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Why not deism?
#11
RE: Why not deism?
(September 15, 2019 at 3:10 pm)Inqwizitor Wrote: If we want to really get down to an ontological principle, we should ask, "What is a god?"


Well that's the issue, isn't it? Theists and deists alike haven't defined what a god is, let alone provided evidence for such a thing.

(September 15, 2019 at 3:10 pm)Inqwizitor Wrote: That might be the fundamental problem with deism, actually. In that case, though, atheism loses cognitive meaning, as well.

How does atheism "lose cognitive meaning?"

(September 15, 2019 at 3:10 pm)Inqwizitor Wrote: The issue is basically, why is there something rather than nothing? That is at least a reason, if not an entirely convincing one (and to be convinced is subjective anyway), to accept some sort of necessary existent.

Why should we accept that as a sensible question in the first place? Who says that "Why is there something rather than nothing?" is even an idea worth discussing?

The question implies that there has to be something instead of nothing, which isn't true. There doesn't "have" to be anything, there simply is. There are no shoulds or should nots, there's simply what is. And the reality is, we are here.
If you're frightened of dying, and you're holding on, you'll see devils tearing your life away. But if you've made your peace, then the devils are really angels, freeing you from the Earth.
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#12
RE: Why not deism?
[How do I quote just the poster's text, without quoting mine along with it?]

If we have no working definition of what a god is, then what does atheism actually mean?

The reason for existence is a fascinating idea worth discussing, at least to me (and billions of other people, evidently). That there simply is no reason or that the question is not worth discussing is not any more convincing than religious ideas. 

Whether or not there "has" to be something or not is the crux of many a metaphysical debate. Simply asserting one way or the other is one way of dealing with that; but there is no compelling reason to agree.
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#13
RE: Why not deism?
(September 15, 2019 at 3:10 pm)Inqwizitor Wrote: The issue is basically, why is there something rather than nothing? That is at least a reason, if not an entirely convincing one (and to be convinced is subjective anyway), to accept some sort of necessary existent.

Nothing is not an issue. No one has a description of nothing. If we can't describe nothing we have no need to argue about nothing.
God thinks it's fun to confuse primates. Larsen's God!






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#14
RE: Why not deism?
(September 15, 2019 at 1:22 pm)Inqwizitor Wrote: There are arguments for the existence of "God", that actually, in the end, don't amount to much more than a hypothetical Prime Mover, or "something" — we don't know what — that is the source of reason, volition and material phenomena. 

Is deism pointless or even dishonest, because it's asserting something as knowledge that we cannot know? Did you ever seriously consider it instead of atheism? Or is there any practical difference?

When I was considering similar questions, I realized that there was no reason to assign the attributes of awareness and willfulness to a deistic God.  Such an uncaring and non-participating God might as well be a completely mechanical law of the universe, a mere given about reality.

And without the attributes of awareness and willfulness, you might as well not call it "God" at all, to avoid confusions.  At that point, becoming an atheist is just a matter of intellectual honesty.
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#15
RE: Why not deism?
OP: From what I understand of deism, it requires at least a bit of supernatural belief. There's no way I'll even consider riding that train.
Being told you're delusional does not necessarily mean you're mental. 
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#16
RE: Why not deism?
(September 15, 2019 at 2:02 pm)Inqwizitor Wrote:
(September 15, 2019 at 1:49 pm)Grandizer Wrote: As for reason and volition, these are products of the nervous system and need not be explained by any sort of phenomena external to the human biology. We have very good explanations for how we come to produce reasoned responses, and we can appeal to computer AIs as good analogies to the human mind (except perhaps for the awareness part, which still has naturalistic explanations anyway ... such as panpsychism which I'm still not really sure about but it's there as an option).

Panpsychism is really interesting. I wonder how it is practically different from pantheism, though. If the universe is eternal and possesses psyche, it's like, the universe is a great cosmic mind.

There are many flavors of panpsychism. But not all flavors of panpsychism involve a cosmic mind.

Read this:
https://aeon.co/ideas/panpsychism-is-cra...bably-true

This one I am very very provisionally leaning to, so not very confidently. But nevertheless the exact type of panpsychism I am weakly adhering to is one where tables and rocks are not necessarily conscious (so slight disagreement with the article there), but one in which the basic elements of existence may have the starting point of consciousness (whatever that is).

And naturalism explains the origin of life pretty well actually, since life is simply a biological process explicable in terms of physical factors and processes. Even if we don't yet know the specifics of how life arose. Keep in mind life is not the same as consciousness. Bacteria are living organisms, but they are not counted as conscious entities.

As to why "something rather than nothing", we can say that something has to exist because absolute nothingness cannot be. Therefore, something necessarily exists. But that something could easily be in line with naturalism.
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#17
RE: Why not deism?
Yes, I think deism is pretty much pointless (dishonest, I can't say).  It suffers from the same fatal fallacy as all other incarnations of the KSA and appears to function as a sort of security blanket for people who want there to be at least some magic in the universe.

Boru
‘I can’t be having with this.’ - Esmeralda Weatherwax
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#18
RE: Why not deism?
(September 15, 2019 at 6:09 pm)Grandizer Wrote:
(September 15, 2019 at 2:02 pm)Inqwizitor Wrote: Panpsychism is really interesting. I wonder how it is practically different from pantheism, though. If the universe is eternal and possesses psyche, it's like, the universe is a great cosmic mind.

There are many flavors of panpsychism. But not all flavors of panpsychism involve a cosmic mind.

Read this:
https://aeon.co/ideas/panpsychism-is-cra...bably-true

This one I am very very provisionally leaning to, so not very confidently. But nevertheless the exact type of panpsychism I am weakly adhering to is one where tables and rocks are not necessarily conscious (so slight disagreement with the article there), but one in which the basic elements of existence may have the starting point of consciousness (whatever that is).

And naturalism explains the origin of life pretty well actually, since life is simply a biological process explicable in terms of physical factors and processes. Even if we don't yet know the specifics of how life arose. Keep in mind life is not the same as consciousness. Bacteria are living organisms, but they are not counted as conscious entities.

As to why "something rather than nothing", we can say that something has to exist because absolute nothingness cannot be. Therefore, something necessarily exists. But that something could easily be in line with naturalism.

That article reminds me the Kantian phenomena/noumena distinction. We can see some things, but we don't know the intrinsic nature of things.

I'm curious how something that necessarily exists is in line with naturalism? Is that like the block theory of the universe?

@BrianSoddingBoru4 — what's the KSA?
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#19
RE: Why not deism?
(September 15, 2019 at 8:27 pm)Inqwizitor Wrote:
(September 15, 2019 at 6:09 pm)Grandizer Wrote: There are many flavors of panpsychism. But not all flavors of panpsychism involve a cosmic mind.

Read this:
https://aeon.co/ideas/panpsychism-is-cra...bably-true

This one I am very very provisionally leaning to, so not very confidently. But nevertheless the exact type of panpsychism I am weakly adhering to is one where tables and rocks are not necessarily conscious (so slight disagreement with the article there), but one in which the basic elements of existence may have the starting point of consciousness (whatever that is).

And naturalism explains the origin of life pretty well actually, since life is simply a biological process explicable in terms of physical factors and processes. Even if we don't yet know the specifics of how life arose. Keep in mind life is not the same as consciousness. Bacteria are living organisms, but they are not counted as conscious entities.

As to why "something rather than nothing", we can say that something has to exist because absolute nothingness cannot be. Therefore, something necessarily exists. But that something could easily be in line with naturalism.

That article reminds me the Kantian phenomena/noumena distinction. We can see some things, but we don't know the intrinsic nature of things.

I'm curious how something that necessarily exists is in line with naturalism? Is that like the block theory of the universe?

@BrianSoddingBoru4 — what's the KSA?

Feel free to look up modal realism and read a bit on it (if you haven't). The universe/cosmos exists necessarily if you accept the supports for modal realism are true and therefore modal realism is true. If you accept that, then there is no possible world in which not all possible worlds are actual.

But even if you don't go along with modal realism, I don't see why something about the universe cannot exist necessarily and from which all else in existence stems from.
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#20
RE: Why not deism?
Deism, is the inability to accept or understand that natural processes happen naturally.

It would be similar to thinking that mechanical processes need some kind of natural process in order for it to move.

A car moving down the street is being pulled by several invisible, intangible horses. An airplane achieves flight because many invisible, intangible birds pull it into the air.

Deism puts something in front of a natural process because people don't understand the nature of nature.
Insanity - Doing the same thing over and over again, expecting a different result
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