RE: What distinguishes a fantasy book from the bible?
August 5, 2011 at 7:12 pm
(This post was last modified: August 5, 2011 at 7:32 pm by Statler Waldorf.)
(August 5, 2011 at 6:52 pm)Rhythm Wrote: You should spend any time you've set aside for insulting me on something more productive. Something like producing a single scrap of evidence for your claims. No one missed any point you've attempted to make Stat. When you decide to mimic your demi-god and "explain" something through parables the message falls flat. This is largely due to the fact that you're a terrible storyteller, but it doesn't help that you seem to have lost your hold on reality.
Telling someone not to waste their time insulting you and then proceeding to insult that person? More of the inconsistency I have grown to love from you Rhythm, it really is part of your charm

(August 5, 2011 at 7:08 pm)edk141 Wrote: The laws of logic are independent of the universe, its physical properties, and its purpose or reason for creation. It is impossible to find scientific evidence for or against logic because it's as conceptual as, say, the number 2. Nothing about the universe can change the fact that 2 = 2.
Oh my, we actually agree on something? Although when you say things like the laws of logic are independent of the universe you are not sounding like much of a naturalist. Do you have proof they exist though?
(August 5, 2011 at 7:08 pm)edk141 Wrote: It's not so much that I believe this implicitly as that I don't see the point in trying to live in any other world but the one my senses tell me I am in. I derive my pain, hope, fear, sadness, whatever from my senses, ignoring them can't change that, so why would I? My senses are as real as I am.
So you admit there is a good chance that your senses are not reliable and you are experiencing a reality that is not actually real?
(August 5, 2011 at 7:08 pm)edk141 Wrote: Actually, I do believe the human memory is not infallible, so I won't refute this point.
I didn’t say infallible, I said reliable. There is no way to prove our memories are reliable, even though we all live like we believe it is true.
(August 5, 2011 at 7:08 pm)edk141 Wrote: I make no assumptions about scientific laws other than that they describe the way the world works. If the world suddenly starts working in a different way tomorrow, I will revise which laws of science I believe to be accurate.
If you actually believed this though you could not learn or know anything because the principle of induction would have no foundation. I have a feeling that you do not jump off of tall buildings because you assume the law of gravity works the same today as it did yesterday and will work the same tomorrow as it did today. There is no way to logically prove this to be true, even though everyone lives like they believe it is true.
(August 5, 2011 at 7:08 pm)edk141 Wrote: You read the Bible with your senses. If your senses were fallible, the only reason you believe them to be infallible would not exist. I detect circular reasoning.
Not a true circular argument, although it has a circular nature to it, I will grant you that. I can use what I have read in the Bible as a new primary axiom to provide a foundation for my initial presuppositions. Everyone has to engage in somewhat of a circular argument sooner or later. It’s not an invalid argument it just can’t be used to prove anything to anyone else.
(August 5, 2011 at 7:08 pm)edk141 Wrote: I do? Please explain. I don't know what your world view is other than logic and reason don't figure in it - how could I borrow from it?
Actually logic and reason are very much a part of it. In fact, in an atheistic universe you’d have no reason to even believe in logic, much less use it. So by doing this, you are acting in a manner that assumes we do not live in an atheistic universe, that there are laws of logic that transcend time and nature and we should use them to discern truth. There is a Biblical basis for that belief, there has never been a naturalistic one.
Interesting discussion though, at least we have gotten to actually discussing something. So kudos.