So, as an atheist I am often asked (and often ask myself) what would I accept as evidence of the existence of god (generic theistic version). In an effort to avoid erecting a defensive structure of text, liberal use of hiding abounds. I don't deal with what it would take for me to be convinced that one god was the right one, that's a much thornier one than generic theism.
I can easily state big things, like the sun stopping for hours and the earth not ripping apart, the stars rearranging to spell words that everyone on the planet can see, etc...
My dilemma lies in identifying the minimal amount of evidence I would find as a reasonable basis to believe in god(s). If I can't nail that down, I'm not really able to answer a question my position indicates I should be able to.
PLEASE chime in where you disagree. I like a bit of biting wit pointing out my errors, it gives me entertainment and elucidation
Evidence:
Subjective vs. Objective
Documented vs. Non-Documented
Repeatable vs. Non-repeatable.
I would believe, but couldn't ask you to.
The real question is what would it take for me to feel justified in telling others that I have a reasonable, evidence based argument for the existence of god(s), still in a broad theistic sense.
So my baseline line on feeling reasonable in saying others should believe would have to be a repeatable, successful, directly interactive experience. Basically if we (as people, maybe it rotates or something) could call up god(s) every Friday night, ask them to do stuff, have them do stuff on request that we can observe, and still have no conceivable knowledge of how they do that. And they could still be alien pranksters with technology literally millions of years more advanced than our own.
That seems to be a lot to ask from a theist (god on command) but if I'm honest that's the only thing that would make me feel I would have the right to tell you that I have a position so reasonable and backed with evidence that you are failing to use correct logic yourself if you do not agree with it. Obviously the definition of acceptable validation of evidence can be an issue, but for this thought experiment, assume "Phenomenally well documented evidence" meets whatever criteria you have as a skeptic.
Please let me know what you folk think would be enough to make the case to other god(s) exist. More evidence, less evidence, different evidence, and why. I think the better I can answer this question for myself the better I will be at pruning my bias towards picking 'unexplained' over 'proof' instead of the 50% odds it should be at a well defined threshold point.
I can easily state big things, like the sun stopping for hours and the earth not ripping apart, the stars rearranging to spell words that everyone on the planet can see, etc...
My dilemma lies in identifying the minimal amount of evidence I would find as a reasonable basis to believe in god(s). If I can't nail that down, I'm not really able to answer a question my position indicates I should be able to.
PLEASE chime in where you disagree. I like a bit of biting wit pointing out my errors, it gives me entertainment and elucidation
Evidence:
Subjective vs. Objective
Documented vs. Non-Documented
Repeatable vs. Non-repeatable.
I would believe, but couldn't ask you to.
The real question is what would it take for me to feel justified in telling others that I have a reasonable, evidence based argument for the existence of god(s), still in a broad theistic sense.
So my baseline line on feeling reasonable in saying others should believe would have to be a repeatable, successful, directly interactive experience. Basically if we (as people, maybe it rotates or something) could call up god(s) every Friday night, ask them to do stuff, have them do stuff on request that we can observe, and still have no conceivable knowledge of how they do that. And they could still be alien pranksters with technology literally millions of years more advanced than our own.
That seems to be a lot to ask from a theist (god on command) but if I'm honest that's the only thing that would make me feel I would have the right to tell you that I have a position so reasonable and backed with evidence that you are failing to use correct logic yourself if you do not agree with it. Obviously the definition of acceptable validation of evidence can be an issue, but for this thought experiment, assume "Phenomenally well documented evidence" meets whatever criteria you have as a skeptic.
Please let me know what you folk think would be enough to make the case to other god(s) exist. More evidence, less evidence, different evidence, and why. I think the better I can answer this question for myself the better I will be at pruning my bias towards picking 'unexplained' over 'proof' instead of the 50% odds it should be at a well defined threshold point.