Friday, August 20, 2010

Major discussion with Brap Gronk

Photobucket Part 1 of 2 (maybe 3): In the category of better late than never, my comments:
Meta: "Any given argument might be rationally warranted, depending upon how it's argued. Rational warrant is like "logical permission to believe something" not actual proof. A person is logically justified in not believing something if that person truly has no reason to believe it."
Brap: I had long response written about that paragraph, but in the end it didn't really go where I thought it was going. Maybe this will be shorter. Essentially I think it boils down to when an argument for rational belief or non-belief is presented, the debaters will treat it as an argument for proof of that position and respond accordingly, as you did in this post and as your friendly (and not-so-friendly) atheist opponents do on your site. I can understand your not wanting to present your arguments as positive proof of God's existence, but that's how they are perceived and addressed by the peanut gallery. Just an observation, really, since I don't think it matters whether you call it rationally warranted belief or proof of God's existence, the responses will likely be the same.
That's true. you are right but I don't know what to do about it. If you go on not making arugments they dance around going "there's no proof, there's no proof!" Now they will never ever never never admit a God argument has  a good point, but at least they shut them up for a bit and one can tell they are worried when their answers are so bad it's obvious they are beaten they get testy and all, so the arguments are rhetorically necessary.
Meta: "Why do I say that "I have never seen God" and the other initial responses are only understandable for someone who has never read a book and knows nothing about modern thought? . . . I include these answers because they are fallacious as reasons not to believe in God."
Brap: These points were just to establish that God is not part of the perceived universe. (Dividing the universe (or whatever the universe is a subset of) into three categories: Perceived, Detectable, and Theoretical.) God may have chosen to be part of the perceived universe for some people in the Old Testament, but that doesn’t seem to be the case in modern times.
Yes God is part of the perceived universe. It just depends upon how one is perceiving it. God is not given in sense data, but that's a given. We all know that. Atheists accept all kinds of things that are not given in sense data. Phenomenological methods go around sense data.
Brap: 5. I am not aware of any evidence of God’s interaction with our world. Natural laws can explain how things work and why things happen, as far as I know.
I am part of the world, I have interaction with God. Natural law is a game atheists play. When they need to deny it's perspective nature they do so, then when they need to be so they spring back tot he point there it's prescriptive.
Meta: “We should not expect to see anything but natural laws at work in the world becasue they are made to work autonomously. But such laws are a dead give away that there has to be a mind running the universe at some level, see my 3d God argument, "fire in the equations.""
Brap: Can we tell the difference between these three things: a) A God that interacts with our world in ways that do not appear to violate the laws of nature. (In other words, undetectable.)
 Yes we can tell the difference but not in ways that demonstrate the reality of God as objectively demonstrable apart form other phenomena. So those ways discerning it may always be subjective and thus can't be used as proof, but for the person willing to make a leap of faith they can used as a guide. One way to distinguish that is not so subjective is porobablity. For exmaple the probability of religoius experience as prophetically noetic and transformative (positive, not negative at all, teaching and restoring and reviving one to a higher life) as a total accident or misfire of the neural net is so extremely improbable that the result of religious experience are a good indication of God, that's why I call it the book The Trace of God. Although that is meant to be undestood as the Derridian trace.
b) A God that does no longer interacts with our world, because nature runs on its own and works autonomously.
 God does interact with the world. The sense of the numinous and the sense of God's presence the feeling of God's love are interactions.I do believe that God answers prayer. I beieve the Lourdes miracles are good evidence to that effect.
c) A God that does not exist.
Yes obviously there's a difference in God not given in sense data and not there being no God. The term "exist" has implications for Tillich, and as a student of Tillich's thought (although unfortunately not of his classes in seminary) I have to point this out. But never mind that, there is a difference in the reality of the divine and not being able to objectively demonstrate that reality to one who does not wish to see it subjectively.
Brap:Your “fire in the equations” argument seems very similar to the argument for intelligent design, which simply theorizes that absent a more plausible scientific theory regarding the origin of an apparently designed X, some sort of intelligence is behind it.
 It's similar to a design argument but it doesn't suffer from the fatal falw in most design arguments, that we don't have something known to be designed or undersigned to compare it to. This is becuase comparing to law and mind we do have previous laws and minds to compare to. Rather than God of the gaps, this is atheism of the gaps. The argument doesn't just turn on a gap, it's a logical problem; how can you have a law based upon the tendencies of universe braining that universe into existence? What are "tendencies" derived from prior to the existence of the thing with the tendencies? That would seem to mandate prescriptive laws. But if the laws are prescriptive what else makes prescriptive laws but a mind? Dawkins wants us to be persuaded by the issue that only brains produce minds and only bodies produce brains, so God must have a body or he can't have a mind. But here's evdience of mind apart from body, yet it's based upon something we also never see, prescriptive laws apart from mind. How do you get a prescription without a mind to write it?
Brap:(Intelligence - - > Supreme Being - - > God) I will agree that the appearance of design does exist in both DNA and the laws of physics, but at one point in the not too distant past the human body appeared to be intelligently designed, as did the arrangement of the earth, moon, sun and stars.
 "supreme being" wrong terminology, violation of Tillichism. Begging question, you do not know that there is not intelligent design so you can't use the existence of things in nature as proof that such design is not needed. Here the skeptical answers suffers from the same flaw as the design argument. But again, we have minds to compare to in judging about prescriptive law.
Brap:Science eventually closed those gaps in human knowledge, so fewer and fewer gaps needed God as an explanation. Right now the last two major gaps seem to be abiogenesis and the Big Bang.
Science did not close any gaps, that's a misunderstanding. The reason religion exists is not to explain things. The reasons for belief in God are not based the need to explain the world. There are major gaps in that regard that can't be answered, such as the need for final cause. But be that as it may even that was "closed" as you say, it would not dissipate the need for religion becuase that's not what religion is predicated upon. Religion is predicated upon the sense of the numinous. That is not a gap, either you sense it or you don't. 
There is no scientific proof that demonstrates that the world was not created. There is no scientific proof that demonstrates there is no divine aspect to reality. Science is as untried and untested in that regard as it was in 1492 or 1200 or 300 BC. The situation with regard to the big bang is not so simple that all we need do is find some half assed cause to stick on it and everything is proved. As I quoted Hawking recently saying when we get all that sorted out then we will be in a position to ask "why is there something rather than nothing?" But even so science can never ask that. If you know all there is to know scientifically you can't derive a "why" from an is. You always have to step beyond scinece and enter the world of metaphysics in order to even ask the question. Indeed scinece is metaphysics but most of it's adorers will  never admit that. Science is like a southern belle who happens to be a prostitute. All her suitors spend their time hanging around outside her door refusing to accept that it could be the case, before they go in and pay for her favors. It's really metaphysics in disguise. But it can't legitimately incorporate metaphysical questions without admitting that.
Brap:But I don’t push the God of the Gaps argument because it’s really pointless. If and when science does solve that last remaining gap, the believers will simply say, “So that’s how God did it” and continue believing.
I'm already saying it because that's not a reason for belief. Atheists always assume it is becuase it has to do with their reasoning. Having an alternate explanation will get the atheist off the hook, in terms of having to believe because it's the only explainable. So atheists approach reality as nothing but a surface level collections of things, the existence of which has to be explained.  So they imagine the reason for belief is nothing more than a surface level explanation. The reason for belief in God is realization about the depth of being. Belief in God is not just adding a fact to the universe. God is not merely another "thing" alongside the list of things that exist. Belief in Bod is realization that one is contingent, that being has depth. Being more than just the surface fact of things existing, it's the why of existence as well.
There's a lot more to this exchange but I'll do that ni the next couple of days.

10 comments:

Brap Gronk said...

Meta: "Yes God is part of the perceived universe. It just depends upon how one is perceiving it. God is not given in sense data, but that's a given. We all know that. Atheists accept all kinds of things that are not given in sense data. Phenomenological methods go around sense data."

Something perceived that is not in the sense data is only in the mind. Emotions are very real, people's perception of things as good or bad are very real. Yet those concepts only exist in the brain. Phenomenological methods require communicating with or observing a person. But that's all there is to measure or observe. Just the body and the body's actions. Anything "real" that person is observing ("I see a tree over there.") can be observed by other means. Anything "imaginary" that person is observing ("I see a unicorn next to a tree over there.") cannot be observed by other means.


Brap: Can we tell the difference between these three scenarios: A) A God that interacts with our world in ways that do not appear to violate the laws of nature. (In other words, undetectable.)

B) A God that no longer interacts with our world, because nature now runs on its own and works autonomously after having been set up by God some time in the past.

C) A God that does not exist.

I am asking this question again (slightly reworded scenario B) because I think you concentrated on arguing for or against the individual scenarios rather than answer the question. I have seen Christian apologists (not only you) argue for scenario A or for scenario B, which is why I like this question so much. (If I am misinterpreting something let me know. But I didn't write this: "We should not expect to see anything but natural laws at work in the world because they are made to work autonomously.")

I am not claiming scenarios A, B and C are the only three possibilities. I am leaving out scenario D, which is God interacts with our world today in ways that do appear to violate the laws of nature. I can't think of any other scenarios, but there may be some.

So, hypothetically speaking, if scenario A were true (B and C false), or if scenario B were true (A and C false), or if scenario C were true (A and B false), could we tell the difference?

Brap Gronk said...

Brap: I will agree that the appearance of design does exist in both DNA and the laws of physics, but at one point in the not too distant past the human body appeared to be intelligently designed, as did the arrangement of the earth, moon, sun and stars.

Meta: "Begging question, you do not know that there is not intelligent design so you can't use the existence of things in nature as proof that such design is not needed."

Not even complex things for which there is overwhelming evidence that they evolved (not originated) through natural means without a designer?

Brap: Science eventually closed those gaps in human knowledge, so fewer and fewer gaps needed God as an explanation. Right now the last two major gaps seem to be abiogenesis and the Big Bang.

Meta: "Science did not close any gaps, that's a misunderstanding."

Seems like the authors who received the divine inspiration for the Bible had a few gaps in their knowledge, such as how humans came to be on this planet, causes of natural phenomenon such as rainbows, disease, etc. I don't know how anyone can say science didn't close those gaps in human knowledge.

Brap: But I don’t push the God of the Gaps argument because it’s really pointless. If and when science does solve that last remaining gap, the believers will simply say, “So that’s how God did it” and continue believing.

Meta: "I'm already saying it because that's not a reason for belief."

It may not be a reason for belief, but a lot of folks consider such things to be a threat to their beliefs. Can you explain why the church has struggled with so many scientific advances throughout history? The details vary depending on the source, but in simple terms it seems like the progression has typically been something like this:

- Theory A threatens a belief we (the church) have held for a long time due to our current interpretation of the Bible.
- Speak out against Theory A, call it blasphemous, try to disprove it, come up with an alternate theory, etc. Make darn sure they don't teach Theory A to our kids.
- Evidence supporting Theory A becomes overwhelming.
- Well, ok, maybe Theory A is true. So, we will now consider part of the Bible to be figurative instead of literal, or we just say that was how God intended it, or we say even though Theory A may be true, that still doesn't explain X.

Joseph Hinman (Metacrock) said...

Brap: I will agree that the appearance of design does exist in both DNA and the laws of physics, but at one point in the not too distant past the human body appeared to be intelligently designed, as did the arrangement of the earth, moon, sun and stars.

Meta:Response "Begging question, you do not know that there is not intelligent design so you can't use the existence of things in nature as proof that such design is not needed."

Brap:Not even complex things for which there is overwhelming evidence that they evolved (not originated) through natural means without a designer?


>>>>Meta, now: how could you ever know that? That's just an ideolgoical interpretation because you are assuming "evolution = no design." That's a wrong headed dichotomy. There is no way to look at something and know that it was either designed and created straight out or evolved ACCORDING TO A PRE DETERMINED PLAN. Now I don't think God has to design in evolution, I think the goal is designed (I know "goals" are ot part of evolution in normal scientific thinking) for the sake of argument it's begging the question to assert evolution = no divine input.

Like the chemical receptor argument in the religious experience thing.





Brap: Science eventually closed those gaps in human knowledge, so fewer and fewer gaps needed God as an explanation. Right now the last two major gaps seem to be abiogenesis and the Big Bang.


>>>Meta: There is only cap closing if belief is based upon gaps. If belief is not based upon gaps then closing a gap in knowledge is not a negation of belief.

I never posited a gap in knowledge as a reason for belief. You have made that construel based upon an inadvertent understanding of cosmogany as a literary genre.


Meta: "Science did not close any gaps, that's a misunderstanding."

Seems like the authors who received the divine inspiration for the Bible had a few gaps in their knowledge, such as how humans came to be on this planet, causes of natural phenomenon such as rainbows, disease, etc. I don't know how anyone can say science didn't close those gaps in human knowledge.


>>>Meta: as I say, you do not understand the reasons for creation myths. you are they are just explanations. probably at one time there was an overlap between the sense of hte numinous and the need to explain. But the Genesis cosmogany as we know it is not about the need to explain how we got here. It's about the loss of innocence.

It has a literary/theological point not a scientific one.


Brap: But I don’t push the God of the Gaps argument because it’s really pointless. If and when science does solve that last remaining gap, the believers will simply say, “So that’s how God did it” and continue believing.


Meta: "I'm already saying it because that's not a reason for belief."

Joseph Hinman (Metacrock) said...

Brap: I will agree that the appearance of design does exist in both DNA and the laws of physics, but at one point in the not too distant past the human body appeared to be intelligently designed, as did the arrangement of the earth, moon, sun and stars.

Meta:Response "Begging question, you do not know that there is not intelligent design so you can't use the existence of things in nature as proof that such design is not needed."

Brap:Not even complex things for which there is overwhelming evidence that they evolved (not originated) through natural means without a designer?


>>>>Meta, now: how could you ever know that? That's just an ideolgoical interpretation because you are assuming "evolution = no design." That's a wrong headed dichotomy. There is no way to look at something and know that it was either designed and created straight out or evolved ACCORDING TO A PRE DETERMINED PLAN. Now I don't think God has to design in evolution, I think the goal is designed (I know "goals" are ot part of evolution in normal scientific thinking) for the sake of argument it's begging the question to assert evolution = no divine input.

Like the chemical receptor argument in the religious experience thing.





Brap: Science eventually closed those gaps in human knowledge, so fewer and fewer gaps needed God as an explanation. Right now the last two major gaps seem to be abiogenesis and the Big Bang.


>>>Meta: There is only cap closing if belief is based upon gaps. If belief is not based upon gaps then closing a gap in knowledge is not a negation of belief.

I never posited a gap in knowledge as a reason for belief. You have made that construel based upon an inadvertent understanding of cosmogany as a literary genre.


Meta: "Science did not close any gaps, that's a misunderstanding."

Seems like the authors who received the divine inspiration for the Bible had a few gaps in their knowledge, such as how humans came to be on this planet, causes of natural phenomenon such as rainbows, disease, etc. I don't know how anyone can say science didn't close those gaps in human knowledge.


>>>Meta: as I say, you do not understand the reasons for creation myths. you are they are just explanations. probably at one time there was an overlap between the sense of hte numinous and the need to explain. But the Genesis cosmogany as we know it is not about the need to explain how we got here. It's about the loss of innocence.

It has a literary/theological point not a scientific one.


Brap: But I don’t push the God of the Gaps argument because it’s really pointless. If and when science does solve that last remaining gap, the believers will simply say, “So that’s how God did it” and continue believing.


Meta: "I'm already saying it because that's not a reason for belief."

Joseph Hinman (Metacrock) said...

Brap: I will agree that the appearance of design does exist in both DNA and the laws of physics, but at one point in the not too distant past the human body appeared to be intelligently designed, as did the arrangement of the earth, moon, sun and stars.

Meta:Response "Begging question, you do not know that there is not intelligent design so you can't use the existence of things in nature as proof that such design is not needed."

Brap:Not even complex things for which there is overwhelming evidence that they evolved (not originated) through natural means without a designer?


>>>>Meta, now: how could you ever know that? That's just an ideolgoical interpretation because you are assuming "evolution = no design." That's a wrong headed dichotomy. There is no way to look at something and know that it was either designed and created straight out or evolved ACCORDING TO A PRE DETERMINED PLAN. Now I don't think God has to design in evolution, I think the goal is designed (I know "goals" are ot part of evolution in normal scientific thinking) for the sake of argument it's begging the question to assert evolution = no divine input.

Like the chemical receptor argument in the religious experience thing.





Brap: Science eventually closed those gaps in human knowledge, so fewer and fewer gaps needed God as an explanation. Right now the last two major gaps seem to be abiogenesis and the Big Bang.


>>>Meta: There is only cap closing if belief is based upon gaps. If belief is not based upon gaps then closing a gap in knowledge is not a negation of belief.

I never posited a gap in knowledge as a reason for belief. You have made that construel based upon an inadvertent understanding of cosmogany as a literary genre.


Meta: "Science did not close any gaps, that's a misunderstanding."

Seems like the authors who received the divine inspiration for the Bible had a few gaps in their knowledge, such as how humans came to be on this planet, causes of natural phenomenon such as rainbows, disease, etc. I don't know how anyone can say science didn't close those gaps in human knowledge.

Joseph Hinman (Metacrock) said...

>>>Meta: as I say, you do not understand the reasons for creation myths. you are they are just explanations. probably at one time there was an overlap between the sense of hte numinous and the need to explain. But the Genesis cosmogany as we know it is not about the need to explain how we got here. It's about the loss of innocence.

It has a literary/theological point not a scientific one.


Brap: But I don’t push the God of the Gaps argument because it’s really pointless. If and when science does solve that last remaining gap, the believers will simply say, “So that’s how God did it” and continue believing.


Meta: "I'm already saying it because that's not a reason for belief."

BrapIt may not be a reason for belief, but a lot of folks consider such things to be a threat to their beliefs.


>>>Meta: becasue they are not trained.

Can you explain why the church has struggled with so many scientific advances throughout history? The details vary depending on the source, but in simple terms it seems like the progression has typically been something like this:


>>>Meta That's just the self serving self aggrandizing romanticized version that atheists who are into scinece tell becasue it makes them look like the heroes.

The truth is Christianity created modern science. read two books:
God and Nature by Numbers and Law. And The Newtonians by Margaret Jacobs.

Both books demonstrate the vital role Christianity played in the rise of modern scinece.

- Theory A threatens a belief we (the church) have held for a long time due to our current interpretation of the Bible.

>>>Meta: one never sees the major theologians freaking out over scientific developments. Untrained laymen, fundies, the lower education crowd.



- Speak out against Theory A, call it blasphemous, try to disprove it, come up with an alternate theory, etc. Make darn sure they don't teach Theory A to our kids.
- Evidence supporting Theory A becomes overwhelming.
- Well, ok, maybe Theory A is true. So, we will now consider part of the Bible to be figurative instead of literal, or we just say that was how God intended it, or we say even though Theory A may be true, that still doesn't explain X.


>>>Meta I'm very disseminated in your galaxy. I would have thought a visitor form another world would be much more sophisticated than the "evolution contradicts God" crowd.

It seems to be really true that atheism really has nothing to do with thinking about God it has to do with anti-fundism. You are really not thinking about God per se you are reacting agaisnt fundametnalists.

Joseph Hinman (Metacrock) said...

Meta: "Yes God is part of the perceived universe. It just depends upon how one is perceiving it. God is not given in sense data, but that's a given. We all know that. Atheists accept all kinds of things that are not given in sense data. Phenomenological methods go around sense data."

Brap Something perceived that is not in the sense data is only in the mind.

Meta: no that is a false assumption, it's an ideological assumption. You have no evidence that the five senses are the onlky way to sense things. But what I really had in mind was highway markers that are given in sense data that point to transcendence, ie God.

I call such "highway markers" the co-determinate. One such example is religious experience.



Emotions are very real, people's perception of things as good or bad are very real. Yet those concepts only exist in the brain.


Meta: can you prove it? A reductionist ideology says that's the case, but how do you know a reductionist ideology is right?


Phenomenological methods require communicating with or observing a person. But that's all there is to measure or observe. Just the body and the body's actions.


Meta: show me a quote in Husserl or Heidegger that says on people are objects of phenomenological perception? I've never heard that.

That's nonsense, anything observed can be observed phenomenologically all you have to do is let the sense data suggest the category to put it in.



Anything "real" that person is observing ("I see a tree over there.") can be observed by other means. Anything "imaginary" that person is observing ("I see a unicorn next to a tree over there.") cannot be observed by other means.


Meta: But that has nothing to do with limiting phenomenological method.


Brap: Can we tell the difference between these three scenarios: A) A God that interacts with our world in ways that do not appear to violate the laws of nature. (In other words, undetectable.)

B) A God that no longer interacts with our world, because nature now runs on its own and works autonomously after having been set up by God some time in the past.

C) A God that does not exist.

Meta yes


I am asking this question again (slightly reworded scenario B) because I think you concentrated on arguing for or against the individual scenarios rather than answer the question.


I answered the question by saying it depends upon what we are perceiving, that's an answer.


I have seen Christian apologists (not only you) argue for scenario A or for scenario B, which is why I like this question so much. (If I am misinterpreting something let me know. But I didn't write this: "We should not expect to see anything but natural laws at work in the world because they are made to work autonomously.")

We can distinguish between them becasue C has never produced the results of mystical experience in other way. It points to the divine, religious experience is the trace of the divine.

No other external process produces long term transformative effects.




I am not claiming scenarios A, B and C are the only three possibilities. I am leaving out scenario D, which is God interacts with our world today in ways that do appear to violate the laws of nature. I can't think of any other scenarios, but there may be some.


Meta: That's true too.

So, hypothetically speaking, if scenario A were true (B and C false), or if scenario B were true (A and C false), or if scenario C were true (A and B false), could we tell the difference?

Meta that's total nonsense. A,B, and D are all true at the same time.

Brap Gronk said...

Brap (previously): "Not even complex things for which there is overwhelming evidence that they evolved (not originated) through natural means without a designer?"

Meta: "how could you ever know that? That's just an ideolgoical interpretation because you are assuming "evolution = no design." That's a wrong headed dichotomy. There is no way to look at something and know that it was either designed and created straight out or evolved ACCORDING TO A PRE DETERMINED PLAN."

Right, because there would be no supporting evidence or a way to prove either one of those theories, which makes them very easy to assert. The theory of evolution, on the other hand, has overwhelming evidence to support it, none of which suggests or supports the input of a designer at any step in the process.


Brap (previously): "Can you explain why the church has struggled with so many scientific advances throughout history? The details vary depending on the source, but . . . "

Meta: "That's just the self serving self aggrandizing romanticized version that atheists who are into scinece tell becasue it makes them look like the heroes."

Then someone needs to correct this sentence in the Wikipedia article on Copernicus, for starters: "In 1633 Galileo Galilei was convicted of grave suspicion of heresy for "following the position of Copernicus, which is contrary to the true sense and authority of Holy Scripture," and was placed under house arrest for the rest of his life." To suggest that church authorities have always welcomed all proposed scientific theories without regard to their agreement or lack of agreement with the theological thoughts of the day is ludicrous.

Meta: " one never sees the major theologians freaking out over scientific developments. Untrained laymen, fundies, the lower education crowd."

Then it is unfortunate that it's primarily atheists arguing against the untrained laymen, fundies, and lower education crowd when these arguments enter the public arena. I would assume the number of non-fundie educated Christians in the US is much greater than the number of atheists, but the Christians seem to be a shy group on these matters, unwilling to confront their fellow Christians.

Meta: "I'm very disseminated in your galaxy. I would have thought a visitor form another world would be much more sophisticated than the "evolution contradicts God" crowd. It seems to be really true that atheism really has nothing to do with thinking about God it has to do with anti-fundism. You are really not thinking about God per se you are reacting agaisnt fundametnalists."

I simply brought up the church vs. science stuff in response to this exchange: [Meta: "I'm already saying it because that's not a reason for belief." Brap: "It may not be a reason for belief, but a lot of folks consider such things to be a threat to their beliefs."]

Brap (previously): "Something perceived that is not in the sense data is only in the mind."

Meta: "no that is a false assumption, it's an ideological assumption. You have no evidence that the five senses are the onlky way to sense things. But what I really had in mind was highway markers that are given in sense data that point to transcendence, ie God."

I don't think the five human senses are the only way the sense things, (Geiger counter, for instance), but they are the only ways available to a standard off-the-shelf human. What those highway markers point to (if anything) is wide open to interpretation, in my opinion.

Meta: "No other external process produces long term transformative effects."

Is it possible an internal process is producing long term transformative effects?

Joseph Hinman (Metacrock) said...

Brap (previously): "Not even complex things for which there is overwhelming evidence that they evolved (not originated) through natural means without a designer?"

Meta: "how could you ever know that? That's just an ideolgoical interpretation because you are assuming "evolution = no design." That's a wrong headed dichotomy. There is no way to look at something and know that it was either designed and created straight out or evolved ACCORDING TO A PRE DETERMINED PLAN."

Right, because there would be no supporting evidence or a way to prove either one of those theories, which makes them very easy to assert. The theory of evolution, on the other hand, has overwhelming evidence to support it, none of which suggests or supports the input of a designer at any step in the process.

I haven't made a design argument

Joseph Hinman (Metacrock) said...

I don't think the five human senses are the only way the sense things, (Geiger counter, for instance), but they are the only ways available to a standard off-the-shelf human.

no they are not. All humans have intuitive powers. All humans have minds.


What those highway markers point to (if anything) is wide open to interpretation, in my opinion.



I've amply demonstrated that's not true.

the concent of the experince is about God

the experinces tend to draw peple to God

the experinces are real.


when real experiences are consistently about things we assume the content of the experience is real as well.