Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Sun Aug 20, 2023 9:02 am
What you presumably mean is that your data set is strong enough that you find it conclusive.
...as would any fair-minded and rational person, I would say. But you'd have to choose to research the relevant data, which include not only the purely logical and rational arguments, but also existential experience, of course. What would a faith in God be worth, if it had no reality for existential being?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Aug 18, 2023 3:35 pmI mean, if there is absolutely NO way you would accept ANY evidence, under ANY circumstances, then can it be surprising at all that you've arrived at the conviction that God does not exist, and that that seems the only possible conclusion to you?
I have said several times now that, in my view, God is an underdetermined hypothesis..."
"Underdetermined?"
Well, the standard definition of that word is, "Having too few constraints to specify a unique solution." But that can't be what you mean, since there's no way for a person who lacks data to say what data he might lack...far less that there's too little of it "to specify a unique solution."
If I'm an ignorant tribesman who thinks the world is flat, I certainly lack data...but I'm in no position to tell modern people that they can't "specify" that the world is "uniquely" spherical. All I can say is that I, personally, am ignorant of the relevant data. Moreover, I can know for sure, even if I'm an ignorant tribesman, that either the world is flat, or it is not; and that at least that one of us is bound to be wrong -- even if I'm not able to know more than that.
The conventional use of that term can't therefore be what you mean. So maybe you can explain exactly what you are trying to say when you do use that term. And maybe I'll even agree with you, if I can understand what claim you're aiming to make.