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How does one respond to this argument?It's long but an interesting read. Thanks :)
#14
RE: How does one respond to this argument?It's long but an interesting read. Thanks :)
(May 17, 2016 at 7:32 am)Alex K Wrote: Please succinctly summarize your position and what the counterargument is you would like debunked. I'm not reading that messy wall of text.

I suppose my main position is that the standpoint of viewing that there is no such being as god or place as heaven or hell is a rational and logical position both in scientific and philosophical terms. I would probably like to counter his refutations on my position and not his position.. meaning I don't mind if both sides are rational but my side (the one making no great claim) IS rational. You get what I mean?



**EDIT**: Now I have realised he keeps saying the existence is god can only be arguable in philosophical terms.. he is wrong there. It can be argued in philosophical but it can be argued in scientific terms too. If one, as all religion do, tried to fit god in with science, well then it can be argued on both scientific and philosophical terms. Scientifically.. there is no evidence to suggest a god exists and philosophically one can deduce a god, yes, but that does not make it true and a philosophy without some solid ground backed up with evidence is a weak philosophical point (The evidence for my position is that there is no evidence for the other position - ergo I don't have to disprove squat). The great thing about Occams Razor (Among competing hypotheses, the one with the fewest assumptions should be selected.)  and Hitchens Razor (That which can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence), as mentioned above, is that it holds it's **meaning and merits** on both scientific and philosophical terms. The onus is on the person making the bigger claim and everything works without the assumption of a divine creator. That simplest version is usually the better one.
(May 17, 2016 at 9:57 am)robvalue Wrote: Sure, no problem at all Smile

Yeah, you can edit for 2 hours after you have posted. However, you could always copy it all, work on it offline, and then repost it in this thread. Using "hide tags" can be useful for breaking things up for the reader too.

[ hide ]
Stuff
[ /hide ]

(With the spaces removes inside the brackets) gives



Sweet (you learn something new everyday after all. ha), I'll see if I can get the time to revamp it.
As I mentioned to Alex K there and it might make my position a little clearer, is this:

I suppose my main position is that the standpoint of viewing that there is no such being as god or place as heaven or hell is a rational and logical position both in scientific and philosophical terms. I would probably like to counter his refutations on my position and not his position.. meaning I don't mind if both sides are rational but my side (the one making no great claim) IS rational. You get what I mean?


**EDIT**: Now I have realised he keeps saying the existence is god can only be arguable in philosophical terms.. he is wrong there. It can be argued in philosophical but it can be argued in scientific terms too. If one, as all religion do, tried to fit god in with science, well then it can be argued on both scientific and philosophical terms. Scientifically.. there is no evidence to suggest a god exists and philosophically one can deduce a god, yes, but that does not make it true and a philosophy without some solid ground backed up with evidence is a weak philosophical point (The evidence for my position is that there is no evidence for the other position - ergo I don't have to disprove squat). The great thing about Occams Razor (Among competing hypotheses, the one with the fewest assumptions should be selected.)  and Hitchens Razor (That which can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence), as mentioned above, is that it holds it's **meaning and merits** on both scientific and philosophical termsThe onus is on the person making the bigger claim and everything works without the assumption of a divine creator. That simplest version is usually the better one.

I was going to say, if you want my full post that he cited the make things clearer, just ask, as I was afraid of having too much text and putting people off, but now I have the hide option. Below is basically what you have read from his citations but just to make things more understandable and less confusing.

Now I have another 2 feckin hours to do in work.. ah well has to be done Smile



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Messages In This Thread
RE: How does one respond to this argument?It's long but an interesting read. Thanks :) - by fruyian - May 17, 2016 at 11:48 am
RE: How does one respond to this - by robvalue - May 19, 2016 at 10:51 am

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