Seth wrote:So the objective claim that the universe began with a big bang, before evidence was discovered which supported that theory simply failed?
I guess you're having trouble distinguishing between a hypothesis and a theory. I would suggest that before what we call the big-bang was the most parsimonious explanation of the observable evidence then it did fail, and it remained a hypothesis - the claim could not be said to be true therefore the claim could said to be false
regardless of whether the big-bang explanation is or isn't the actual objective truth of the beginnings of the Universe.
You see, what we're dealing with here are claims. A claim like this that cannot be said to be true, because it doesn't fit the available evidence or because there is no evidence available, offers us no reason to accept the claim, no reason to proportion assent to the claim, no reason to believe the claim or claimant. The basic principle of logical non-contradiction has it that something cannot be both true and false, and the sceptical approach to claims to knowledge (that God exists) is to operate from the principle that the claim is false until or unless is meets and overthrows all relevant and proportionate challenges to its justification.
This is not inconsistent with anything I have said, including that objectives claims are treated as false unless or until they can be robustly supported. Until that point it is just one of a number of possibilities that might account for the evidence, or any of a virtual infinite number of possibilities that people might imagine and/or propose. Indeed, even in granting that the big-bang is a solidly supported theory does not and has not stopped people examining the question of the Universe's origins in light of new information, or stopped them developing new hypothesis and theories about it. In fact, what appears to be the most parsimonious explanations at present may themselves be overturned, but even so, until or unless robust evidence is available and accounted for we can not proportion assent to any claims or assertions to the effect that this-or-that new or novel hypothesis is the actual objective truth of the matter. Why would or should we be so lax when we have at our disposal a raft of scientific tools, techniques, processes, and secured knowledge for distinguishing shit from gold?
I don't think so.
Apparently not.
While an unevidenced objective claim may be ignored, the claim does not "fail" in the sense that the objective claim is not true because it's unevidenced.
Again, you are confusing the ultimate or objective truth of a thing with the quality and state of the claims made on behalf of that thing. If you want to take Pascal's wager on God be my guest - but your efforts to denigrate the rational capacities of those who see no reason at all to place that kind of bet only exposes your drive to take issue with atheists for being atheists. You want us to accept that the abject failure of god-claims to support themselves is no good reason for not believing them. How do you think that's going?
It is merely unevidenced and therefore the truth of the claim remains in question, but that fact has absolutely no effect on the actual truth or falsity of the claim.
I'm not a betting man, but it's clear that all you're really doing here is holding the door open for some imagined creative, intentioning, supernatural, omni-omni, authoritative, mythical entity proposed in accord with a particular religious tradition. All I'd say is, "Shut that door! You'll catch your death!"
Brian Peacock wrote:
If someone says "I make the claim that there are fairies at the bottom of my garden" the appropriate response is not to say "There are no fairies at the bottom of your garden because fairies are mythical supernatural creatures that do not exist"
Correct, if you want to be all formal about it. The better response is to say, "How do you know this? Show me the evidence." If the evidence does not support the claim then it is quite reasonable to say, "There are no fairies at the bottom of your garden," and perhaps follow that up with, "Fairies are mythical supernatural creatures common in European folklore and fiction. They do not exist outside of our imagination." But sometimes I'll grant we miss a step, or take it as read, because we've heard that kind of rubbish all too often. Cutting to the chase saves a lot of unnecessary arse-ache - but then again, it's not like atheist never put the work in to explicating their position or take it step-by-step is it?
"Cutting to the chase" in this case doesn't cut the mustard, said one aphorism to the other. Yes, it is true that atheistic argumentation takes as read lots of things, all of them entirely unsupported and/or unsubstantiated or inherently fallacious.
You really need to address the substance of what I've said if you want to stand any chance of maintaining this fiction.
What you call "rubbish" may indeed be rubbish and may not thereford support the claim made
Again, and this is getting tiresome now, atheists are addressing the claims and assertions of theist et al...
but again, the absence of evidence is not evidence of absence
..not the ultimate or objective truth of God's existence, and what we might call 'their atheism' is merely a response to or conclusion about those particular kinds of religious claims, assertions, and insistences.
What we are dealing with are the claims and assertions of those who say that "'God exists', is true" and then probably go on to wibble about what everyone else should think and do about that.
I've been quite patient in dealing with your misunderstanding about atheism, that it necessarily depends on reciprocal and equivalent claims to those put forward by theists etc, and I've gone to great lengths to show how a lack of evidence and the paucity of religious justifications in support of the existence of their nominated deity can and are found wholly, and reasonably, unconvincing by those people we call 'atheists'.
And yet you continue to tone-police, set dubious conditions, and declare that atheists never have reasonable, logical or rational grounds for not believing in God, gods, or any other unsupported, un-evidenced, claimed for thing. Basically you seem to be involved in a grand endeavour to disavow atheists as to the reasonableness of their conclusions. As this continues the 'what' of your point takes on progressively less significance and the 'why' progressively more, but that's apologetics I guess.
therefore cutting to the chase cuts out the most important step in a logical, rational argument
You're building your house out of straw here.
Which part of "It's not like atheist never put the work in to explicating their position or take it step-by-step is it?" did you not get? What do you think I'm doing here? You're running with the wrong strand again and painting all atheists into the same corner so you can more easily tar them all with the same brush - as unreasonable, dubious thinkers intent on imposing their authority over the religious by declaration and insistence alone. Not only that, you've just applied another spurious condition to expressions of atheism, to wit: atheists can't just 'cut to the chase' and say they're atheists, they have to lay out the whole rationale before they can even begin to identify themselves as atheist to others. And not only not only that, this is on top of the spurious condition which maintains that whatever an atheist may lay out by way of an explanation for their point of view it is always and necessarily irrational and illogical. Even when it quite clear and obvious that no reciprocal or equivalent claim is being made, or is even needed, to disbelieve theism, you dogmatically maintain that some reciprocal and equivalent claim is actually being made because, well, because you say so.
I guess you're kind of obliged to do all that shifting about now, its just part of your self-ascribed role as the Grande Validador dos Atiemso, and you probably feel you'd lose face if you dropped that façade now. However, as I've said to you already, if you want understand how reasonable the atheist position is compared to the theist position all you have to do is to try and make a case for the existence of God. Until then all you have is tu quoques, repetition, strawmen, the erection of dubious condition (which you don't even apply to yourself), and repetition.
which is to draw all conclusions about a claim based on evidence, not the lack thereof.
Now you're just giving the impression that you don't actually know anything about what atheism is and what atheists say about their atheism - which is a shame because faux ignorance is a discourtesy and discursively disingenuous. If you were genuine in this you'd be addressing what atheists actually say in response to theists claims and assertions, that is; the reasons why atheists say they don't believe theists on this-or-that matter. Instead you're merely disqualifing atheists from ever having or making a point though an undue over-reliance on the well-poisoning tactic of maintaining that whenever someone calls themselves an atheist it marks them down as irrational hypocrites and wrong automatically.
As I said upstream, your just taking issue with atheists for being atheists now - and it's not like you're proposing any alternatives other than, "Just shut up about it guys, and if they ask you just tell 'em you don't have a thought in your head about God. That way they might leave you alone." I suppose telling atheist to shut up and go away it the job of an apologist, so I'm hardly surprised you've stooped that low.
In other words, by cutting to the chase you are making assumptions about the question based on your own prejudices and preconceived notions, all of which are axiomatically based on...well...nothing whatever other than your own skepticism, and drawing a conclusion about anything only on one's skeptical attitudes is not a rational act.
That was a nice story. You have an obvious flair for imaginative construction. Time to finish that novel perhaps?
It doesn't matter if the atheist explicates their position or takes it step by step
Pissing in the well again, just in case we didn't get the point?
if each step is built on a foundation of fallacies and irrational assumptions.
And all you have is tu quoques, repetition, strawmen, the erection of dubious condition (which you don't even apply to yourself), and repetition.. Sorry if I'm repeating myself, but it's not like I haven't put the time into pointing out where and how you've deployed these errancies before is it(?).
One can build an enormous edifice of irrational assumptions based on flawed evidence or the absence thereof, but that doesn't make the argument rational or the conclusions valid.
By your lights no conclusions can ever be secure about any unsupported claim, no matter how ridiculous, far fetch, or fabricated. How big is the Presidents dong again? Surely it must be 12 feet long if it's an inch by now! Radical falliblism is one thing, but epistemic nihilism is not only an impractical lie, it is the very definition of a waste of everyone's time in discussions of this sort.
Just look at Marxism, which is founded on the single slender reed of an unfounded assertion that return on investment is not legitimate labor and therefore is theft of the worker's labor.
Yeah, you're the Grande Validador da Moralidade e Politica too.
Which is of course asinine in the extreme, and yet entire cultures and nations have been founded on that single idiotic assertion and a hundred million people have been murdered in the name of that stupid idea.
Go and post that red herring in a politics thread so I can ignore it in context.
Brian Peacock wrote:because by doing so you are irrationally (fallaciously) basing your rebuttal on the unsupported claim
If atheism conformed to, consisted of, or was validate by your strawman then yes, you'd have a point. As it stands though, you just don't.
that what is at the bottom of her garden are indeed "fairies" and further you are making specious and unfounded assumptions that the object which is claimed to be a "fairy" is a mythical supernatural creature that does not exist
An understanding of, and a reference to, the relevant literature, an awareness of the development of certain cultural concepts, and a comparison with the myths of other societies, can all, singularly or in the round, give us an entirely supportable means of telling the poor sod that a fairy is not real. Whether they choose to accept this is private matter for them alone.
Yes, but you have to actually do so in a rational manner not simply take it as read, particularly when what you want to take as read is itself both fallacious and potentially wrong.
...tone-policing and repetition.
when in point of fact she could be referring to "fairy shrimp," which do happen to exist and are entirely natural.
Brian Peacock wrote:In which case, when we refer to 'Faries" here we have to agree that we're talking about the same thing. As I put it before, the word-token "Faries" has to be mutually comprehensible to both questioner and respondent to give the question-answer binding proportionate and relevant semantic context.
Agreed, which means you have to show that the word-token is understood to mean at least roughly the same thing.
Did you not notice that I explained how the word-token 'God' has to be mutually comprehensible to a questioner-respondent paring if the question and its nominated answer are to retain their semantic context, cohesion, and meaning? I'm beginning to think you just trying to wind me up now. You'll have to try harder that that though.
Brian Peacock wrote:
In you scenario, when we, in our role as respondents, say, "You do know that faries are mythical creatures don't you?" the questioner simply has to say, "Oh, I don't mean those kind of faireis, I mean the shrimp. We call them fairies round here," and we all have a good chuckle about the misunderstanding, and then we can reset and ask for evidence: "Show me your shrimp baby!"
Well, you are assuming sans evidence that fairies are in fact "mythical creatures" aren't you?
It's pretty clear now that you didn't read what I wrote, because I actually gave some context for why Faries are a culturally specific myth. You do know what a myth is, don't you?
Let me revert to the multiverse theory that says that merely by thinking of "fairies" as miniature bipedal beings with wings who fly around in gardens causes a universe to come into existence where fairies are not mythical creatures. Fact is that you believe fairies to be mythical creatures, but since your knowledge and understanding of the universe is neither complete nor perfect you cannot actually make an unevidenced claim that this is true, instead you must provide evidence that fairies are mythical creatures, not actual ones, for your claim to be other than irrational. So your rational response might be "Well, it's my understanding that fairies are mythical creatures, so I'm skeptical of your claim, but I'm not certain either way. Shall we go investigate and see if we can find evidence of the truth of your claim?"
Firstly, I'm no here to defend the Multiverse theory, all I'm doing to pointing out that there are no reasonable grounds to believe theists, and that this makes you an 'atheist'.
Secondly, the ontological argument, that if you can imagine the existence of some-thing as existing with certain properties and attributes then one must accept the possibility of the existence of that imagined thing with those properties and attributes, is metaphyical nonsense. If metaphysics could furnish us with real and actua truthful knowledge about the world then we'd all be travelling to the Moon on rocket shoes to be sucked off by Shiva.
Thirdly, tone-policing is boring and trollish.
The same thing is true of god claims.
Brian Peacock wrote:Not it's not, because when theists talk about God we're all pretty clear about what they mean, not least because they tell us, earnestly and often. There is little confusion about what God represents, there is just no evidence of what God actually is.
And how exactly do theist's god claims, no matter how predictable you might think they are, affect the actual question at the bar?
What you call 'the question at the bar' is "Why should I believe you?" from the atheist's side of the courts, and "Why should you not believe me when I've just told you that God exists and if you don't scar the genitals of your children, wear a special hat on a Friday, and give me a tax break then you're gonna get exactly whatever it is my religion has told you you're gonna get?" from the other.
Again, you're resorting to the Atheist's Fallacy by taking as read the proposition that a theist's claim about God is accurate and factually representative of the actual existence and/or nature of God.
- This is what theists say about their version of their nominated deity: that their claims and assertions about it are factually accurate. Taking theists at their word is not fallacious even if their claims, assertions and arguments are.
- Atheist don't believe them.
You cannot base a rational rebuttal on the description of a theist of the supernatural character of god because you have zero evidence that this "god" spoken of is either supernatural or that the "supernatural" is not actually the "natural" that you simply do not understand.
Brain Peacock wrote:Correct, and in the absence of evidence for the existence of a thing it is quite reasonable to not only withhold proportioning assent to the claim, but also to point out that that lack of evidence gives us absolutely no reason to believe the claim.
Yes, I completely agree. But that is entirely different from stating a conclusion that God does not exist, or even a claim that God is as the theist describes used as the foundation for a critique of the putative actions or intentions of said god.

Athiests are drawing a conclusion about the claims and assertions of theists, end of. It's only you who zealously maintains that doing that is the same as making a reciprocal and equivalent claim.
Brian Peacock wrote: To all intents and purposes all objective claims are false until demonstrated otherwise even if a hedge or a bet on the claim feels more comfortable or more consistent with what we've been taught or led to expect. The clue is in the word 'objectivity'. Check it out in your nearest dictionary.
This is simply not the case. You are once again posting the fallacious argument that the absence of evidence is evidence of absence.
You are probably the most uncharitable person I've ever interacted with on the internet. Have you forgotten what I've already said about Scepticism and the soundness of challenging claims to knowledge on the basis of
the justification they provide, or are you just ignoring it for shits and giggles?
You twist it to say that the absence of evidence causes an objective claim to be false, which is not necessarily the case, as I have tried very hard to get across to you.
And you Sir have just unduly ignored another relevant qualification. Read what I wrote again and this time account for the 'to all intents and purposes' part, and tally that against the fact that all the atheist ever has to go on are the claims and assertions of theists etc.
This particular debate is not about what theists say or believe
Brian Peacock wrote:Yes it is, because atheism is a direct response to what theists say, believe, do and insist.
If that is the case, then "atheism" is not actually atheism, it is in fact "anti-theism," which sounds very much like a religious belief to me. A "direct response" to what theists say, believe, do and insist is not "a lack of belief in gods," it is in fact a carefully considered position in direct opposition to such claims and therefore isn't "a" anything, it's a positive assertion of denial of theistic claims, and that ain't atheism.
This is getting silly now.
How do you think anyone would arrive at 'a lack of belief in gods' unless some notions pertaining to putative supernatural entities fitting that description was not already afoot, and exactly how would arriving at 'a lack of belief in gods' not be a 'direct response' to what the proponents of the entities were putting forward? Then you can tell us why reporting that one has arrived at 'a lack of belief in gods in "direct response" to theist claims and assertions' is either a claim or an assertion about anything other than the view one has arrived at.
In short, you cannot make a rational counter-claim about something you have absolutely no evidence about.
Brian Peacock wrote:But a counter-claim is not necessary. Do keep up. What you insist on calling a counter-claim is just a conclusion about the claims and assertions of others.
Only if that is the case, which much of the time it's not.
It that it then? Is that what you're running with?

You're as bad as Davedodo007 who things everyone who advocates gender equality is necessarily defined by the rarest, most novel, and most appalling unpleasant representation of that idea he thinks is possible. He's a big fan of yours btw.
Most of the time it's "I don't believe in God because..." followed usually by a resort to the Atheist's Fallacy, and it is that following assertion that belies the definition of "atheism."
Write a book about it - surely you owe it to the world?
You may of course always refuse to give such claims further consideration, but that's entirely different from trying to say that the claim is false, because you do not know that it is false, you are
assuming that it is false, which is not a rational thing to do.
Brian Peacock wrote:But we know that the claim is not-true don't we? Eh?
We do? No we don't, and no you don't, and that's the point. You are assuming that it's not-true without evidence for that claim.
Uncharitable and disingenuous. I said 'not-tree', which was a clear reference to what I had said previoiusy about claims failing in their own terms and us not therefore not proportioning assent to them. De-contextualising that to stand for a decree by fiat on the objective existence of this-or-that supernatural entity is very poor form imo.
Brian Peacock wrote:Please apply the logical faculties here you say you value and regard. We are entirely entitled to say that the objective claim is false until it can be supported evidentially, and we remain entitled to do so as long as a falsification for the claim remains regardless of its variations or dependant assertions until or unless that situation changes. This is the reasonable, rational thing to do.
I have explained many times that no, you cannot rationally say an objective claim is false merely because it is unevidenced.
But it's not-true is it? Eh?
It may be indeterminate, but it is not necessarily false.
I've dealt with this misrepresentation already - on numerous occasions, but you keep going if it helps you sleep at night. Nonetheless, if you'd like a soundbite to focus on for the next round, then...
You need to show how withholding proportioning assent to an unevidenced/unsupported claim necessarily entails an explicit reciprocal and equivalence claim and how a mere report about a conclusion on the soundness of the claim itself is necessarily invalid. For this we will take it as read that the conclusion does not consist of a simple contradiction.