Seth wrote:Seth wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:
Well, as long as you don't have any other evidence rebutting his recounting of the Trojan War, why should we not accept the evidence that is available as true until proven untrue?
Because we can't accept every writing as true until it's proven untrue.
Why not? Because it's extremely inconvenient for your anti-theistic dogma to do so, that's why not. However, your skepticism is not the metric by which truth is judged. People can judge the veracity and probative value of any writing they read without reference to your skepticism, you see. And the burden of proving their judgment wrong lies with those who make the positive claim that their judgment is wrong.
Because it is illogical to believe in multiple inconsistent things at the same time. Therefore, we don't believe them until there is reason to.
I'm not talking about "truth" - proof or evidence is not "truth". You keep confusing those concepts.
Taking it from the top, and repeating, again - We don't KNOW what is "true." For all we know, everything our eyes see and ears hear is deceptive, and there are 47 different universes, and each person has a penis sticking out of their forehead, and there are ghosts walking next to us rubbing the napes of our necks. We don't "know" that isn't "true!" Maybe it is true. There just isn't any reason to believe it.
We just don't believe it until there is reason to fucking believe it!
Yes - people are free to judge the veracity of anything they want, and I never said they couldn't. That doesn't make them RATIONAL or LOGICAL for doing so. Someone might take a rock and call it "evidence of the blue potato god." They are free to do that, but they aren't being rational or logical in doing so.
The burden of proving their judgment "wrong" is not on me. Theirs is the positive claim. Rejecting someone else's claim is not a positive claim. The burden remains on them one asserting the existence or nature of a phenomenon. I'm not doing that.
I don't know if there is a god or gods or deity or demigod or great vagina-goddess. Maybe there is. But, I don't believe in them.
Seth wrote:
It's an assertion.
It's a statement of observational fact. Feel free to prove that the observation was not made.
I'll reject that person's claim until it's proved. Just because a person wrote something down a long time ago doesn't make it believable. People say they saw their dead granparents' ghosts haunting them. I don't believe them because there is no evidence to support their assertions. If they write their statement in a diary and then die, I don't then consider their diary to be evidence of what otherwise would be an unsubstantiated claim. It's still an unsubstantiated claim.
By your logic, you have to accept MY statement that there is no god, because you can't "know" that I'm wrong and you certainly can't prove I'm wrong. Therefore, you believe my statement, right? If not, why don't you believe my statement?
Seth wrote:
Anyway -
(Hektor:)
'Zeus, and you other immortals, grant that this boy, who is my son,
may be as I am, pre-eminent among the Trojans,
great in strength, as am I, and rule strongly over Ilion;
and some day let them say of him: "He is better by far than his father",
as he comes in from the fighting; and let him kill his enemy
and bring home the blooded spoils, and delight the heart of his mother.' (6.476-481)
According to Seth, Zeus and the other immortals have been proven to exist, by a preponderance of the evidence.
Do you have any evidence that Zeus and the other immortals did not or do not exist, or are we to accept your argument from incredulity as an
ipse dixit proof?
I'm not asserting anything. I just don't believe in Zeus based on the lack of evidence.
By your logic, you think that the preponderance of the evidence is that Zeus exists. Right? Or, will you dodge the question?
No, I'm saying that you cannot rationally make the claim that Zeus does NOT exist [/quote]
The only claim I'm making is that I don't believe he exists because of a lack of evidence. As I've said several times, it may be true that Zeus exists, or that after we die we go to Nirvana, where Nirvana plays a concert every third Tuesday, and Tuesday Weld fellates us lovingly. Maybe that's the truth, but I don't believe the Zeus thing or the Nirvana thing or the Tuesday Weld blowjob thing.
It would be irrational to believe in it absent proof.
Seth wrote:
because you have no evidence pointing to that conclusion. Absent any such evidence, the preponderance of the evidence points towards the existence of Zeus.
No, the preponderance of the evidence doesn't point to Zeus existing, for the same reason that the preponderance of the evidence didn't point to Robert having to give the money back. That's not a preponderance of the evidence. It's evidence of no probative value, and evidence of no probative value is not evidence of anything.
Seth wrote:
What you believe is, of course, something entirely different. You can say "I don't believe Zeus exists"
That's all I've ever said. It would be irrational to believe Zeus exists.
Seth wrote:
and I will not disagree with you because belief is an intensely personal thing. But you cannot state as a matter of fact that Zeus does not,
I have admitted conceptually that any state of affairs may exist. Zeus may exist. The Earth may be hollow. The universe may be an illusion. And, there may be a tooth fairy, and guardian angels. I don't believe in any of them, though, for the same reasons.
Seth wrote:
or did not exist because you have absolutely no evidence pointing to that conclusion. All you have is your incredulity.
Lack of belief in an asserted phenomenon is the only rational position when there is no evidence presented for that phenomenon. I do not need evidence.
I could use your logic to say that all you have for denying the assertion that "gods do not exist" is your own incredulity. Can you prove that "gods do not exist" is not a true statement? Of course you can't. Therefore the preponderance of the evidence is that gods do not exist.
Your logic is so nonsensical that the result is that the assertions gods do exist, or god does exist, as well as the assertion gods do not exist, all are proved by a preponderance of the evidence.
Seth wrote:
Seth wrote:
The ONLY evidence we have are the statements of the ancients that Zeus does, or did exist. That is where the preponderance of the evidence lies, whether you believe the evidence or not. Until you can disprove the evidence that exists, that's how things stand.
Working with that arguendo:
The ONLY evidence we have are that the statements of the ancients (like Lucretius) that the gods did not exist. That is where the preponderance of the evidence lies, whether you believe the evidence or not. Until you can disprove the evidence that exists, that's how things stand.
However, you are wrong that the "only" evidence we have are the statements of the ancients. We have other documents like Theodorus of Cyrene's work "On the Gods" and the writings of Robert G. Ingersoll, to name two, one from the Golden Age of Greece, and the other from the Golden Age of American freethought. We also have the writings of modern philosophers like Ayn Rand and folks like Christopher Hitchens.
According to you, all those writings are evidence. Therefore, it is completely false for you to say that the ONLY evidence we have are the statements of the ancients, whether Homer or the Bible.
Therefore, also arguendo, if you are claiming writings are evidence, then we have countervailing evidence.