Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Tue Dec 19, 2023 12:38 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Dec 15, 2023 2:40 pm...it's not clear to me that any of what you're saying has anything to do with logic. After all, the right comparison is mathematics.
Well, now you're moving the goalposts.
I don't understand that objection. What "goalposts," and how "moving"?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Dec 15, 2023 2:40 pmAnd logic isn't an ideological thing. It will happily serve any "user," like maths will. It is required by both the Theist and the skeptic in equal measure
The ideology comes with your choice of premise.
Again, I don't understand the objection. It's perfectly obvious that logic is just a method, which, like maths, is simply "a handle to fit all pots," rather than a particular ideological orientation. Logic is what the Theist uses to make his case, but also the thing that the skeptic uses to make his: and it's the same tool you're attempting to employ right now, to convince me that logic isn't a universal tool.
You have chosen to believe that God is real, an hypothesis for which there is no direct evidence. You have also chosen to believe that an iron age account of creation is accurate, despite the overwhelming evidence that it is not. With those premises in place, it is easy to reach the conclusion that you will live forever as a favourite of the "Supreme Being". You know that's why you chose them, but cannot admit it because fear of a meaningless existence and death are not good reasons to believe anything. So instead you have put a lot of energy in supporting beliefs that have no foundations of their own.

I'm sorry...I'm always amused when people who've never met me tell me they know what my history and motives are.
I think I know what you're trying to say. You're trying to say that you suspect that I might be a person like that. But I'm sorry to disappoint, in that regard: I'm actually somebody who became a Theist as a result of the convergence of several factors, among which were the failure of secular philosophy to explain evil, a personal search through the alternatives, and a personal experience with Jesus Christ, all in my university years. So the whole, "you're only believing this because you're afraid / indoctrinated / culturally propagandized / not aware of the (alleged) contrary evidence, and so on just rings hollow with me.
I'm not at all what you imagine I am. So I can't say that this description troubles me much.
The good news for you is that, as most atheists will concede, perhaps there is a God.
If they do, they've stopped being Atheists at all. One might call them "agnostics," but their Atheism has become quite suspect.
Where you come off the rails though, is projecting your ideological motivation and hard work onto "Atheists" and "Evolutionists". You believe they work as hard as you to prove that God doesn't exist. No doubt there's a few on the lunatic fringe.
Hmmm...maybe there's not as few as you imagine. I find that quite a lot of the major proponents of that ideology are quite frank about their antipathy to God. And I would suggest that my claim is simply a reversed form of the sort of accusation Atheists routinely launch against Christians: they say, "You only believe in God because you want there to be a God," to which the Christian can rightly rejoin, "You only believe there's not a God because you want there not to be a God." And if the former is true in any cases, then it's not hard to imagine that the latter can be true as well.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Dec 15, 2023 2:40 pm...depending on the available premises; because every argument -- even arguments trying to doubt logic -- depend on logic for their coherence and success.
The choice of "available premises" is unlimited; people make them up all the time. The hard of thinking are apt to confuse validity and soundness and believe their conclusions.
But logic is a procedure, not a set of particular premises. One can plug any premises at all into the logic "equation," and one will get a formally-
valid conclusion: as you indicate, it still might not turn out to be a
truthful one, if the premises themselves are faulty; but if they're not, then it's guaranteed to be a
sound conclusion -- both valid and true. (And yes, I do know the formal terminology.)
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Dec 15, 2023 2:40 pm...the only evidence for any God is words.
Well, that's decidedly not true. Even a reasonably-informed skeptic knows that. The whole of Creation itself is clear evidence of God...
Creation is evidence for
any hypothesis that is consistent with it.
I don't think it is. I recognize that people who are already disposed not to see the hand of God in it can perform sufficient contortions to avoid seeing it, and then claim it's not there; that's what I think they're really doing. There are some things that are just so glaringly obvious about this world that only some really extraordinary mental gymnastics can get one not to at least suspect that God is behind it all; but I do recognize that it is possible for people to do those gymnastics.
And I think there's actually a good theological explanation for why that's so, having to do with allowing the free will of mankind. So I don't deny that it's quite possible for a person to work himself into a state in which he doesn't see the evidence
as evidence at all anymore. But I think that's not the natural or most obvious position, for sure.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Dec 15, 2023 2:40 pmas is the rationality of the universe and science itself, and mathematics...
You really are a have your cake and eat it kinda guy, aren't you? On the one hand you claim the miracle of the resurrection is the sort of irrational behaviour that is evidence; on the other the fact that there isn't more irrationality is also evidence. That the universe behaves predictably, that the same conditions produce the same results, is exactly what you would expect if no God were twiddling the knobs.
Well, you have to think of what is claimed by the word "miracle." It's not the claim that, under most circumstances, reality doesn't simply obey ordinary scientific regularities or "laws." It's the claim that the Creator can, when He wishes to, act upon the world Himself...that the scientific regularities are subject to the Divine Will. And framed like that, there's nothing about that that the skeptic can even protest: he and the believer in miracles are agreeing that
most of the time the scientific regularities apply; and the skeptic has to admit he doesn't know what's possible whenever God Himself chooses to intervene. He is just gratuitously choosing to believe that there's no God to do that.
So they're really only arguing over historical fact. One is saying, "God parted the Red Sea," and the other is saying, "I don't think he did." But they're not arguing that the laws of hydrodynamics can tell them anything about that, because both of them believe fully in hydrodynamics...which is what makes the case, by definition, a "miracle." If hydodynamics did not
ordinarily apply, there would be no just claim of a "miracle" at all.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Dec 15, 2023 2:40 pm...and the human psyche...
What about it does God explain that evolution can't?
Lots. Consciousness, for none thing. But volition, identity, morality...lots of stuff.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Dec 15, 2023 2:40 pm...and all of that is without taking into account anything that includes any direct or any written revelation at all.
Whatever experience you have had that you attribute to God revealing himself to you, I am quite certain there are alternative explanations.
From the outside? No doubt. But my experience is different.
Could I be wrong? Plausibly...from your perspective...I admit it. And even from my own, I suppose I could tell myself I'm deluded. But there comes a point in human experience when denying the experience starts to take far too much energy, and it becomes more of an effort to fight the truth than to begin to admit it to oneself.
I don't offer that to you as evidence you can use. I know you have to have your own experience. But I merely point out that I understand your perspective as an outsider on that, and still don't feel particularly perturbed by the suggestion, because of my own perspective as somebody who has a quite a different experience and knowledge of the thing.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Dec 15, 2023 2:40 pm
Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Fri Dec 15, 2023 2:26 pmYour conviction that we are all the same simply isn't true.
I've never said we are "all the same." I've said what Darwin said, which is that we are
"of the same species," which miraculously always seems to be at exactly the same stage of alleged "evolving."
The fact that we have different genes is precisely the claim of evolution.
Actually, Darwin had absolutely no knowledge about genes, and premised the whole theory on the assumption that things that look somewhat alike must be related. That's exactly how the monkey-to-man story, which is so embarassing for the history of the movement, got started in the first place. If Darwin had understood genetics, he never would have proposed it -- at least not in the flawed form he did.
There are many genetic mutations that make foetuses unviable, survival to adulthood unlikely and reproductive success difficult or impossible.
Foetal development isn't "evolution," of course. The matter of "species" is not thrown off by outliers who happen to be infertile. A dog is still a dog, whether it's been neutered or not, whether by nature or by the vet. That's another thing genetics confirms to us.