Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Dec 01, 2020 3:58 pm
Scott Mayers wrote: ↑Tue Dec 01, 2020 12:17 pm
"De-fine" comes from "of finite". "
You've just answered your own question, Scott. For if you want "finite" definitions for an infinite being, you can't have them; not because the Entity in question does not exist, or cannot be partially described, but because nobody has the ability to put strict limits on any infinite.
The same is true of "
pi." There IS a real ratio between the radius of a circle and it's diameter. Circles and diameters both exist, and can be quite stable and well-defined; but the ratio between them is infinite: and no mathematician since the dawn of time or into eternity will ever be able to tell you what the finite limits of "
pi" are: they'll all stop with "3.14....something." They may give you a very long list, but they will never, never give you the total list.
So you can't have definitions of the infinite. But that does not imply either that
"pi" is not real, or that "
pi" is nothing useful to us. It is both.
I'm responding after a break from my last post to DL so some of what him or others wrote may have addressed this. I see Advocate had a post that I like in response to it and agree.
Taking what you said here, you interpret pi as being unable to be defined but this is not the case. A defintion of something that involves infinities is still 'finite'. You are confusing meaning that in formal logic systems use as 'undefines' that are nevertheless definitions. You
can use 'undefined' terms at the beginning of a CLOSED system that defines it INSIDE the system but that one may not be able to formally state without using certain 'postulates'. This is what a program does when we initiate the terms being used at the beginning of all computer pre-compiled languages. They RESERVE terms without defining them but are still definitions about the kind of memory they reserve.
So you might say, for instance, "God" can be an 'undefined' but ONLY if it is later formally defined. This is not the case by your meaning because you are forcefully imposing some unspoken postulate that we likely will not agree to and would also prove that the very system being used is NOT 'closed' or, "incomplete". Then the best you'd be able to assert is that your system of belief may be a 'theory', something that many authors on religion DO respect. But those who recognize this are relatively 'liberal' and not even the kind of religions that necessarily create the problems because they do not assert their beliefs as LITERAL. Since you are a literalist that POSTULATES this, "God" as existing by your system, you are making the fallacy here of introducing "hidden assumptions" that beg what you are trying to prove.
I do not accept postulating that this "God" exists, even if this may be agreed to when you are talking about people who come from another different religion. But then you are not in disagreement about God's existence but to the particular subset of beliefs that define a religion. For instance, your assumptions may be valid for a Muslim you are competing to change to become Christian. This is not permissible for a non-theist to prove ANY religion.
Your example of using pi (∏) above is incorrect for a slightly different reason: the PARICULAR representation of
∏ cannot be literally listed finitely but is nevertheless real, something that requires a digression and proof that will be distracting here. But it is STILL 'defined' and expanded upon within math. (the symbol, is an undefined though) You would have been simpler to assert the definition of "
∞" (infinity) instead as an example, for it has a better direct link to your assumption here. In this case, you define what "finite" is, and upon agreement that the definition is assigned to something real (a postulate of 'existence' that not one would deny normally), then you CAN define "infinite" as "non-finite" with expanded differentiation on "infinitismal". That is, as long as you agree to the existence of something, call it 'X', then even if you may not agree to whether 'non-X' exists by itself, you have to agree that the concept exists as a real complement to X where it has been proven to exist.
You require defining "God" here as I said because we disagree to your hidden postulate that it exists without necessarily noticing you are doing it. We are in disagreement to the existence. Thus you cannot permit "God" as an 'undefined' term because you'd be setting us up to require imposing upon us to read all your sources (your 'system' of belief) in order to agree. But you already admit that your meaning transcends definition which demonstrates your bias. And I do should not be begged to PRETEND your whole system, your whole religion, in order to attempt a disproof because it is UNCLOSABLE. The only 'proof' of closure for such a system is both death itself and your particular believed God to present himself there. We are in disagreement to why we
should even believe. Thus you cannot expect us to
gamble (like Pascal's Wager) in something because this is itself postulating God (pretending he exists) prior to proving it. This is VERY common with those like yourself who presume a "fake-it-until-you-make-it" mentality that is defining of right-wing believers. Your name, Immanuel CAN here, points to this attitude. While such political beliefs about what may seem to work for you cannot apply to others without the very imposition of CONTROL or force over others. The consevative's psychology is to assume that they are PROOF that one can succeed by inappropriately looking back at what your attitude was before hand and thinking that your prior pretense of it was the cause of it coming true, a positive thinker's fallacy, more formally called, "Wishful thinking".
So you are making the error of a hidden or missing assumption. And because I don't accept the implied existence of God that such a hidden postulate requires to permit using "God" as an undefined variable, this is not acceptable to allow for the non-believer apriori. It is circular and so is more of an appropriate general label of "non-sequitor" that you presumed of me incorrectly.
I need a real definition of "God" to go further. If you won't express one, then your belief is NOT able to be
provable to anyone but those who already believe.