tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11516215.post7842683696405510374..comments2024-03-28T15:31:02.860-07:00Comments on Metacrock's Blog: Reprise argument from causal necessityJoseph Hinman (Metacrock)http://www.blogger.com/profile/06957529748541493998noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11516215.post-15136779726057452232021-01-04T11:44:05.283-08:002021-01-04T11:44:05.283-08:00Joe previous: Joe: what are degrees of nothingness...Joe previous: <i>Joe: what are degrees of nothingness? He's basissing his eternal destiny on this totally uprovable concept, degrees of nothingness</i><br /><br />Pix: <i>I explained this last time, but I guess I should not be surprised that it is over your head.<br />Get a box, and take all the stuff out. What is inside it? Nothing. That is one level. Get a suitable vessel and pump out the air. What is inside? Nothing. That is another level. Then there is potentially a nothingness except the laws of nature. Then there is the hypothetical absolute nothing.</i><br /><br />Joe: <i>that doesn't prove anything Godwise</i><br /><br />Correct. It was responding to a comment you made that was not about God, and therefore it is not about God itself. This is how discussions work, Joe.<br /><br />Joe: <i>our precedents beg the question. ...</i><br /><br />So true. Your precedent is based on the assumption that your argument is true.<br /><br />It is good to see you have the integrity to admit it.<br /><br />Joe: <i>I never argue proof I argue warrant, the need for a necessary eternal cause warrants belief in God</i><br /><br />But the universe arising from quantum randomness is just as warranted.<br /><br />You happen to pick your hypothesis because you are starting with the assumption that the Bible is true.<br /><br />Joe: <i>sorry that is sloppy analysis, my position is a hell if a lot more sophisticated that just "the Bible is true."</i><br /><br />And yet all your arguments rest on that assumption.<br /><br />Pix: <i>If we assume the Bible is true, then God exists, and then the most logical scenario is God created the universe.</i><br /><br />Joe: <i>begging the question</i><br /><br />That was the point!<br /><br />PixAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11516215.post-5567987256864124122021-01-04T08:39:23.334-08:002021-01-04T08:39:23.334-08:00Anonymous said...
Joe: what are degrees of nothing...Anonymous said...<br />Joe: what are degrees of nothingness? He's basissing his eternal destiny on this totally uprovable concept, degrees of nothingness<br /><br />I explained this last time, but I guess I should not be surprised that it is over your head.<br /><br />Get a box, and take all the stuff out. What is inside it? Nothing. That is one level. Get a suitable vessel and pump out the air. What is inside? Nothing. That is another level. Then there is potentially a nothingness except the laws of nature. Then there is the hypothetical absolute nothing.<br /><br /><b>that doesn't prove anything Godwise</b><br /><br />Joe: It is not a bit consistent with science because in science things need causes, he has no example or proof<br /><br />So I am in the same situation as you then; no precedent and no proof.<br /><br /><b>our precedents beg the question. I never argue proof I argue warrant, the need for a necessary eternal cause warrants belief in God</b><br /><br />Joe: So in other words he's not going to try to justify something from nothing but just assert God is nonexistent so he's something from nothing too,<br /><br />This is just a lie. I never once asserted God is nonexistent in that discussion.<br /><br /><b>Pardon me I've argued with too any atheists,</b><br /><br />I pointed out several times that "My position is that we do not know."<br /><br /><b>I agree with that but we are justified in placing faith</b><br /><br />But as ever you rage against the straw men of your own contriving.<br /><br /><b>those damn message boards</b><br /><br />Joe: But that totally ignores the fact that God is the more logical of the two options because it ys not arbitrary. It's based on minds being necessary for ideas, Laws of nature are ideas, ideas don't exist apart from minds. Things need causes, the universe needs am eternal cause so the cause of physical law must be a mind that mind we call God.<br /><br />Your hypothesis is founded on the Bible being true, like all apologetics.<br /><br /><br /><b>sorry that is sloppy analysis, my position is a hell if a lot more sophisticated that just "the Bible is true."</b><br /><br />* The Bible is true<br />* Therefore the Bible is true<br /><br /><b>In my view the Bible is part of the clitoral tropism of the tradition not the proof of their veracity; you have the tail wagging the dog,</b><br /><br />If we assume the Bible is true, then God exists, and then the most logical scenario is God created the universe.<br /><br /><b>begging the question</b><br /><br />Joe: you have yet to justify it with logic, between the two alternatives we have the mind that thinks ideas vs the idea without mind, that means God is more logical.<br /><br />My position is that we do not know; that is, neither can be justified.<br /><br /><b>I can respect that view but I don't think we have to stop there.</b><br /><br />Joe: He thinks the mind is the subset and the laws are the main thing.They can't exist without the mind. The laws are ideas in the mind. The mind is not the subset<br /><br />So if you can actually prove the laws of nature (as opposed to mankind's modelling of them - the laws of science) cannot exist without the mind, then you have point.<br /><br /><b>Proof is a tall order but not necessary for warrant, belief is warranted by a logical reason for belief.</b><br /><br />But I do not see that. It is certainly not in the steps 1 to 7 of your argument, which does not even include the words "mind" or "law".<br /><br /><br /><b>good point maybe I should amend them. I think is a logical extension of that argument,</b><br />Joseph Hinman (Metacrock)https://www.blogger.com/profile/06957529748541493998noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11516215.post-35344501920727704072021-01-04T04:40:49.715-08:002021-01-04T04:40:49.715-08:00Joe: what are degrees of nothingness? He's bas...Joe: <i>what are degrees of nothingness? He's basissing his eternal destiny on this totally uprovable concept, degrees of nothingness</i><br /><br />I explained this last time, but I guess I should not be surprised that it is over your head.<br /><br />Get a box, and take all the stuff out. What is inside it? Nothing. That is one level. Get a suitable vessel and pump out the air. What is inside? Nothing. That is another level. Then there is potentially a nothingness except the laws of nature. Then there is the hypothetical absolute nothing.<br /><br />Joe: <i>It is not a bit consistent with science because in science things need causes, he has no example or proof</i><br /><br />So I am in the same situation as you then; no precedent and no proof.<br /><br />Joe: <i>So in other words he's not going to try to justify something from nothing but just assert God is nonexistent so he's something from nothing too,</i><br /><br />This is just a lie. I never once asserted God is nonexistent in that discussion.<br /><br />I pointed out several times that "My position is that we do not know."<br /><br />But as ever you rage against the straw men of your own contriving.<br /><br />Joe: <i> But that totally ignores the fact that God is the more logical of the two options because it ys not arbitrary. It's based on minds being necessary for ideas, Laws of nature are ideas, ideas don't exist apart from minds. Things need causes, the universe needs am eternal cause so the cause of physical law must be a mind that mind we call God.</i><br /><br />Your hypothesis is founded on the Bible being true, like all apologetics.<br /><br />* The Bible is true<br />* Therefore the Bible is true<br /><br />If we assume the Bible is true, then God exists, and then the most logical scenario is God created the universe.<br /><br />Joe: <i>you have yet to justify it with logic, between the two alternatives we have the mind that thinks ideas vs the idea without mind, that means God is more logical.</i><br /><br />My position is that we do not know; that is, neither can be justified.<br /><br />Joe: <i>He thinks the mind is the subset and the laws are the main thing.They can't exist without the mind. The laws are ideas in the mind. The mind is not the subset</i><br /><br />So if you can actually prove the laws of nature (as opposed to mankind's modelling of them - the laws of science) cannot exist without the mind, then you have point.<br /><br />But I do not see that. It is certainly not in the steps 1 to 7 of your argument, which does not even include the words "mind" or "law".<br /><br />PixAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com