Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Mon Oct 27, 2025 10:51 am
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Oct 26, 2025 1:54 pm
Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Sun Oct 26, 2025 10:21 am
Well it does to people who haven't nailed their credulity to some particular cross.
No, it has nothing to do with what one personally knows or believes -- me or you. It's just obvious, isn't it? I can't say what you "can know," and you can't be dogmatic about what you suppose I "can know," unless you have some compelling rationale that isn't obvious here. And what would that be?
Philosophy 101: Cogito ergo sum.
You'll have to explain. I see no connection between Descartes'
cogito and the present issue. If one attends to Descartes, one comes to believe one does not even know one's own body exists, let alone what somebody in another body knows. So Descartes would seem to me to be a bad place for your argument to resort.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Oct 26, 2025 1:54 pmSo the dogmatic agnostic, the kind who says, "I don't know, and you can't either," is no more intellectually tenable than the Atheist who says, "There are no Gods." To be reasonable, agnosticism must be a humble, modest and moderate thing, and can perhaps go as far as to say, "I don't know, and maybe you don't either," but is rationally incapable of being any more dogmatic than that.
If an agnostic exceeds that, then he's just wearing the same intellectual rags as the Atheist: dogmatic claims to know things he can't possibly know.
It's a bit like arguing with the proverbial goldfish. I keep telling you that I have no desire to defend "Atheism", which after one trip around the goldfish bowl, you apparently forget.
No, I've not forgotten. I'm pointing out that a so-called "agnosticism" that makes irrational claims to know what other people can or cannot know is as absurd as Atheism. Neither one of them has a shred of credibility.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Oct 26, 2025 1:54 pmHowever, I have found that most admitted agnostics tend to be either centrist, close to the 50-50 line and willing to confess the limitations of human possibility of knowing, or even more open to the possibility of God than that. Somewhere between the center-doubtful and the extreme of openness is where an intellectually solid agnosticism can land. But it can't be
hardened agnosticism, or it's just Atheism with less nerve. After all, the core meaning is "I don't know."
Well, as mentioned:
Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Fri Oct 24, 2025 8:12 amHere is an actual definition of:
agnosticism, (from Greek agnōstos, “unknowable”)...
https://www.britannica.com/topic/agnosticism
I read it. It's a faulty definition. I pointed out why. Nobody can claim to know what another person can or cannot ever know, without a very specific and compelling reason for saying it. It's just irrational to suppose he could.
So I could say, "There's no way you can know the size of the universe," and that would be rational for me to say, because the universe is expanding. By the time somebody ventures a measurement, it's already bigger than that. But how can I say, "I know for sure that Will cannot know Boston, or bricklaying, or the population of New Zealand? How would I know what Will can or cannot know?
So how can an agnostic say, "I don't know God, and you cannot either"? What's his rational basis for such a judgment? Does he, like the Atheist, claim to know there's no God, so there's nothing to be known?
...philosophy is fundamentally story telling.
No, but continue...
Mathematics and logic are just rules for particular types of stories.
Definitely not. The "story" 2+2=12 is perhaps a "story," in that it's fictional. But 2+2
actually = 4. And that's empirically and logically provable.
Thomas Kuhn described in The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.
Kuhn had some good points. But he didn't say what you're taking to have said. He only talks about scientific theorizing, not about maths or logic. And, in fact, his argument relies heavily on an objectivist view of truth. For what can it mean to say that a theory is "true" or "more true" if it's all just stories?
I think you've drunk too heavily at the Postmodern kool-aid fountain, Will. It's not true that everything is "narrative," or "story."
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Oct 26, 2025 1:54 pm
Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Sun Oct 26, 2025 10:21 amCome up with a premise, the negation of which is self contradictory, and you will have your proof, which I will be compelled to believe.
Oh, that's easy. I already have. Atheism.
So the negation of "Atheism", theism, is self contradictory. I don't think you mean that.
No. I mean that Atheism
is a negation. And it's a self-contradictory one, too.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Oct 26, 2025 1:54 pmNo human being is ever adequate to make the claim, "I know there is no God." That's absurd.
Not according to you:
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Oct 24, 2025 2:25 pmJust ask yourself: how would one person -- say, you -- know what your neighbour or somebody who's an expert or the academic at the local university CANNOT know?
I take that to be a claim that
you can know what a neighbour, expert or academic cannot know.
Then you mistake it. I'm saying the opposite. I'm saying that even I don't know what Will can or cannot know, unless I have a compelling reason for believing it. So I can safely say that Will does not know the dimensions of the universe or whether God exists or not, because those require infinite knowledge, and Will -- like me -- is finite. But how do I know if Will knows the city of Dublin or quantity surveying or how to make good tea? I'm in no position to say.
What you can know is that you believe in your god. You can know that you have experiences that you attribute to that god. What you cannot know is all the alternative explanations for your experiences, and if you don't even know what those explanations might be, you cannot possibly rule them out.
All human knowing is
probabilistic, not absolute...at least in the empirical realm. That need not trouble anybody: high probability knowledge is far better than low probability knowledge. And we all live by estimating relative probabilities.
You don't "know" in an absolute way that you won't be stabbed to death in the street today. But you still go out, because your estimation of that probability is that it's low. That's how we all live: not by absolute knowledge, but by weighing probabilities.
So where does the Atheist or the dogmatic agnostic get his confidence to say "There's no God?" Where's his incorporation of probability? What is it based on? How secure can our confidence in his knowledge be?
What you might benefit from understanding is that, outside the story you are telling, some of your claims are nonsensical. For instance, that an almighty god, who could create an infinite number of worlds, chooses to make only one.
I haven't said that. I don't know how many "worlds" God has made. There are certainly many planets. Who knows what God is doing out there? I certainly don't claim to know that.
But again, how does the dogmatic Atheist or agnostic "know" that
other people can't know God? And if they don't "know" it, why are they talking about
other people at all? Why not just say the truth, which is "
I don't know God"? That's what an honest Atheist or agnostic would have to do.