Coito ergo sum wrote:Seth wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:
Fuck, dude. For the last time - I never said it impeached the TRUTH. You said yourself that we don't know the truth, and we can't know the truth ever. The truth may well be different than the overwhelming evidence. Of course the claim "God exists" may be "true."
Keerect!
Then what have you been arguing with me about? I've been saying that over and over again.
At the moment, your claim that there is no evidence supporting the claim that God exists and the nature of belief and truth.
There is just no reason to believe it. Well, I'll leave it to you to explain the reasons there are to believe it. An explanation that someone somewhere might have evidence that you or I don't know about is simply a truism on every issue everywhere all the time. We all know that. The question is, what is that evidence? If the answer is "I don't know," then there is no reason to believe the assertion.
Seth wrote:
Until someone presents evidence for it, then it is not based on evidence.
Someone (a great many someones actually) has presented evidence. You just disbelieve the evidence.
Nope. They haven't. If you care to prove me wrong, present the evidence.
I have. You evade the consequences of that evidence by discounting it and denying that it is evidence, even though it is clearly and exactly evidence even according to your own argument because, in the case of the gospels, it's a record of observations of actual events set down by the observers of those events, which you yourself said constituted evidence.
Seth wrote:
I am not required to acknowledge that those folks your talking about have any evidence at all unless they present it.
They have, for just about 2000 years.
Haven't. But, I'm open to it. What is it?
Ask them.
Seth wrote:
If they choose not to, then that's up to them. I can't prove their secrets wrong, nor would I try. But, it is irrational in the extreme to believe in something someone says when they say, "God exists, and I have the evidence, but I'm not presenting it to you."
It's also irrational in the extreme to deny the existence of two millennia of evidence.
There isn't. There have been 2 millenia, but the "of evidence" part is made up by you. Again, if you care to prove me wrong, present the evidence.
See, there's the problem. You evade the issue by denying that the evidence, however weak or strong, exists by saying "there isn't." It wouldn't matter what evidence I produced, you would simply claim it's not evidence. I could say that the miracle at Fatima is evidence observed by tens of thousands of people less than a hundred years ago and you would say "that's not evidence" even though observations and reports, along with investigations and interviews with people who were there by a priest over many years are in the record at the Vatican (and elsewhere).
So, there's one piece of evidence produced for you. What's your response?
Seth wrote:
I don't care about impeaching their beliefs. I only care about the beliefs I hold, and until I am presented with evidence of God's existence, it's irrational to believe in it.
Yes, it's irrational for YOU to believe in it.
What planet are you on, Seth? An individual is only capable of holding beliefs for himself. So, yes, it's irrational for me to believe it. If someone actually meets god face to face and shakes his hand, and therefore has first hand evidence of god's existence, then he can rationally believe in that god. But, nobody else would be justified in believing him, unless it could be verified. Who is saying otherwise?
You are. You don't say "I don't believe there is evidence," you say "There isn't [evidence]. There have been 2 millenia, but the "of evidence" part is made up by you." But there is evidence, and you refuse to admit that there is evidence because it evidently doesn't meet YOUR narrow definition of "evidence suitable to convince CES." But your incredulity is not the metric for "evidence." You don't seem to understand that point at all.
Seth wrote:
It's not, however, irrational for others to actually look at the evidence and find it credible and therefore to believe in it.
If they have the evidence, sure. I'm asking what it is. You haven't presented it.
I don't have to present it. You have said that it doesn't exist, therefore it is your burden to prove that no evidence exists. You ask me to present it and I have done so (the accounts of the Apostles in the New Testament) but you deny that those records of events witnessed by individuals and then recorded are "evidence," which is a convenient use of the Burden of Proof fallacy and an example of the fallacy of Hasty Generalization in that you take a sample of the evidence of the existence of God of size zero and then come to the conclusion that there is no evidence of the existence of God merely because you refuse to acknowledge that any evidence of the existence of God exists.
I will be interested to see how you evade and rationalize away the events at Fatima on October 13, 1917.
This is no different than any other issue anyone ever debates, Seth. It's never irrational for someone to hold a belief based on evidence they know.
But you claim that there is no evidence of the existence of God, and you cannot present any evidence of the non-existence of God, which makes your belief that God does not exist irrational.
So, if someone says that all cops are rapists, and they have the evidence, then it's rational for them to believe it. Even if they don't share the evidence with you, it's rational for them to believe it. And, it might be true. But, you and I would have no trouble say, "I don't believe all cops are rapists" if that person doesn't present their evidence. We'd say, "there isn't any evidence that all cops are rapists" and leave it up to the person making the claim to prove it.
But if they say "all cops are racists" and do not provide evidence of that claim, you cannot then logically conclude that all cops are NOT rapists without first producing evidence of your own that at least some cops are not rapists. You can disbelieve the claim, but you cannot yourself make the positive assertion that all cops are not rapists without providing critically robust evidence demonstrating that some cops, somewhere, are not rapists. You may not, contrary to what you are arguing, simply make assumptions about cops and rape based on no evidence whatsoever and then make a valid conclusion to the question "are all cops rapists?"
That would be an unsupported and therefore fallacious assertion on your part.
In the same way, you can disbelieve the claim that God exists all you like, but you cannot logically or rationally make the INDEPENDENT claim that God does not exist without providing some evidence to support this claim. Therefore, all you can say about the claim that God exists is "I don't believe it, but I don't know with any degree of certainty whether God does or does not exist."
Seth wrote:
I don't believe in gods is the only rational conclusion when I don't have any reason to believe in gods.
Purposeful evasion or rejection of evidence does not create a rational conclusion.
I'm not purposefully evading or rejecting evidence. Someone making the assertion can present the evidence. I have looked hard for many years. It's not there, as far as I can tell. Might it be? Sure. I'll let those making the assertions present it.
You haven't been looking very hard. What's your rebuttal of the events at Fatima in 1917?
Seth wrote:
One can only draw a rational conclusion by evaluating ALL the evidence that exists.
Not true at all. That's about the dumbest thing I've ever heard you say. Nobody knows "all" the evidence that exists on anything. You don't. I don't. Nobody does.
So, what constitutes "enough" evidence upon which to draw a rational conclusion? Beyond a reasonable doubt? By a preponderance of the evidence? By a scintilla of evidence?
Now, let's assume, though, that you are correct, and "one can only draw a rational conclusion by evaluating all the evidence that exists." So, the claim "God exists" is made. Since no human being can have access to "all" the evidence that exists, and we could never know for sure that anyone had access to "all" the evidence anyway because there might evidence that they didn't know about also out there, then by your own argument, no rational conclusion can be drawn. Therefore, it would be irrational to conclude that God exists, and it would be irrational to believe something that was irrational to conclude.
It may be, but it is also equally irrational to conclude that God does NOT exist. See the conundrum? If there is evidence, no matter how slight, that evidence must be given due weight and it must be weighed against countervailing evidence tending to disprove the claim. I have provided several examples of evidence that God exists, and all you've done is deny that they are evidence and you've failed to provide any countervailing evidence tending to disprove the existence of God. But your denial of the existence of evidence, or your incredulity or skepticism about the nature of the evidence doesn't change the existence or nature of the evidence leading towards the existence of God, nor do they provide ANY countervailing evidence tending to disprove the existence of God. So, we once again end up with the ledger balance in favor of the existence of God and against your completely unsupported assertion that God does not exist.
So, for you to conclude that God does not exist based on your admitted dearth (absence actually) of evidence leading to your conclusion that God does not exist is an irrational act of unreason.
Seth wrote:
Anything less is just a belief, not a rational conclusion. Beliefs, you see, need not be rational. Conclusions do.
I've said 50 times that belief doesn't NEED to be rational. But it's not rational to hold an irrational belief. Axiomatic, that.
But it's not an irrational belief if it's based on evidence, which most theists will tell you they find and evaluate in favor of the existence of God in abundance. So, their beliefs are rational, and your incredulity or skepticism about their evidence does not change the rationality of their belief nor does it change the nature or truth of the evidence they have found and examined. It only affects YOUR belief, which is of little interest to anyone else.
Conclusions also don't have to be rational. You make irrational conclusions all the time. They're just irrational.
Well, to be a valid conclusion it needs to be a rational one. And I'd note that you make irrational conclusions all the time too.
Seth wrote:
What is true or not doesn't matter!
Really? I thought the truth was the ONLY important thing.
It doesn't matter in terms of what to believe. I don't believe in the Flying Spaghetti Monster. The fact that it might be true is irrelevant.
Why is it irrelevant?
Seth wrote:
I'm not "impeaching the truth." Even if there were overwhelming evidence of gods' existence, there still might be no gods, and even if there is no evidence of gods, there still might be. Just like there might be fairies and ghosts and UFOs. But, it is irrational to believe in them in the absence of that evidence.
And it's irrational to conclude that no evidence exists because you are unwilling or unable to examine that evidence which does exist objectively and without bias.
I don't conclude that "no evidence exists" anywhere in the universe. Again, do you not pay attention to me? Why am I even talking to you? I never said that no evidence exists anywhere in the universe. For example, there may be evidence in the Andromeda galaxy or inside a black hole. Who knows?
No evidence has been presented to me. No evidence has been presented here. After looking hard, I've determined that there isn't any available. I've told you many times now that I don't foreclose the possibility that I'm unaware of some real evidence.
"There are none so blind as those who will not see." Your claim to have "looked hard" for evidence is not credible I'm afraid. I'll be interested to see how "hard" you looked at, for example, the evidence of the events at Fatima in 1917. I'm quite interested to see your critically robust arguments and proofs that those events did not happen as described by hundreds of people and witnessed by tens of thousands of people. By the way, arguments from incredulity are not going to be allowed. Only hard science.
I await the presentation of it by someone advancing the argument. Until then, I can not rational believe in God, and therefore, I don't. I might someday. I'll never foreclose that possibility. I don't believe in ghosts either, and I might someday. I don't claim to have "all the evidence", but all the evidence I have, and all the stuff that people have claimed to be evidence of ghosts that I've seen, read and heard has been "not evidence" in the scientific sense. To the extent we want to use legal parlance and call it testimonial evidence, if the person swears under oath to seeing a ghost, I find that unpersuasive in the extreme.
That's all very interesting and junk, but it still doesn't say anything about the evidence for the existence of God that you have not "looked hard" to find and have decided to ignore because you don't think it's evidence. Your incredulity or lack of scholarship does not determine anything but YOUR belief or lack of it.
Fair?
Well of course. I'm not demanding or expecting you to believe anything, I'm merely pointing out the fallacy of the claim that God does not exist because theists have not presented evidence of his existence. They have. You don't like or accept that evidence as sufficient, but your disbelief and incredulity are not valid premises in the argument for the non-existence of God, a proposition for which you have produce exactly zero evidence in support of.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
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