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Shia Islamic Argument for the existence of God
#51
RE: Shia Islamic Argument for the existence of God
(April 27, 2016 at 4:22 am)pocaracas Wrote: It always strikes me as odd the necessity that muslims feel to include arabic words, even if transposed to the latin alphabet...
It's like arabic has some special property that will make us non-speakers aware of the veracity of what's being said/written.

Here, try to see if this makes any sense:
- In the days of old (antigamente), people were more in tune (mais atentas) with their natural surroundings (à natureza). There were the druids (druídas) and the shamans (shamãs) who mediated the spirit and the natural worlds.

Did that translation add anything to the english text?
That is interesting. Maybe they are simply transcribing what they read an imam or scholar write, where it actually serves some purpose, and the minority of followers who want to appear reasonable--yet haven't separated what others say from their own ideas--fail to realize its lack of function in contexts such as these.
He who loves God cannot endeavour that God should love him in return - Baruch Spinoza
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#52
RE: Shia Islamic Argument for the existence of God
To defend the OP on two points though...
(March 17, 2016 at 1:31 pm)Esquilax Wrote: You cannot prove the existence of something in reality via argument, particularly not through a philosophical argument: you can't, essentially, talk something into existence. Philosophy has its uses, but nowhere among those is the ability to demonstrate objective reality. 
Well, no, not really... I mean the whole purpose of philosophy is to demonstrate objective reality. That's what reason basically amounts to: beginning with a set of axioms that are known exclusively to the intellect and deducing from these more particular concepts to intelligibly explain the structures that make experience possible.
Quote:You're really doing nothing more than playing word games, and worse still, they're all negative word games anyway, as I'll soon show, but for now, there's this: logic is only as good as the data you feed into it. You have included no data here, and thus cannot come to a conclusion that shows anything about reality. Only about some hypothetical reality where everything works exactly as you've said; you've done nothing to demonstrate that our reality is that reality. 
Again, I couldn't disagree more. To the extent that he's attempting to construct a metaphysical worldview based on simple axioms from which further propositions logically follow, he's not obliged to "demonstrate that our reality is that reality." He simply has to show that his reasons are both valid and consistent with the data. While that doesn't mean that his proof describes our reality--a challenge that no worldview can successfully meet--it establishes it as an alternative to which reasonable people can ascribe, granting that human reason is fallible.
He who loves God cannot endeavour that God should love him in return - Baruch Spinoza
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#53
RE: Shia Islamic Argument for the existence of God
(April 28, 2016 at 9:04 pm)Society Wrote: Is this the religion that worships the pedophile?

Yup. He's held as some sort of ideal human, but he was bunking up with a child. Objective morality was different in those times, apparently.
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#54
RE: Shia Islamic Argument for the existence of God
(April 29, 2016 at 3:21 am)robvalue Wrote: Objective morality was different in those times, apparently.
I'd like to think that the world has in some respects made a certain amount of ethical as well as intellectual progress since then.
He who loves God cannot endeavour that God should love him in return - Baruch Spinoza
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#55
RE: Shia Islamic Argument for the existence of God
I would very much agree that it has.
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#56
RE: Shia Islamic Argument for the existence of God
(April 29, 2016 at 1:47 pm)robvalue Wrote: I would very much agree that it has.
Oh! I see you've come to the objective morality side (the Good side)!  Wink
He who loves God cannot endeavour that God should love him in return - Baruch Spinoza
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#57
RE: Shia Islamic Argument for the existence of God
Yeah....

No Tongue
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#58
RE: Shia Islamic Argument for the existence of God
I think it's quite damning that the Shiites cannot agree on how many Imams there were supposed to be until the Mahdi. Somehow, people cannot agree on something as basic as this. Are the Ismalis right or are the Twelvers right or are the Zaidis? There's no objective way of determining who is right. The number of Imams might be five, it might be seven or it might be twelve. Who knows?

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#59
RE: Shia Islamic Argument for the existence of God
I have to say. . . if you NEED a philosophical argument for God, because there's no other proof of His existence. . . then what is He doing for you, really, other than allowing you to have existed?
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#60
RE: Shia Islamic Argument for the existence of God
Excited Penguin,

Quote:You fail to comprehend that the totality of entities and their universals are just as real as the finite entities are. You seem to think they aren't because the totality of entities is nothing more than a sum of its parts and therefore cannot be considered as a separate entity. I would have to disagree, since the same could be said about any separate entity in particular - namely, that it is nothing more than a sum of its parts. So if we were to take this part of your argument to its conclusion we would have to conclude that nothing could possibly exist, and yet we know that not to be true. Everything does exist, including finite entities, their totality and their universals.

It’s interesting you’re saying this. I was at first drawn to another one of Ibn Sina’s arguments (the Argument from Contingency and Necessity posted on Edward Feser’s blog) but then lost interest due to atheists pointing out the flaws in considering totalities and aggregates as real things (which that argument kind of did).
 
The “separate entities” or finite entities refer to any actual, real, existing entities. They don’t refer to totalities or sums of parts. Totalities or sums of parts are simply notions or abstract concepts; we like to assign names to entities to make it easier for our minds to treat them as if they’re one. But the totality itself doesn’t exist; it’s only the individual “members” that truly exist. We just assign names to them, or common names to them, to make it easier for us to understand relations between them. You might ask, “But aren’t those members then comprised of other things? And are thus totalities of other things?” Well, the same thing I said above then applies to those things too; those members, if it seems like they are comprised of parts, are then actually just mental abstractions of even smaller actual entities.
 
A totality doesn’t have any real existence; totalities are just synonyms for many actual individual entities. It is the members that exist, and only they exist – nothing more. If this is the kind of totality you speak of, then yes – totalities exist – because that’s just another way of saying that many individual entities exist. But the semantic usage of totality in the DOTV isn’t referring to such a usage of the term. The Ayatollah, I believe, was saying that totalities in and of themselves don’t exist – only members exist, nothing else and nothing more. The actual, substantial existence of totalities is an illusion. They are simply names or concepts that we abstract and assign to help ourselves understand large numbers of entities better.

Even if we take, for the sake of argument, totalities to be actual things - then any totality would be either finite or infinite. If the former, it would be a finite entity (and finite entities cannot be the extensions of that reality, as explained in the argument). If the latter, then that totality would be an infinite/absolute/unrestricted entity - which is, again, precisely the kind of thing the "argument" seeks to demonstrate.
 
And if you’re talking about emergent properties, then I’ve already addressed that in my last post in response to JuliaL.

Quote:You argued that universals have only a mental existence. That's true, but so does everything else. Reality itself is only a mental concept.

Even if we say, for the sake of argument, that everything else (cars, books, planets, galaxies, universes, etc) also has only a mental existence – how exactly would that be a problem for the DOTV? If anything, that would only strengthen it; it would show that the extension of that reality cannot be any of these things because they all only have mental existences (and mental existences are finite and conditional).

 
Reality, fortunately, is not a mental concept. If we and our minds didn’t exist, reality would still be hanging around. Heck, it would still be there in the form of our minds really not existing. And ah, here would be where I would repost a requote (A Commentary on Theistic Arguments, pages 184-185):

Quote:“Should reality be annihilated in a specific condition—in a beginning, or an end, or in any particular supposition—then only two situations are conceivable.  The first is that its annihilation is not real, and an equivocal or false claim has been made that reality is annihilated.  In this case, reality is preserved and it has not been annihilated.  The second is that its annihilation is true; that is, reality has really been annihilated.  In this supposition, again, the affirmation of the basic reality is acknowledged, since the supposition asserts that reality has really been destroyed; therefore, as a real phenomenon, the destruction of reality reflects the real presence of reality.  Therefore, the falsehood of sophistry and veridicality of reality is well secured in every perceivable supposition; and a single instance of reality’s destruction is inconceivable. A proposition, which negates reality, is a proposition, that neither its veridicality can be related in any supposition, nor its falsehood could ever be doubted.  That is, its utterance always presupposes its own falsity. On the other side of the spectrum, it is impossible to doubt the meaning of the proposition, which affirms reality, because dismissing it as meaningless or doubting its meaning entails the affirmation of reality.”


Bingo. Even saying that reality doesn't really exist only reaffirms that it does. Reality must exist unconditionally (and therefore cannot only exist in the mind).

Quote:This is a non sequitur, plain and simple.

Really? How?


Mudhammam,

Quote:Anyway, the argument is compelling in some ways, but it basically sounds to me like an equivalent of Spinoza's God, which is to say, Nature is infinite and everything is eternally necessary. In other words, this is hardly the God of Islam or any particular deity that vies for the attention of certain regions of the terrestrial spheres. So... why call it God?

You can call it whatever you want. You can call it God (with a capital G) if you feel like it (the word "God" is, after all, pretty vague in its meaning). Personally, I just call it a deity. I like to say "the DOTV proves the existence of a deity with such and such qualities (the aforementioned qualities that were traced by Ibn Sina)." You can also call it Allah. The Arabic word "Allah" predates Islam, and it literally means "the awe-inspiring" (or, according to others, "the deity"). Since I find this entity to be the only deity known, and I also find it awe-inspiring, I can call it Allah (I do, after all, speak Urdu and Arabic and such vocabulary would come naturally to me). It is also to be noted that I am not concerned with proving the truthfulness of any particular religion in this thread. If I was concerned with that, only then would I proceed with trying to identify this deity with Islam or any other religion. Here I'm only proving the existence of a deity or deity-like entity.
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