Quoting novium from 11:40, 17th Aug 2007
I didn't miss the point. I didn't create a straw man.
It'd be the same as...oh, I don't know, a man seemingly raising another man from the dead, wouldn't you say?
Whether or not people believed it (even if they were present) would depend on what they already believed.
No interpretation can be proven, remember?
So with the stars in the sky, even if they changed very suddenly... it wouldn't mean anything. People would believe what they would.
It wouldn't be "proof" of anything. It's just be one more thing, like the sun coming up every morning, or the fact that there exists an "I" to ask these questions. Or miracles... and yes, even today there are unexplained things that people call miracles.
People whose philosophies don't see things that way don't see it as "proof" that they are wrong. And they are quiet right to do so.
And I might note that not knowing about be theology has not stopped him, or you, for that matter. But that's the beauty of strawmen, isn't it?
You never actually have to question your world view. You can just smugly go on making assumptions about, oh, I don't know, why people aren't just atheists when it's so obvious.
Quoting Senethro from 13:09, 17th Aug 2007
Is the statement "God exists." a factual claim or an interpretation?
Quoting novium from 12:55, 17th Aug 2007
Are you saying then that Dawkins has really bothered to know his theology and philosophy?
Let me ask you this: do you remember that book "The bell curve"? The horrible, fallacious thing, arguing basically for old fashioned eugenics and racism? Would you feel the need to read it from cover to cover, having skimmed through it, read a few passages, noted the fact that it was bullshit, and read the reviews and criticisms?
I certainly didn't. I wasn't going to be convinced by it. I could already spot the flaws, and I could read how other people responded to to it. That satisfied my curiosity, and thus I felt no need to suffer through the rest of it.
Quoting Haunted from 13:13, 17th Aug 2007
No! More fantastic and undeniable than that. Millions of humans and instruments whitenessing the rearranging of the stars into a message from god. SOMETHING THAT CAN NEVER BE EXPLAINED WITHOUT INVOKING A SUPERNATURAL INTELLIGENCE.Whether or not people believed it (even if they were present) would depend on what they already believed.
No! You'd have to be a madman to ignore such a thing. No athiest or agnostic could remain so after whitnessing such a thing. Granted, if god spelt out the name of the 'correct' religion (say mormonism) then you may find that those from other faiths (mostly the fundamentalists I'd argue) would somehow twist it into a test of their faith.No interpretation can be proven, remember?
Nothing can be proven 100% as we all know. But you can prove something beyond reasonable doubt. The sign as described above would prove beyond all reasonable doubt the existence of a supreme supernatural intelligence.So with the stars in the sky, even if they changed very suddenly... it wouldn't mean anything. People would believe what they would.
They may choose to do so but we then comment on the logic of their positions. Atheism and agnosticism would cease to be a defensible logical stance. A question would remain, is this YHWH saying hello or is this Shiva testing me? Now, that is an interpretation that can never be answered (not sure the infamous razor can be applied to such ludicrous situations).It wouldn't be "proof" of anything. It's just be one more thing, like the sun coming up every morning, or the fact that there exists an "I" to ask these questions. Or miracles... and yes, even today there are unexplained things that people call miracles.
The sun comes up because of gravity which is a natural process we understand. My example cannot be a natural process not can it ever be described as one. It is "proof" of a god.People whose philosophies don't see things that way don't see it as "proof" that they are wrong. And they are quiet right to do so.
No, philosophies can be wrong if they make statements about the natural world, alot of them do. Indeed, surely a good philosophy should be falsifiable?And I might note that not knowing about be theology has not stopped him, or you, for that matter. But that's the beauty of strawmen, isn't it?
The criticisms about his theology were trivial (getting a passage from the wrong book in the new testament for example). If theology is a straw man then what is theologians have to stand on?You never actually have to question your world view. You can just smugly go on making assumptions about, oh, I don't know, why people aren't just atheists when it's so obvious.
My world view can be falsified! I have said as much, if you show me incontravertible evidence to the contrary I will adopt it! This is why atheism is more logical than theism. Any theist can dismiss evidence agaisnt them as a test of their faith, it's so wonderfully circular.
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Now with 100% more corn
Quoting Haunted from 13:22, 17th Aug 2007Quoting novium from 12:55, 17th Aug 2007
Are you saying then that Dawkins has really bothered to know his theology and philosophy?
See my Emporers wardrobe quote.Let me ask you this: do you remember that book "The bell curve"? The horrible, fallacious thing, arguing basically for old fashioned eugenics and racism? Would you feel the need to read it from cover to cover, having skimmed through it, read a few passages, noted the fact that it was bullshit, and read the reviews and criticisms?
Logically no. Emotionally yes, I could immediately make a judgement on it if it flied in the face of all that I had learned. If I wanted to be sure that this was bullshit I would have to investigate it myself.I certainly didn't. I wasn't going to be convinced by it. I could already spot the flaws, and I could read how other people responded to to it. That satisfied my curiosity, and thus I felt no need to suffer through the rest of it.
Yes we simply don't time to go through every book or whatever. However, if you insist on making lengthy comments and opinions about this one then it is perhaps worth your while just sitting down and getting through (it is a nice read, flows very well). You took the time to skim the whole book (for what purpose I can only guess), would it have taken that much more effort to just read it?Quoting Haunted from 12:50, 17th Aug 2007
As I've said, on the surface, comparisons can be drawn. But look deeper (i.e. why they know the things they know) and you'll see why it isn't so.
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Now with 100% more corn
Quoting Rilla from 13:37, 17th Aug 2007
I think everyone's forgetting (or maybe not- I'm not reading everything everyone says exactly, and certainly I'm not going to read over some pages that I've missed) -
That God/Religion of any kind are faiths - by their very nature, they are never going to be proven or not.
People believe in a God not because they have evidence for it, but because they have faith - they believe without any proof. Any amount of evidence one way or another is irrelevant.
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Be good to yourself because nobody else has the power to make you happy.
Quoting Gubbins from 13:31, 17th Aug 2007
I'm still not entirely about your exact semantic use of the phrase "world view". You seem to be applying it in a way that is different to most of the rest of us. We can explore the world through science and thus derive causes and effects for our actions and those of others. In doing so, we can prescribe a personal "meaning" to those action, in terms of what we want to (or think we should) achieve. I don't see this as being at odds with any religious "meaning" one might ascribe to life.
As to the separation of scientific thinking and theology, I see little reason to believe in a God whose presence or effect cannot (even theoretically) be tested through visual observation. It would appear to me that this belief is creating something where nothing exists. Again, though, this is a personal conclusion, so perhaps you have a different take on this?
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...then again, that is only my opinion.
Quoting novium from 13:39, 17th Aug 2007
I can't imagine such a thing in reality, can you?
Besides, it's kind of a silly question to ask in any case. Why do we need an example of something that can be explained without invoking a supernatural intelligence?
That's an issue of proof, of which there can never be, as I have argued.
Even if such a thing could exist, and magically be accepted by every one...it would not "prove" anything, because as I have repeated many times now, you can't prove an interpretation.
There would never just be one interpretation, do you get what I am saying?
I mean, think about the fish with the names "allah" and "Muhammad" written on them with their scales in arabic. I don't see that as proof of anything, do you? But then again, I'm not inclined to. I see what I expect to see.
LASTLY: your world view can't be falsified. World views can't be falsified by definition.
you've looked out at the world, and within yourself, and sensed nothing more.
Fine. But you assume that you are correct about this, that what you sensed is True.
On top of that first belief, you've looked around you, and pulled from the world you see support and justification. But it's only support and justification because you've viewed them through the lens of that first interpretation, you see?
You'll never convince your opposite to believe as you do, because from that first thing, they interpreted it differently and view the world through a different lens. Your support and justifications will always seem wrong to your opposite, because they see those things differently than you do. They might even seem flawed, where, working from your original interpretation, the logic is sound. They will see different things in the same images. And vice versa.
His theology is very wrong, in the assumptions he makes about how those things are used and interpreted.
his is why he remains so unconvincing, except to people who already agree with him.
That's why, for example, all the teapot analogies in the world fall flat. Because he, like you, misses the point about world views and *meaning*. He's trying to prove/disprove a world view. How pointless is that?
Quoting novium from 13:39, 17th Aug 2007
LASTLY: your world view can't be falsified. World views can't be falsified by definition.
On top of that first belief, you've looked around you, and pulled from the world you see support and justification. But it's only support and justification because you've viewed them through the lens of that first interpretation, you see?
Quoting Haunted from 14:16, 17th Aug 2007
Gubbins I think we're close to agreement on most things. [and the rest]
Quoting Haunted from 14:16, 17th Aug 2007
2. You cannot prove a negative etc.
Quoting novium from 14:01, 17th Aug 2007
I think perhaps we are speaking past each other.
My only conclusion is that your belief is that god(s) should be testable through visual observation. This is an extention (if you'll pardon me taking the liberty) of your assumption of a generally materialist world view.
Quoting Gubbins from 14:09, 17th Aug 2007Quoting novium from 13:39, 17th Aug 2007
LASTLY: your world view can't be falsified. World views can't be falsified by definition.
Now I'd disagree with this regarding atheism, assuming you mean what I think you do when you say "world view", as atheism isn't a belief, but a lack of it*. It is based on the proof and disproof of hypotheses, therefore proof of something contrary to its expectations would indeed falsify it.
*To drag out an old analogy, black (c.f. atheism) isn't a colour, but an absence of it. Then again, transparent (c.f. agnosticism) isn't a colour either.On top of that first belief, you've looked around you, and pulled from the world you see support and justification. But it's only support and justification because you've viewed them through the lens of that first interpretation, you see?
Now this is precisely what I was getting at before when justifying my stance on agnosticism.
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...then again, that is only my opinion.
Quoting novium from 14:41, 17th Aug 2007
To move away from agnosticism (in any direction) requires a leap of faith.
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