Does God Exist?
Posted: Sun Nov 24, 2013 8:03 pm
William Lane Craig says there are good reasons for thinking that He does.
http://philosophynow.org/issues/99/Does_God_Exist
http://philosophynow.org/issues/99/Does_God_Exist
For the discussion of all things philosophical.
https://canzookia.com/
Yes, it would be a good social science project. However, it wouldn't qualify as a part of the physical sciences. You can't devise a natural experiment to prove a supernatural hypothesis. Science will always claim that mental events have physical causes. If not then it would go down as an unexplained law of nature that has yet to be determined.QMan wrote:Good article, finally philosophy makes some sense.
Point #8 could have stressed that the personal experience of God should be verifiable with statistical social science types of experiments with fairly high probability (my estimate 80 to 90%, never 100%) with a reasonable statistical certainty using a Population Tolerance Interval approach (a good Masters thesis for someone). What is needed is individuals to invest the time and effort to participate in the experiment following the instructions provided in the test manual (the Bible) and input from experienced experimenters (e.g., clergy and peers) who already successfully conducted this type of experiment.
The difficulty with conducting this type of experiment (as always concerning this topic) is that the experiment is not engaged in due to inherent biases, pre-conceived notions, the (correctly) perceived personal difficulties with the rigors and requirements of the experimental test conditions and protocol, and demands on time and personal involvement (6 months to a year minimum). My guess is that all these requirements rule out at least 99% of all the wannabe scientists in the PN forum who will nevertheless continue to think of themselves as objective observers of the contemporary scene.
We can distinguish between the God debate and the God inquiry. PN could provide a service by laying out the evidence that the God debate is a dead end, and then asking in what other manner the God inquiry might proceed.spike wrote:You are right, this God debate is a dead-end issue and a waste of time. I am sorry to see that PN is wasting more print on it.
Neither theism or atheism have any such power. All such victories, whatever side proclaims them, are fantasies breeding in the minds of imaginary victors.I did like the article by William Lane Craig, especially since I immediately realized that he, like so many others, has managed to once more thoroughly consign atheism to where it belongs, namely, the dust bin of history.
That's why I said that this will probably go on til two people are left standing.Felasco wrote:Neither theism or atheism have any such power. All such victories, whatever side proclaims them, are fantasies breeding in the minds of imaginary victors.I did like the article by William Lane Craig, especially since I immediately realized that he, like so many others, has managed to once more thoroughly consign atheism to where it belongs, namely, the dust bin of history.
If we could convince the majority of the population that Walt Disney is God, would that qualify as a superior argument?However, at that time, it will count what the overall numbers were, did the theists outdo the atheists overall with a greater body count via superior arguments.
Dead for you maybe.spike wrote:You are right, this God debate is a dead-end issue and a waste of time. I am sorry to see that PN is wasting more print on it.