Theophilus wrote:Then...in what sense are they "proofs" at all?
I don't think they are proofs as we use the terms today. But from my limited understanding of philosophy a "proof" was the correct logical outcome if one accepts the premises proposed (and therein lies the rub?
'Proof' at one time meant 'test', so it may very well be a linguistic problem, an unintentional equivocation. In any event, they don't qualify as proofs by modern conventional terminiology. Instead, they would better be described as 'errors in reasoning'. If you doubt that, please present one of them so that we can analyze it together.
Dragons in basements? The thing about that is that it purely hypothetical. It's like pink unicorns or pasta monsters - they are things that nobody has ever proposed really existed. But belief in God(s) - that is something that really does constantly emerge.
And the assertion of the existence of a supernatural, omniscient, omnipotent creator who is undetectable is not hypothetical? How so? I notice in your last sentence that you switch from focusing on the existence of God to the existence of
belief. Those are far from the same thing, and
belief is not evidence for
existence. If it were, then we could use the
even more widespread existence of other superstitions as evidence for the veracity of astrology, witchcraft, a pantheon of gods, spirits, voodoo and so forth. Your answer simply doesn't hold water.
So no, I don't really think the dragons, pink unicorns or pasta monsters really offer anything useful as they don't really relate to the natural cross-cultural belief in the supernatural.
They relate perfectly to the cross-cultural belief in the supernatural, because they're further examples of the same desire to make reality conform to one's traditional, comfortable, warm-and-fuzzy, pie-in-the-sky delusion. People over here do seriously believe in dragons, spirits, ghosts, good luck charms, palm reading, astrology, etc, and there's no more evidence for your god than there is for any of them. They're all products of limited reasoning capacity, coupled with a trembling preference for a comforting fiction over a clear vision of the way things really are. Yes, belief is cross-cultural, but what is believed in is as diverse as the human imagination is capable of conceiving.
Carl Sagan is of course famous for his phrase that extra-ordinary claims required extra-ordinary evidence. But I've never seen any philosophical, let alone scientific, basis for that statement - as far as I can tell it's no more than opinion (which is O.K., except that I think it gets a false authority because of who said it).
If I tell you that I have a quarter in my hand, you'd probably say, 'OK, whatever'. It's not an extraordinary claim, it has no particular consequence to your life or your worldview. If I tell you that I have a magical, invisible fire-breathing dragon in my basement, you'd most likely say, 'Yeah? Prove it.' Why? Because if it were true, you'd have to revise your whole view of reality. Therefore, when theists claim that there is an invisible, undetectable, super-powerful being that created the whole universe (and the 'evil' within it??) yet cannot be detected by any human senses or devices...well....I hope you'll forgive me for responding, 'Yeah? Prove it.'
If you have any evidence for the existence of this super-magical-powerful entity that somehow exists beyond time and space, please present it. If you don't, please confess that you don't. If you don't, it's more reasonable to conclude that it's more likely to be a figment of your imagination, brought about by your cultural conditioning, coupled with a certain trembling in the face of reality, than it is that such being actually exists contrary to common sense.
(I hope that doesn't sound too harsh. It's just the limitation of typed communication. Please don't read any animosity or lack of compassion into what was written.

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"A philosopher is a blind man in a dark room looking for a black cat that isn't there. A theologian is the man who finds it." ~ H. L. Mencken
"We ain't a sharp species. We kill each other over arguments about what happens when you die, then fail to see the fucking irony in that."
"It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions in favor of vegetarianism while the wolf remains of a different opinion."