Skip navigation
Sidebar -

Advanced search options →

Welcome

Welcome to CEMB forum.
Please login or register. Did you miss your activation email?

Donations

Help keep the Forum going!
Click on Kitty to donate:

Kitty is lost

Recent Posts


Lights on the way
by akay
November 22, 2024, 02:51 PM

Do humans have needed kno...
November 22, 2024, 06:45 AM

What music are you listen...
by zeca
November 21, 2024, 08:08 PM

Gaza assault
November 21, 2024, 07:56 PM

Qur'anic studies today
by zeca
November 21, 2024, 05:07 PM

New Britain
November 20, 2024, 05:41 PM

اضواء على الطريق ....... ...
by akay
November 20, 2024, 09:02 AM

Marcion and the introduct...
by zeca
November 19, 2024, 11:36 PM

Dutch elections
by zeca
November 15, 2024, 10:11 PM

Random Islamic History Po...
by zeca
November 15, 2024, 08:46 PM

AMRIKAAA Land of Free .....
November 07, 2024, 09:56 AM

The origins of Judaism
by zeca
November 02, 2024, 12:56 PM

Theme Changer

 Topic: Why atheists fail to persuade theists

 (Read 36450 times)
  • 12 3 ... 8 Next page « Previous thread | Next thread »
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     OP - December 22, 2013, 02:35 PM

    Most people have the wrong epistemology, theists and atheists alike. One's epistemology is how he determines what is true and what is false.

    Karl Popper found this mistake and called it Justificationism. This is how justification is supposed to work. Say you have an idea. For this idea to be believed, i.e. considered knowledge, i.e. considered true, the idea must be justified.

    The problem with this epistemology is that it’s impossible to work — an idea can never be justified. Whatever justification one has for the idea, is itself an idea, so by justificationism's own reasoning, the justification needs a justification to justify it so that it can be considered true. But then, in order to consider that justification true, we need another justification for it. And so on, forever. This is an infinite regression problem that needs a solution.

    So what’s the solution? Popper figured out that the solution is to break the cycle by not seeking justification at all.[1] Instead, he said that an idea is considered (tentatively) true if there are no criticisms of that idea [2] — a criticism is an explanation of a flaw in an idea.[3]

    To be clear about how criticism works, we need to understand that flaws can only make sense in the context of a problem. Ideas are solutions to problems. So if there is a criticism of an idea, it explains why the idea fails to solve the problem — that is it's flaw.[3]

    Now, even if an idea has a criticism, thus rendering the idea false, the criticism itself could be wrong. So if somebody comes along with a criticism of that criticism, then the idea is rendered true again. So this means that an idea can be true, but only tentatively, until a criticism of it is found. So instead of using the terms true and false, it’s better to use the terms unrefuted and refuted because it's more clear that these labels are always treated as tentative.

    So let’s do an example. Isaac Newton created his theory of gravity.[4] No one had any criticisms of it for 300 years. During that time, the theory was unrefuted (aka tentatively true). Then Einstein showed that Newton’s theory doesn’t work for anything going near the speed of light. For 300 years scientists thought that Newton’s theory was true — would never be refuted — but they were wrong. Einstein refuted it. [To be clear, we still use Newton’s theory of gravity in situations where the objects are not going near the speed of light because it’s a pretty good approximation as long as you stay within these constraints.]

    Now, what some atheists do is to say that the God idea is wrong because it’s not justified by evidence. And this is a mistake because justification is a mistake. And the theists can claim the same thing: that the idea that God doesn't exist is wrong because it’s not justified by evidence — and they are correct about that. So, by atheists using this false epistemology in their arguments, they give theists the same tool to use in their counter-arguments, thus creating a stalemate. But the only reason this is a stalemate is because the atheists are framing the problem like this: You don't have evidence to justify your claim.[5]

    The Popperian way to think about this is to think about which idea is unrefuted and which is refuted. Now to be clear, a refutation does not require physical evidence gathered from experiments. A refutation can be an explanation of a flaw in an idea.

    So let’s consider the God and No-God ideas. Both the God idea and the No-God idea have no evidence against them. But let’s ask why the God idea doesn’t have any evidence against it. It’s because the God idea doesn’t make any testable predictions.[6] And without testable predictions, we cannot design an experiment that could test it. So it's not a scientific theory. But that doesn’t mean that we should consider it true. We should also look for criticisms of the idea that don't use physical evidence..

    As for the No-God idea, it also doesn’t make any testable predictions. But that’s not really the rival idea to God. The competing idea is Evolution. And the Evolution theory does make testable predictions. And to date, we haven’t found any evidence that refutes the theory of Evolution. To be clear, that a theory makes testable predictions, means that it’s a scientific theory. So the Evolution theory is a scientific theory that hasn’t been refuted by evidence, while the God idea is not a scientific theory and thus cannot have any physical evidence against it because it doesn’t even make any testable predictions.

    But as I said before, we don’t need physical evidence to refute ideas. We can do with criticism alone. If we have just one unrefuted criticism of an idea, then that idea is refuted.

    So are there any criticisms of the God idea? Well in order to figure that out, let’s consider what problem the God idea is supposed to be solving. The most common problem that theists claim the God idea solves is this [7]:

    "Where does 'apparent design' come from? Where does complexity come from? Where do adaptations come from? Where do useful or purposeful things come from? All of these questions are fundamentally asking roughly the same thing: Where does knowledge come from?" (source: fallibleideas.com[slash]evolution-and-knowledge).

    Now, everyone knows that people create knowledge, but where did people come from?

    The God idea attempts to solve this problem by saying that God created people. But this doesn’t solve the problem — all it does is add a layer of indirection. God is a complex, intelligent being, like people. God contains knowledge, so where did God come from?

    So that’s the contradiction. The “solution” does not solve the problem because all it does is create a new problem of the same type: What created God?

    The solution to this problem should address the question of knowledge, rather than sidestep it.

    The solution to this problem is Evolution. For more on that, see _Evolution and Knowledge_, by Elliot Temple (link: fallibleideas.com[slash]evolution-and-knowledge).


    --------------[ 1 ]---------------

    Q: But this clearly doesn't apply to mathematics because mathematics is only concerned with proof and justification. And without either of these two elements, you have nothing (as far as mathematics is concerned).

    A: I disagree. When mathematicians created their math ideas, they did it by guessing ideas, and criticizes their guesses. What you're calling a proof is an argument that argues for the math idea. When a math guy creates an argument (aka proof), he goes through many iterations before he lands on something he's happy with, something that addresses all of his own criticism. The point is that the argument is fallible, and the mathematician treats it that way.


    --------------[ 2 ]---------------

    Q: So as long as I say something is true, even if it isn't it's true until someone says "no it isnt" then what they say becomes the truth. I don't think we would get very far if this were the case.

    A: That's how the US judicial system works. And I think it works pretty good. Somebody might go to jail because of a theory of his guilt, but the case can always be appealed, because the court knows that it's possible something was wrong with the evidence, or something else. So even the courts know that their decisions are tentative.

    Q: I don't know if I agree. There is a burden of proof requirement in criminal cases in the US. It's a fallible system and innocent people do get convicted. That theory in the op has no burden of proof. It's simply states because "I say so"

    A: No you’ve misunderstood. If “you say so” that I’m guilty by doing specific thing X. And “I say so” that I’m innocent by doing specific thing Y instead, and if there is no evidence to refute either claim, then it’s a stalemate — both are refuted — innocent until proven guilty.


    --------------[ 3 ]---------------

    Q: Rami, if I am correct, you are arguing that the default position for any argument should be that it is correct until it is criticized. I do not think this is reasonable. For one thing, it is difficult to define what a criticism is. How do we show something is a criticism?

    A: My answer is long so I decided to blog it: How does criticism work? (link: ramirustom.blogspot.com[slash]2013[slash]12[slash]how-does-criticism-work.html)


    --------------[ 4 ]---------------

    Q: You're using the wrong definitions for theory, hypothesis, and law. So your essay is wrong.

    A: No. Just because I use different words than you do, that doesn't mean that my ideas are different than yours. Two people can say the same sentences and mean different ideas by them. Also, two people can say different sentences and mean the same ideas by them. So, the words theory, hypothesis, and law, in the way I used them, are all the same thing in that they are testable/falsifiable theories, which is what gives them scientific status. As Popper explained, a theory is scientific if and only if it can, in principle, be ruled out by physical evidence. This is known as The Line of Demarcation -- it separates science from non-science. Note that some people claim to be doing science but they don't create testable/falsifiable theories and test them, so they aren't doing science since they aren't doing the scientific method. So it's important to be selective with which theories get to be classified as scientific. Just because it's claimed to be scientific doesn't mean it is. Make your own judgement call. Don't trust it just because it's claimed to be scientific.


    --------------[ 5 ]---------------

    Q: If (physical) evidence isn't used as justification in support of a theory, then how is it used?

    A: Evidence refutes theories. Evidence is criticism. To be clear, only scientific theories can be ruled out by evidence.




    --------------[ 6 ]---------------

    With the God idea I'm talking about the harder case where it doesn't make any testable predictions. I know that some people's idea of God does make testable predictions, but I didn't talk about that in my essay because that's easier to refute, since you can refute it with physical evidence.


    --------------[ 7 ]---------------

    There are some other common reasons people give for believing in God which I explain in another essay, _Is God real?_ (link: ramirustom.blogspot.com[slash]2012[slash]09[slash]is-god-real.html).


    ----[ What about morality? ]-----

    Q: If people become atheists, doesn't that mean they will become immoral?

    A: Why would that happen? Morality is a body of knowledge about what is right and wrong. Humans can create any kind of knowledge, including moral knowledge. So just because a person leaves a religion, that doesn't mean he'll throw out his morality. For example, a christian knows that murder is wrong. If he stops believing in god and christianity, that doesn't mean that he'll stop believing that murder is wrong.


    -----[ more on persuading ]-----

    Q: How do I persuade a theist?

    A: Ask him, "What question does your god claim answer?"  Or "What problem does your god claim solve?"  That puts the ball in his court. Don't take the ball back until he has given you a question to work with. Then you criticize it. Show how their god claim doesn't solve their intended problem. ~~~ If you are arguing with a theist and you're not sure how to criticize his question, post it here and I'll help you. Or email me privately.

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    See my other articles:

    Why Most Terrorists Are Muslims
    http://www.councilofexmuslims.com/index.php?topic=25471.new#new

    Is God real?
    http://www.councilofexmuslims.com/index.php?topic=25473.0

    Why don't ex-Muslims go public?
    http://www.councilofexmuslims.com/index.php?topic=25472.0
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #1 - December 22, 2013, 03:38 PM

    Now, what some atheists do is to say that the God idea is wrong because it’s not justified by evidence. And this is a mistake because justification is a mistake. And the theists can claim the same thing: that the idea that God doesn't exist is wrong because it’s not justified by evidence — and they are correct about that. So, by atheists using this false epistemology in their arguments, they give theists the same tool to use in their counter-arguments, thus creating a stalemate. But the only reason this is a stalemate is because the atheists are framing the problem like this: You don't have evidence to justify your claim.


    I don't agree. The theist is both proposing and accepting something. The atheist is doing neither. There is no symmetry between the two positions.

    There is no requirement that the atheist insist there is no God. Some obviously do, whether by epistemological naivety or reasonable, argued conviction. So the idea of the requirement for justification does not necessarily apply to the atheist by default. Only to those individuals who take a step beyond atheism proper to affirm their own individual conclusion. It seems to me to be astonishingly unreasonable to expect that just because one rejects a god they are therefore making a claim about God of their own that requires justification. What if the atheist affirms that there is no evidence, but concludes that the question is therefore irresolvable? Is that not valid? It's not as simple as believing God exists or believing God does not exist. I think this deflection of the same requirement onto the atheist merely illustrates the simplistic and shallow nature of the conclusions a typical theist holds and the methods they were drawn by and I don't see how it's reasonable. But I do see how it's still reasonable to expect justification from the theist (assuming they wish to gain traction).

    Moreover, in what sense do you mean 'God'? God, as 'sub specie aeternitatis', the 'view from eternity', is a useful philosophical tool or thought experiment. The view of maximum abstraction and objectivity. Thinking beings have the capacity to transcend their own species-specific perspective and explore that vantage as a hypothetical. This is not the God that the atheist rejects. The atheist rejects the peculiar God concept presented by the theist, and the reason for rejection might vary depending upon the nature and construction of that concept. It might be rejected for a number of reasons. Not necessarily because there is no evidence. They might stumble upon an exception. "God is all, the harmony of existence, the connectedness of mutually arising systems" would probably only be rejected on the grounds of God being a tautology with other, less religiously-loaded words.

    You say some atheists, though. Not all. But even still, I am not convinced that rejecting something on the grounds of no evidential justification is the same thing as making the hard conclusion that the thing absolutely does not exist. It is unfair to expect everyone make that kind of commitment in theoretical terrain where everyone is still just making shit up. I don't even necessarily 'believe' in the Big Bang. I believe people smarter than me, experts in specialised fields who devote their entire career to that area of study and who have been working and corroborating together from all around the world for decades, know quite a bit more about it than me. And I'm comfortable deferring to them and provisionally accepting that the Big Bag is the best explanation we have (not that it is true). I believe I understand to some extent the science behind the Big Bang theory. But I'm quite happy to hold off on belief on the veracity of it until it's been demonstrably proven. And that goes for any theory. And so, as an atheist, I will reserve my judgement and enjoy perusing the data and discoveries, and perhaps even see great leaps and bounds in knowledge during my lifetime. I don't need ultimate truth of this one particular dilemma to give my life meaning. Nor do I need to throw my chips in and bet on belief in any theory surrounding that one dilemma. I'm happy to just let the universe be discovered as she is, whatever she turns out to be.

    One could argue that we are creatures of emotion, that rejection of God is in fact the same as a firm conviction in practice, a sustained personal faith or confidence in the truth or falsity of a proposition. I do not think this is always the case. For me, the question of the existence of God does not fall into that category of things. God has no value in the formula of my worldview or the day-to-day management of my psyche, except perhaps as the experiment of thought I mentioned earlier. I do not have a sustained personal faith in the truth of a 'belief' about God. God is, literally, meaningless. A petty, silly, tiny, insignificant idea. My concerns are cosmic and universal, not captive by a small patch of land in the Middle East and the ignorant tribal naval gazing that happened there millennia ago.

    Too fucking busy, and vice versa.
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #2 - December 22, 2013, 03:53 PM

    i messed up this comment
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #3 - December 22, 2013, 03:54 PM

    I don't agree. The theist is both proposing and accepting something. The atheist is doing neither. There is no symmetry between the two positions.


    I don’t understand what you are disagreeing with.

    I said that *some* atheists ask for evidence of god. And I said that there is no evidence. And I said that theists reply to that by asking for evidence that there is no god. And I said that there is no evidence for that either (since the idea of god is not a testable theory — to be clear, I’m talking about the harder god claim, the one that doesn’t make any testable predictions).

    The symmetry here is that both the atheist and the theist are asking for evidence of the other guy’s position, and neither of their positions have any evidence to refute the other guy’s position.

    Which part of this are you disagreeing with?
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #4 - December 22, 2013, 04:04 PM

    I don't agree that it's unreasonable, mistaken, or false to expect justification or evidence for a professed belief in a god. Your grounds for it being unreasonable, at least as far as I understand you, is that it can be reversed. I think the theist certainly can and will try to reverse it, but I don't see that reversal as valid since the symmetry isn't there.

    I think this reversal is a failure on the part of the theist, not on the part of the atheist. Atheists are certainly welcome to adapt their arguments around that common theist move, but they should not be obliged to. I certainly wouldn't. I would not afford religious claims any concession that I do not already afford other types of ideological claims.

    Too fucking busy, and vice versa.
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #5 - December 22, 2013, 04:19 PM

    If you make a claim I don't believe, the burden of proof is on you. To ask for proof about something's lack of existence is idiotic. Would you like me to prove to you I wasn't abducted by aliens when I was six? Don't be silly. Proof that I was is what's needed, not that I wasn't.

    `But I don't want to go among mad people,' Alice remarked.
     `Oh, you can't help that,' said the Cat: `we're all mad here. I'm mad.  You're mad.'
     `How do you know I'm mad?' said Alice.
     `You must be,' said the Cat, `or you wouldn't have come here.'
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #6 - December 22, 2013, 04:32 PM

    I don't agree that it's unreasonable, mistaken, or false to expect justification or evidence for a professed belief in a god. Your grounds for it being unreasonable, at least as far as I understand you, is that it can be reversed. I think the theist certainly can and will try to reverse it, but I don't see that reversal as valid since the symmetry isn't there.

    I think this reversal is a failure on the part of the theist, not on the part of the atheist. Atheists are certainly welcome to adapt their arguments around that common theist move, but they should not be obliged to. I certainly wouldn't. I would not afford religious claims any concession that I do not already afford other types of ideological claims.


    I still don't understand what you're saying. My essay refutes the idea that justification is possible, and you're not even addressing this part. Do you have a counter-argument to my argument that justification is impossible?

    Further, I did not claim that evidence acts as justification. It doesn't. Evidence works by refuting theories, not by "justifying" them. I explained this in my essay. I'll repeat it here:

    Q: If (physical) evidence isn't used as justification in support of a theory, then how is it used?

    A: Evidence refutes theories. Evidence is criticism.
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #7 - December 22, 2013, 04:34 PM

    If you make a claim I don't believe, the burden of proof is on you. To ask for proof about something's lack of existence is idiotic. Would you like me to prove to you I wasn't abducted by aliens when I was six? Don't be silly. Proof that I was is what's needed, not that I wasn't.


    I'm not clear on what you mean by "burden of proof"? Are you referring to *physical evidence supporting a theory*? Or *physical evidence refuting a theory*?
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #8 - December 22, 2013, 04:49 PM

    Evidence or argument establishing a fact or the truth of a statement i.e. "you will be asked to give proof of your identity". Evidence, verification, corroboration, authentication, confirmation, certification, validation, attestation, demonstration, substantiation, etc.

    I have as much need to prove to someone claiming there is a god that there is no god as I need to prove to someone claiming vampires are real that there are no vampires. The burden of proof rests with the one making the claim. Until such a time I feel no need whatsoever to walk around with garlic, crucifixes, silver, stakes or holy water in case Dracula leaps out of the shadows as I'm making my way home.

    `But I don't want to go among mad people,' Alice remarked.
     `Oh, you can't help that,' said the Cat: `we're all mad here. I'm mad.  You're mad.'
     `How do you know I'm mad?' said Alice.
     `You must be,' said the Cat, `or you wouldn't have come here.'
  • Re: Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #9 - December 22, 2013, 04:55 PM

    I still don't understand what you're saying. My essay refutes the idea that justification is possible, and you're not even addressing this part. Do you have a counter-argument to my argument that justification is impossible?

    You're correct. I am indeed not addressing that part. I am addressing another part that is not that part.

    I think justification is a thing of degree. In the context of your argument, of two parties trying to convince each other, what a person would accept as justification is a matter or personal intellectual satisfaction.

    Further, I did not claim that evidence acts as justification. It doesn't.

    I didn't say you did. But now that you mention it, I disagree with that also. Evidence can of course justify a claim. Evidence can show something to be correct or reasonable.

    Too fucking busy, and vice versa.
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #10 - December 22, 2013, 08:06 PM

    Ishina said:

    //I think justification is a thing of degree. In the context of your argument, of two parties trying to convince each other, what a person would accept as justification is a matter or personal intellectual satisfaction.//

    So what you’re saying is — correct me if I’m wrong — that if you have two rival theories, and if each of them had a justification, then you would accept the justification that satisfies you the most. But this is a mistake. What you need is a criticism of one or the other rival theories. Once you have a criticism of either of them, then the justification is refuted, leaving the rival one unrefuted.

    Do you see what I mean?


    //But now that you mention it, I disagree with that also. Evidence can of course justify a claim. Evidence can show something to be correct or reasonable.//

    No, evidence doesn’t work that way. Evidence can only be used to refute theories.

    To illustrate this, please consider the following hypothetical situation:

    Say you found a swan for the first time, and it was white. Let’s say you guessed the theory that: All swans are white.

    So then you decided to test your theory by looking for more swans to see what color they are. Say you found 10 more swans and they were all white. Your theory is still in tact. Now, would you say that these 11 pieces of evidence “show something to be correct”? If so, that’s a mistake because…

    Now let’s say you went looking some more, and you found a black swan. So this 12th piece of evidence refutes your theory. Which raises the question: How could the 11 pieces of evidence show that the 1st theory is correct when now they don’t do that?
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #11 - December 22, 2013, 08:12 PM

    Evidence or argument establishing a fact or the truth of a statement i.e. "you will be asked to give proof of your identity".

    Yes, and if you are a well-trained thief, you can fake that identity, which means that the "proof of your identity" could be wrong.

    So evidence cannot be used to prove a theory true. Evidence can only be used to prove a theory false.

    Evidence, verification, corroboration, authentication, confirmation, certification, validation, attestation, demonstration, substantiation, etc.

    I have as much need to prove to someone claiming there is a god that there is no god as I need to prove to someone claiming vampires are real that there are no vampires. The burden of proof rests with the one making the claim. Until such a time I feel no need whatsoever to walk around with garlic, crucifixes, silver, stakes or holy water in case Dracula leaps out of the shadows as I'm making my way home.

    I agree that any theory (god, vampires, etc) that doesn't make any testable predictions, can't be tested, which means that it's not a scientific theory.

    Is that what you mean?
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #12 - December 22, 2013, 08:13 PM

    Quote
    No, evidence doesn’t work that way.


    Yes it does.

    Quote
    Evidence can only be used to refute theories.


    It's used to both prove and refute.

    Quote
    Say you found a swan for the first time, and it was white. Let’s say you guessed the theory that: All swans are white.

    So then you decided to test your theory by looking for more swans to see what color they are. Say you found 10 more swans and they were all white. Your theory is still in tact. Now, would you say that these 11 pieces of evidence “show something to be correct”? If so, that’s a mistake because…


    So a dodgy bit of empirical evidence means something is true? No, it does not. No one worth their salt would say that. You can say that you've found such and such but all that proves is that you found 11 white swans. there's so much more to establishing something as correct.

    Quote
    Now let’s say you went looking some more, and you found a black swan. So this 12th piece of evidence refutes your theory. Which raises the question: How could the 11 pieces of evidence show that the 1st theory is correct when now they don’t do that?


    How can there be white people in the world when black people exist?

    `But I don't want to go among mad people,' Alice remarked.
     `Oh, you can't help that,' said the Cat: `we're all mad here. I'm mad.  You're mad.'
     `How do you know I'm mad?' said Alice.
     `You must be,' said the Cat, `or you wouldn't have come here.'
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #13 - December 22, 2013, 08:16 PM

    You cannot prove that something does not exist. I do not need to prove anything if I don't believe in the existing of God. God is like a non-existing chair in an empty room. There is no chair, the room is empty. It is upto a believer to show (prove) that God exists.

    वासुदैव कुटुम्बकम्
    Entire World is One Family
    سارا سنسار ايک پريوار ہے
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #14 - December 22, 2013, 08:20 PM

    Quote
    Yes, and if you are a well-trained thief, you can fake that identity, which means that the "proof of your identity" could be wrong.

    So evidence cannot be used to prove a theory true. Evidence can only be used to prove a theory false.


    I've wrote several comments in response to this, and I still can't decide the best way to reply to that statement.

    Quote
    I agree that any theory (god, vampires, etc) that doesn't make any testable predictions, can't be tested, which means that it's not a scientific theory.

    Is that what you mean?


    No, I mean if you want to convince me something is true the burden of proof is on you, not me. Why? Because one of us it trying to convince someone of something, the other isn't.

    `But I don't want to go among mad people,' Alice remarked.
     `Oh, you can't help that,' said the Cat: `we're all mad here. I'm mad.  You're mad.'
     `How do you know I'm mad?' said Alice.
     `You must be,' said the Cat, `or you wouldn't have come here.'
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #15 - December 22, 2013, 08:21 PM

    Quote
    You cannot prove that something does not exist. I do not need to prove anything if I don't believe in the existing of God. God is like a non-existing chair in an empty room. There is no chair, the room is empty. It is upto a believer to show (prove) that God exists.


    I can't prove there isn't a teapot orbiting the Earth. I can however state I have no reason whatsoever to believe this is true.

    `But I don't want to go among mad people,' Alice remarked.
     `Oh, you can't help that,' said the Cat: `we're all mad here. I'm mad.  You're mad.'
     `How do you know I'm mad?' said Alice.
     `You must be,' said the Cat, `or you wouldn't have come here.'
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #16 - December 22, 2013, 08:26 PM

    I take a different direction about this.  I think theistic statements about gods always include theories (apart from some philosophical gods no one worships which I would define as not theistic) that these gods do stuff, thunderbolts, helping Achilles, saving, making heaven and earth, being good, loving...

    They sometimes want reciprocity - worship, sacrifice, rituals....

    So they are weak hypotheses and theories, easily refuted for example by Franklin building lightning rods, or Darwin asking where is the designer?

    I go further - I have theories showing how and why gods were invented and have evolved.  If I go into a cave, make a sound, hear ann echo, what else is it but the gods talking to me?

    Theists have already ben persuaded.  Many believe that by making a lot of noise, much like the wizard of oz, they can fool people into believing in their gods.  The problem is that our brains very easily hoover up poor data.

    When you are a Bear of Very Little Brain, and you Think of Things, you find sometimes that a Thing which seemed very Thingish inside you is quite different when it gets out into the open and has other people looking at it.


    A.A. Milne,

    "We cannot slaughter each other out of the human impasse"
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #17 - December 22, 2013, 08:26 PM

    So a dodgy bit of empirical evidence means something is true?

    I said no such thing. You don't even know what I'm talking about. I said that evidence means something is false!

    You're not even listening to me. You're not even trying to understand what I'm saying.

    No, it does not. No one worth their salt would say that.  

    That's not an argument. Your unargued assertions are not persuasive.

    By the way, this is one of the reasons that theists aren't persuaded by atheists. It's because some atheists (including you) don't make arguments much and instead you make unargued assertioned and personal attacks ("no one worth their salt would say what you just said").

    You can say that you've found such and such but all that proves is that you found 11 white swans. there's so much more to establishing something as correct.

    Unargued assertion. Please provide your argument.
    How can there be white people in the world when black people exist?

    What? I don't understand how that question is relevant to our discussion.

    Since I think the scientific method is going to be discussed soon in this discussion, I'll go ahead and explain it:

    The method works like this:

    (1) (a) Create a testable theory. (b) Design an experiment that could refute it.

    (2) (a) Run the experiment and collect the result. (b) Interpret the result.

    If (2b) rules out the theory, then go back to (1a) and create another testable theory — maybe from the refuted testable theory by changing a part of it so that the new version doesn’t contradict the existing evidence.

    Note that every step is fallible. So you want to critically question every step. So for (2a), that means that the experiment is repeated many times and by many people.
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #18 - December 22, 2013, 08:28 PM

    I can't prove there isn't a teapot orbiting the Earth. I can however state I have no reason whatsoever to believe this is true.


    You don't *need* to prove that there doesn't exist a teapot orbiting the Earth. You can refute the claim by looking for contradictions (which doesn't require physical evidence).
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #19 - December 22, 2013, 08:31 PM

    I take a different direction about this.  I think theistic statements about gods always include theories (apart from some philosophical gods no one worships which I would define as not theistic) that these gods do stuff, thunderbolts, helping Achilles, saving, making heaven and earth, being good, loving...

    They sometimes want reciprocity - worship, sacrifice, rituals....

    So they are weak hypotheses and theories, easily refuted for example by Franklin building lightning rods, or Darwin asking where is the designer?

    I go further - I have theories showing how and why gods were invented and have evolved.  If I go into a cave, make a sound, hear ann echo, what else is it but the gods talking to me?

    I'm not clear on why you think your approach is different than mine. I said that we can refute the god claim by looking for contradictions, which seems to be what you just said. Did I misunderstand you? Or did you misunderstand my essay?
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #20 - December 22, 2013, 08:33 PM

    Quote
    That's not an argument. Your unargued assertions are not persuasive.

    By the way, this is one of the reasons that theists aren't persuaded by atheists. It's because some atheists (including you) don't make arguments much and instead you make unargued assertioned and personal attacks


    I didn't mean it as a personal attack, and I'm not trying to persuade you. All I've done is say I disagree. You're quite right that it's not an argument. Also, I never said I'm an atheist.

    `But I don't want to go among mad people,' Alice remarked.
     `Oh, you can't help that,' said the Cat: `we're all mad here. I'm mad.  You're mad.'
     `How do you know I'm mad?' said Alice.
     `You must be,' said the Cat, `or you wouldn't have come here.'
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #21 - December 22, 2013, 08:35 PM

    I think you need to replace all the uses of Theist and theism with Deist and deism. The Theist concept of God has many distinct differences than the version you are talking about. Philosophical arguments are merely additions to the theism concept of God. Sure many of these philosophical arguments do not have evidence for or against, hence why these are restricted to philosophy and not science. However many of the actions taken by theistic God(s) can be tested using the scientific method. Prayer for example is a major theme with the three Abrahamic God(s). We can test prayer to see if these indeed net a result. Many followers claim God answered their prayers, this is something we can indeed test. Usually such test shows prayer is nothing more than personal experience devoid of any positive results. People link the closest positive event with the prayer in an attempt to legitimize prayer actually works. Simply put correlation does not imply causation.

    Person A is sick and prays to become well, or healed. Person A become well. All other factors be it medical, biological, etc are discounted due to the belief prayer works. Likewise I could assume by not stepping on a crack will result in not breaking my mother's back. In both cases actions result in what appears to be confirmation of both views. However the moment prayer does not work, it has been falsified. Likewise by stepping on a crack which doesn't result in my mother's back being broken my view is falsified. Again correlation does not imply causation.

    Also theistic God(s) takes direct action in the world which is documented in many religious texts. If these events are false one can assume the concept of God presented by a brand of theism is incorrect or their texts are in error. However these texts are used as the foundation of theistic religions not philosophy. Philosophy is merely the additional arguments which sounds great to the believer but completely fails to link a philosophical concept of God with the theistic concept of God. These two concepts share attributes but only the theistic version is the one that actively takes part in the world. Be it Moses, Noah, Abraham, Mohammad, Jesus, etc. Once these texts no longer represent history and reality any such foundation is undermined and can be questioned. If God did indeed flood the world there would be evidence of such an event. If there is no evidence I can dismiss part of the theistic claim. This is why religion has continually reinvented itself. What was once taken literal is not longer literal. However by doing so the Theist undermine their own religion be it texts, doctrine, dogma, etc. The believer has shown their religions are man made tailored to fit the current norms of a society. For example slavery was fully condoned by the 3 A's. There are regulation for slavery in each text. Slavery was accepted by religion and defended by religion. Flip forward in time slavery is now seen as immoral so the believer reads such norms of society into their text. Yet the text themselves are completely devoid of condemnation of slavery. For an all knowing being there should be at least mention of the fact that in a few hundred years people would be appalled at the idea of enslaving their fellow man. For a God that is unable change the course of history for the betterment of mankind, when all texts supposedly serve this purpose, shows most theistic God(s) are inept or fiction. Considering the attributes assigned to theses God(s) it should not be inept so to my conclusion is it is a fictional character.

    My apologies if I took this in a different direction but I feel that you are combining theism's God(s) and philosophical God(s) into one and the same. This is not the case.
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #22 - December 22, 2013, 08:39 PM

    Quote
    I'm not clear on why you think your approach is different than mine. I said that we can refute the god claim by looking for contradictions, which seems to be what you just said. Did I misunderstand you? Or did you misunderstand my essay?


    I thought you said religious views were metaphysical, from Popper, I am saying they are theories and thus refutable.

    When you are a Bear of Very Little Brain, and you Think of Things, you find sometimes that a Thing which seemed very Thingish inside you is quite different when it gets out into the open and has other people looking at it.


    A.A. Milne,

    "We cannot slaughter each other out of the human impasse"
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #23 - December 22, 2013, 08:45 PM

    What if the atheist affirms that there is no evidence, but concludes that the question is therefore irresolvable? Is that not valid?


    That would make them an agnostic or an agnostic atheist.

    Interesting thread overall.

    "Work without hope draws nectar in a sieve, and hope without an object cannot live." -Coleridge

    http://sinofgreed.wordpress.com/
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #24 - December 22, 2013, 08:52 PM

    I thought you said religious views were metaphysical, from Popper, I am saying they are theories and thus refutable.


    Religious views are ideas. All ideas are refutable.

    Everything a human mind can think, is an idea. Every idea is on the table -- ready to be refuted.
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #25 - December 22, 2013, 08:52 PM

    So what you’re saying is — correct me if I’m wrong — that if you have two rival theories, and if each of them had a justification, then you would accept the justification that satisfies you the most.

    I would accept the theory that had the most explanatory power. Or maybe I wouldn't. If a question is so vague and far reaching that there are rival theories each with justification, I'd just conclude the question is irresolvable at this point. But when is anything like that in reality?

    If something is true, all the sciences will converge upon it. If one theory has overwhelming evidence in favour of it and has better explanatory power, obviously I would accept it. Obviously I would feel it was a justified theory. I don't see a problem with that. I wouldn't necessarily be concluding the theory is true, but rather concluding the theory to be the 'most true' one we have at the moment.

    But this is a mistake. What you need is a criticism of one or the other rival theories. Once you have a criticism of either of them, then the justification is refuted, leaving the rival one unrefuted.

    Do you see what I mean?

    And if both theories are criticised?

    No, evidence doesn’t work that way. Evidence can only be used to refute theories.

    In your own novelty model, where you've defined evidence as such, sure. But that definition of evidence is not currency outside of your personal model. It's just an ad hoc component of your model. There is such a thing as supporting evidence outside of your model, in the real world.

    Too fucking busy, and vice versa.
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #26 - December 22, 2013, 08:56 PM

    What if the atheist affirms that there is no evidence, but concludes that the question is therefore irresolvable? Is that not valid?


    He's wrong because EVERY idea is refutable. We don't need physical evidence to refute theories. We can refute a theory by just pointing out a contradiction in it.
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #27 - December 22, 2013, 09:02 PM

    He's wrong because EVERY idea is refutable. We don't need physical evidence to refute theories. We can refute a theory by just pointing out a contradiction in it.

    This isn't correct. If the question is "does God exist?" and there is no evidence of it, concluding that the question is irresolvable at this point is not wrong. There is no theory to refute at that stage.

    Too fucking busy, and vice versa.
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #28 - December 22, 2013, 09:03 PM

    He's wrong because EVERY idea is refutable. We don't need physical evidence to refute theories. We can refute a theory by just pointing out a contradiction in it.

    There is no contradiction in that. It's simply stating that the person thinks that most likely there is no god, but they can't be sure because there is no real evidence to prove or disprove the god theory. It's the most logical stance to take actually.

    "Work without hope draws nectar in a sieve, and hope without an object cannot live." -Coleridge

    http://sinofgreed.wordpress.com/
  • Why atheists fail to persuade theists
     Reply #29 - December 22, 2013, 09:04 PM

    Are you saying Popper's category of metaphysical - not refutable - was incorrect?

    When you are a Bear of Very Little Brain, and you Think of Things, you find sometimes that a Thing which seemed very Thingish inside you is quite different when it gets out into the open and has other people looking at it.


    A.A. Milne,

    "We cannot slaughter each other out of the human impasse"
  • 12 3 ... 8 Next page « Previous thread | Next thread »