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RE: Must We Know Everything?
March 19, 2015 at 5:07 pm
What a quotable thread, everyone!
It's a mark of ignorance to me to say that we will one day know everything there is to know. A big discovery in science doesn't simply an answer a burning question we've asked for a long time, it can often open the door to a whole knew field of inquiry to pursue, and I have no reason to think that this won't hold into the future.
Must we know everything?
I think a sentiment similar to this is what drives a lot of people into the sciences to discover new things about life, the planet and the universe. It's the human obsession with explaining the world we live in. Luckily for us, we discovered the scientific method so we could stop fooling ourselves into explanations that weren't or aren't true.
Teenaged X-Files obsession + Bermuda Triangle episode + Self-led school research project = Atheist.
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RE: Must We Know Everything?
March 19, 2015 at 7:05 pm
(This post was last modified: March 19, 2015 at 7:11 pm by JuliaL.)
Can we know everything?
I don't construct very complicated arguments, but:
If we were to know everything, wouldn't that entail knowing the non-existence of unknown unknowns?
Wouldn't that mean you know what you don't know?
Doesn't that sort of logical inconsistency show the incoherence of omniscience?
I'm pretty relaxed about not knowing everything if it is logically impossible.
So how, exactly, does God know that She's NOT a brain in a vat?