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Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
Posted: December 13 2010 at 18:33
Mr ProgFreak wrote:
@Iván: There you go again, requesting that I prove your religion wrong. You believe until proven wrong, that's the problem! We've already gone through all the inconsistencies in your religion and between the religions (or even the Christian denominations to start with), plus all the logical contradictions of the various "God" concepts - please don't pretend that you've already forgotten them. But even if none had been presented - the burden of proof is on you. YOU claim that there is a God, and that he created us and has a plan and so forth. You need to provide evidence that any of that is actually true - if you can't then how can you expect me to believe it? And how can you blame me for not understandiing how you could believe it.
Mike, you should be politician, you use circular arguments to turn what you said as if I had requested anything:
You said:
Mr ProgFreak wrote:
So, I'm open minded by my definition, not by Iván's. By my definition he's close minded, because he's ignoring evidence that's contrary to his beliefs.My skepticism, however, does not conflict with any demonstrable facts.
I requested nothing, I'm only asking what anybody would do...If you said you provided evidence that prove my beliefs are wrong.........................................Where is this evidence you affirm I'm ignoring?
Joined: November 08 2008
Location: Sweden
Status: Offline
Points: 5195
Posted: December 13 2010 at 18:45
I already answered that in my previous reply. You can also watch the video in the initial post again, you can remember the principle "absence of evidence is evidence of absence, if evidence should be present". Then you could read The God Delusion ... the possibilities are endless.
Let's focus on the absence of evidence alone, because this is very simple: You are making a positive claim. You have no good reasons for believing the claim is true. The reasonable choice is to abandon the claim. Is there any argument against this conclusion which isn't circular and/or based on either personal revelation or blind faith - or a mere rationalisation, like "so many people are believing in this" or "society would collapse if people stopped believing" etc.?
Edited by Mr ProgFreak - December 13 2010 at 18:45
Joined: October 08 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 3281
Posted: December 13 2010 at 19:08
Without specific reference to anything this time, it's always amused me how theists insist that you read their holy scriptures yet are absolutely mortified when you suggest that they read The God Delusion or something similar.
Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
Posted: December 13 2010 at 19:16
Mr ProgFreak wrote:
I already answered that in my previous reply. You can also watch the video in the initial post again, you can remember the principle "absence of evidence is evidence of absence, if evidence should be present". Then you could read The God Delusion ... the possibilities are endless.
Let's focus on the absence of evidence alone, because this is very simple: You are making a positive claim. You have no good reasons for believing the claim is true. The reasonable choice is to abandon the claim. Is there any argument against this conclusion which isn't circular and/or based on either personal revelation or blind faith - or a mere rationalisation, like "so many people are believing in this" or "society would collapse if people stopped believing" etc.?
I'm making no claim.
I was keeping my beliefs to me, when this threads started indicating that everything I believe in is false and that we were some sort of ignorant children who needed of your rational mind.
So...The one who make a claim is you, you said all we believe in is false..Prove it.
Joined: October 16 2006
Location: FL, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 17493
Posted: December 13 2010 at 19:32
Equality 7-2521 wrote:
That response deserves no response.
Textbook's responses usually deserve no response.
By the way, for those saying that this thread is at risk of being closed for being too long, please... We can teach you a thing or two in the libertarian thread.
Joined: October 08 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 3281
Posted: December 13 2010 at 20:11
Seriously, PF can't prove there is no god, just as Ivan can't prove there is a god.
However as the atheist experience illustrated on their show, the person who makes the positive claim is the person that has a job to do.
The story goes like this:
A: There's a unicorn in this shoebox.
B: I don't think so. Unicorns don't exist.
A: But I have one in this box.
B: I really don't think so.
A: Really there is.
B: I don't think a unicorn could fit in there.
A: It's a minature unicorn.
B: *looking in box* But I don't see anything.
A: It's an invisible minature unicorn.
B: *feeling* But my hand passes right through the space in the box.
A: It's an intangible invisible minature unicorn.
B: But I can't even hear it breathing.
A: It's an intangible invisible minature unicorn who generates soundwaves on a frequency outside the range of human hearing.
B: There is no unicorn in this box.
A: Prove it.
Just what exactly is B supposed to do here? There is nothing to prove. There is nothing to argue against. Nothing observed suggests that there is a unicorn in the box and a ridiculous series of inexplicably attained magical properties need to be attributed to the unicorn before its existence makes sense.
It's the same with god. The naysayers don't need proof that they have seen nothing which suggests he exists.
Joined: October 08 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 3281
Posted: December 13 2010 at 20:30
Well you could've been, I am sort of abrupt and unhelpful at times ;) But I hope Ivan addresses what I said for once, PF doesn't have to prove that he's seen no evidence of god. Ivan has to provide that evidence. However if I can go one step ahead, no evidence that Ivan can provide will not be able to be explained as the creation of man. Therefore he cannot provide evidence that god exists. However it's not a stalemate- PF wins because he made no positive claim.
Joined: October 16 2006
Location: FL, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 17493
Posted: December 13 2010 at 20:32
Textbook wrote:
Seriously, PF can't prove there is no god, just as Ivan can't prove there is a god.
However as the atheist experience illustrated on their show, the person who makes the positive claim is the person that has a job to do.
The story goes like this:
A: There's a unicorn in this shoebox.
B: I don't think so. Unicorns don't exist.
A: But I have one in this box.
B: I really don't think so.
A: Really there is.
B: I don't think a unicorn could fit in there.
A: It's a minature unicorn.
B: *looking in box* But I don't see anything.
A: It's an invisible minature unicorn.
B: *feeling* But my hand passes right through the space in the box.
A: It's an intangible invisible minature unicorn.
B: But I can't even hear it breathing.
A: It's an intangible invisible minature unicorn who generates soundwaves on a frequency outside the range of human hearing.
B: There is no unicorn in this box.
A: Prove it.
Just what exactly is B supposed to do here? There is nothing to prove. There is nothing to argue against. Nothing observed suggests that there is a unicorn in the box and a ridiculous series of inexplicably attained magical properties need to be attributed to the unicorn before its existence makes sense.
It's the same with god. The naysayers don't need proof that they have seen nothing which suggests he exists.
That is much better. And I can even agree with your point. I have said in the early stages of this thread: the burden of proof lies with the one stating a positive, never a negative. They teach that in law schools (I attended one for 4 years, and even here in the US in a legal psych class I took...) plus it's much more obvious to do it so.
The thing is, if the person believing in the unicorn in the box is happy doing so and it actually makes him/her a better person, so be it. I won't believe in the unicorn in the box, but who am I to try to steal the box just to tear it open?
Joined: October 08 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 3281
Posted: December 13 2010 at 20:51
It's true that we can take skepticism to spooky levels.
For instances lets replace "I have a unicorn in this box" with "My wife loves me."
A: My wife loves me.
B: Prove it.
A: Ummmm.... gee... I just feel it.
B: Not good enough for me, I want evidence.
A: Well she buys me stuff.
B: Absolutely irrelevant. Nothing to do with emotion.
A: She does things for me.
B: Maybe she wants something out of you.
A: We have sex.
B: But you don't know how she feels, maybe she hates it. Some proof please.
A: Look, f**k you, I know alright.
B: No you don't. Someone who believes in god might say the same things and that's not good enough for proving god so why is it good enough here?
The escape route for A is that love is an emotional quality so if he feels it as an emotion, that's enough. God's meant to be a real-world entity so emotion isn't enough for him However, what of the situation where someone genuinely feels loved, only to later discover that this person was actually playing them? They felt the same way as the person whose partner truely did love them, but it seems only the former was loved despite identical emotions in each case.
It's a tricky issue and for many T and Equality's answer is appealing. If someone needs to think something in order to make themselves happy, let them think it, don't demand they prove it.
Religion gets thumped by people like me though because thinking someone loves you doesn't cause the kind of problems belief in god does. Belief in love doesn't loan itself to organisation and social control the way belief in god does, which is why I'll accept someone's "unicorn in a box" when it's a personal thing like love, but not when it's an ideology that seeks the establishment of a system that controls people.
Joined: August 11 2005
Location: Philly
Status: Offline
Points: 15784
Posted: December 13 2010 at 20:54
You're making the assumption that all religions share that ideology which is simply not true. A person could personally believe in a Judeo-Christian style God and have no desire to push this belief on others, have others change their behavior, or even talk about his beliefs.
If such a thing causes someone to feed the hungry, clothe the poor, and ease human suffering, then I don't really see the problem.
"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
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