Seraph wrote:August wrote:Seraph wrote:August wrote:Seraph, can absolute truth be known or not?
I think you can believe a truth that is in fact the absolute truth, but even if you do you have no way of knowing for sure that it is the absolute truth. You can only believe whether or not something is
likely to be the absolute truth.
Is that statement absolutely true or not? How do you know that it is or isn't?
Does God exist or not?
If I had a nickle for every time I've that counterpoint.
I do not know if it is absolutely true. It could be the case that someone someone knows something absolutely without any shadow of a doubt. In fact, many would say that the statement "My mind exists" could be said to be an absolute truth that can be known beyond any doubt. Either way, knowledge that can known beyond ANY doubt is exceptionally rare.
And I do not know for certain whether God exists or not. I believe He does, but I cannot say that I know beyond all doubt that He does and I don't think anyone really can in this life. Unless they've actually met God and are 100% certain it wasn't an illusion, I don't think one can be absolutely sure.
So ultimately the non-believer has no reason to agree with you, or even listen to you. This line of argumentation just results in an infinite regression, and ultimate skepticism that nothing can be true or not true.
However, we do know that some things are absolutely true. For example, we know that logic is absolutely true...not the laws of logic, but the underlying aspects of reality described by the laws.
If there are underlying aspects of reality that are absolutely true, then those are accepted as brute fact, or presuppositions. In that same manner, you have two choices when entering any debate or argument, you either accept that God exists, or you don't, and you argue from whichever perspective. However, arguing from the position that God does not exist, and then trying to prove from there that He does, only leads to what you portray, infinite regression and skepticism, and no argument of certainty.
Your approach is exactly what Richard Dawkins does. He never says that God does not exist, but says that there is a high probability that He doesn't. Your counterargument is that there is a high probability that He does. That does not 1. account for all the arguments, 2. account for all the evidence, and 3. establish anything as fact. In fact, the questions that need to be answered when we discuss this are mostly logically prior to probability arguments that result from the scientific method, which in itself can never be proven valid by its own rules.
The existence of God is a logically primitive proposition, not a logically derivative proposition. The existence of God is not a deductive or inductive consequence of the premises of an argument, but the very logical and metaphysical basis of argument, and the possibility of the premises itself. The existence of God is necessary, not contingent, and therefore cannot be falsified nor proven using inductive reasoning. You cannot start from a place where you assume that certain axioms are more certain than the existence of God, and reason in a straight line from there to the existence of God. That positions God's existence as a logical derivative, and not logical primitive.
Other arguments for God's existence fail because they do not necessarily portray the true character of God, that He cannot but exist. The argument for God's existence cannot function on logical contingency.
As for charges that this is circular reasoning, any argument is susceptible to this. Your own position can very easily be shown to be circular from an epistemological point of view. All arguments start with presuppositions that are logically primitive, and therefore inherently circular. This does not mean that it is fallaciously circular though, and that is why we investigate presuppositions, including other religions, for internal logical consistency.
In the end, only the Christian God survives such scrutiny, and is His existence true from the impossibility of the contrary.