there is no evidence." Very clearly, there is. And that evidence exists at the highest academic level. Now, one can say, "I don't accept that evidence," or "I don't like that argument," or even "I'm afraid to look at the evidence," and one can also decide to say why, or just avoid the evidence -- but what one can no longer rationally do, in view of texts like this one, is say "there is no evidence." That boat just doesn't float anymore.
And we might have known. An issue that has occupied some of the best scholarship for some two thousand years plus is highly unlikely to be a trivial issue, the sort of easy thing dismissed with the wave of a hand and a claim that "there is no evidence." Very clearly, some very smart people found some very compelling reasons to think the question was deserving of consideration.
I think that "natural" evidences don't really convince anybody who's determined not to accept evidence from nature. People like Francis Bacon, the father of science, liked natural arguments. So did people like Newton, or Pascal...not foolish men, to be sure. But not everybody does; and for those who do not, there is always an alternate explanation for everything, that is "good enough" to allow them to continue not to consider.To save time: what do you think is the strongest natural evidence for the existence of a god?
At most, natural arguments can take an obdurate man where his excuses for NOT believing lack warrant, and he is, to quote Romans "without excuse." But Jesus Himself said, "He who has ears, let him hear." That implies that some people will listen, and some are determined not to listen. I can think of no argument at all that can force a person to accept anything as evidence, if he is determined not to. As the old saying goes,
"A man convinced against his will / Remains an unbeliever still."
No argument is persuasive if we're speaking to one who will not hear. Fortunately, we do not have to be like that. It's always a choice: "I will consider," or "I will not."
That's clearly incorrect, as you can see if you understand the Moral Argument, for example as presented in the Blackwell Guide. Whether or not a Creator of the cosmos exists is absolutely essential to the question of whether anything can every be "right" or "wrong."(And to repeat, this has nothing to do with the the objectivity or subjectivity of morality.)
(Just to say: cosmological and teleological arguments that assume a non-natural explanation is possible merely beg the question. In other words, the premise 'a non-natural explanation for a natural event is possible' has to be justified.)
And no formulation of the moral argument that I've seen even remotely establishes moral objectivity, because that's not its purpose. If you care to set one out here that you think does succeed, please do, and we'll assess it.
