Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 08, 2024 6:22 pm
Harbal wrote: ↑Mon Jan 08, 2024 6:08 pm
I don't think it makes any difference whether God exists or not.
Then you're the only person who thinks so.
Well I do like to think of myself as an original thinker.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:To explain God, we need science. Starting out with the assumption of God, and what God is, will lead us nowhere.
How ironic. Historically, it's actually the opposite: if we had had no conception of God, we would never have had any science either.

It's science that's the derivative, and Theism that's the source, actually.
What a bizarre claim.

Did you mean to say that, or did it all just come out wrong?
Science is a method of discovery, God is just a proposed phenomenon. We use science to investigate phenomena, not the other way round.
Want proof? Ask yourself this: there are billions of very smart people in places like India, China, Subsaharan Africa, aboriginal North America...and so on. Why, then, did science appear in the West, and nowhere else?
What's that got to do with anything?

I don't even think it's true.
Answer: a certain conception of God has to exist in a society before one can even conceive of natural laws, or of a systematic and rational method to predict them. One has to believe in a lawgiving kind of God, a rational God, a God of order and sequence...and then one has to have motive to discover His doings through the examination of creation. That's why the discoverer of the scientific method itself was a devout Christian, Francis Bacon. Check it out.
This, by the way, is not my own insight. It's known as "Whitehead's Thesis," invented by the philosopher of science, Alfred North Whitehead,"
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/whitehead/. He was also a clergyman.
I have never heard of the man, and he was a clergyman, so two sound reasons for disregarding him.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:But your assumption that we are a ruby, and the rest of the stuff in the universe is just rocks, is what I think is called begging the question.
I'm simply pointing out the illogic in your own argument. You said that the abundance of the "stuff" means we should be skeptical that we have any value; I pointed out that that's not logical.
I used the beach analogy, where the Earth was just one grain of sand among countless others, which is exactly how the Earth looks in amongst the rest of the universe. So why is it illogical to be sceptical about our specialness?
I didn't try to argue we were a "ruby," just that you can't know we AREN'T one by trying to deduce it from the size of the universe.
I rather think you strongly implied it. What would even make you think of a ruby, otherwise?
So no, I didn't beg any question. I didn't, in fact, make any argument of the kind. I just pointed out that yours didn't work.
I think you did beg the question, and you did nothing to invalidate my point that, when looked at in the context of the vastness of the universe, there is no reason to think our planet is anything special.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:We know we are a miniscule spec in the universe, that is not a matter of dispute, but we by no means know if there is anything special about us that sets us apart from the infinitely massive quantity of other stuff that we just seem to be part of.
This was your argument...plus one more step...that you seem to think that repeatedly speaking about the amount of 'stuff' that apparently doesn't count should also count against any possiblilty of our specialness.
And it doesn't. That's the only point worth making from that.
If you know, or at least think -as the ill informed fellow who wrote Genesis thought- that there is only one of you, then you are bound to assume you are special, but when you learn you are just one among countless billions, it should at least make you question that assumption.