rpwiegand wrote:I add my comments here with apologies for being late to the discussion. It is an interesting one in the sense that there is more mutual respect going on here than in many similar exchanges.
Context: I am an empirical agnostic with a great deal of respect for people of many faiths. My goal is not to convince anyone of anything, but rather it is to understand Kurieuo (and others) views a bit better. Unless you have more to offer than what I've seen here, I doubt I will be convinced either. Perhaps we can just learn more about each other's beliefs.
Kurieuo jumps to an extreme here. I can't speak for Banky, but I hold a similar philosophy and require no assumption that my perceptions of reality are perfect and without error. There is a supposition that some signal from reality can be discerned with the noise of my sensory apparatus, and that I have some faculty to incorporate and filter such information, as well as to reason over it. But I would not express that as a "belief" but rather a utilitarian necessity.
Actually you have me wrong. My intentions for arguing against our perception of reality being truth conducive were other than it being my position. As I previously wrote a few posts back:
K wrote:In any case, what is wrong with basing beliefs on physical observations? I have only made mere mention that you appear to have been a positivist, and yet you appear to take a sharp exception to it. So I am left wondering why you do, since I do base a lot of my own beliefs on what I observe, and even scientific observation. Clever, or not clever, political style tactics, or not, I do not really see what the exact issue is with which you are taking exception. I just thought I was entering into a discussion, and now I have completed what I set out to do - to show the First Cause argument based on the impossibility of an actual infinite is not contradictory for the reason you gave - I really do not see any point in further pursuing this topic of discussion.
My actual belief is that my perceptions of physical reality are in fact truth conducive and to be trusted, just like my moral intuition which can't be seen, or my spiritual sense of awareness to the divine. There is no reason I can see why I should deny such things as being false. Evidentialists, particularly Positivists, on the other hand are forced to accept only that which can be observed or proven and I simply desired to highlight the folly most post modernists highlight of such a position.
K wrote:If our perceptions cannot be trusted at all, then we're at a solipsism. Perhaps that's true, but it is also useless.
Yes, It is very impractical. And since I can not prove by logic either way whether my perceptions are truthful or not, I choose to believe they are true for it is more practical for me to do so, and as it is more practical it is therefore the most logical decision for me.
rpwiegand wrote:Moreover, if it is true, no harm is done by assuming it isn't so ... since every possibility is as equally likely or absurd. So it is a useful supposition that I am capable of perceiving some aspect of reality and reasoning over it. From there naturalism is quite straightforward, as long as we are willing to concede an imperfect epistemology (which I am). Indeed, overall I will freely concede that there may be aspects of the Universe that I do not (and perhaps cannot) understand. But I've also not seen any reason to believe that I have anything more available to me to ascertain such things than my perceptions and my mind.
Since I do not assert that God doesn't exist, I don't believe more is logically required of me. As Banky conceded, so I concede: a creating God is possible.
I simply add here that on the same basis one such as yourself is prepared to accept their perception of the physical world as truth conducive, I would argue that I am by the same token entitled to the same benefit of believing God has indeed spiritually revealed Himself as backed by a great deal many others in my Christian traditions have vouched for over the centuries and until today.
rpwiegand wrote:But it's also possible that there was no such creator. I frankly have yet to make sense of your "timeless Universe" argument. Cause is a function of time, time is a structural component of the Universe, and it makes no logical sense to talk about a "cause" of the Universe. It is like saying, "What is the meaning of the negative region of the radial component in a polar coordinate system?" It has no meaning, the question makes no sense.
Yet, if the universe had a beginning as cosmology largely tends to support, then causality is introduced since there is a prior "time" when the universe was not, and then a time when the universe was. Certainly the physical time of our universe is a structural component of our universe like space, however it only makes sense to ascribe the temporalness of our universe not existing and then coming into existing as a passage of time.
rpwiegand wrote:If it makes sense to you, more power to you. But I am unconvinced by the cosmological argument ... I've heard it in many forms, by many theologians, and it all sounds like semantic equivocation or non-sequiturs to me. Even if the question made sense to me, I agree with Banky: any quality you bestow upon God to resolve the dilemma could just have easily been bestowed upon the Universe itself. I can see the argument demonstrating that a creator might be, but not that a creator must be.
It can. Yet, as I previously quite carefully reasoned, if we ascribe timelessness to a non-sentient universe then we would expect such a universe to be entirely static and unchanging. This is because change implies a time before such a change and hence temporality - time. Thus, if a non-sentient universe is timeless, there can not be cause and effect (changes) happening within it.
rpwiegand wrote:A better question in my mind is this: Why is it so important to intellectual Christians to defend the notion that a belief in the Christian God is entirely rational?
Perhaps such Christians are persuaded of God's real personal existence, and out of our love for others and that which Christ showed, we want others to come to the same important truths we have come to and be set free. The same question ought to be asked of Atheists since I find there are a great deal more on the Internet propagating their own arguments against God. If God does not exist, and this life is all they will have, why waste the time with which they could be enjoying life debating such a matter? I see such people as entirely inconsistent with their beliefs, and think such obviously hints as an emotional issue in their lives they are trying to sort out with which they for some reason or another blame on religion or Christianity.
rpwiegand wrote:How do you reconcile faith with the notion that the existence of God is reasonably inferred? I don't believe Christians are stupid or foolish, but neither do I see how reason gets one to that position. Is it really one or the other: I must admit your view is rational, or I must conclude you are a fool?
Perhaps it is best to see it as a matter of proper alignment of our heart or perception or the like. How can it be that two extremely rational and well experienced intellectuals in arguments for and against God's existence can come to such a polar opposite conclusions? Philosophy has not provided an outright answer about who is right, and neither has science. Indeed such a question can not be settled by such epistemological pursuits. If it could, it probably would have by now. I therefore believe God needs to "align" our heart and illuminate our minds and spirit to perceive Him. When this happens one will perceive God literally everywhere. And until this happens it seems one is blind to God in almost everything. Hence the Atheist, and even Agnostic, asks "where is the evidence?" Whereas for me, I just look around and wonder in amazement how anyone could miss it.
At the same token, those who do not believe in God must obviously put down the disagreement over God's existence between two equally intellectually experienced and well reasoned people to something similar. Perhaps all who believe in God really do have a deficient mind or really do have mental problems as I heard one Atheist put it. Perhaps there is a "God gene" some are born with, or perhaps this gene is what God switches on sometime in life to reveal Himself to people through? Who knows.