RE: Terrible Atheist Argument #1
November 12, 2013 at 10:18 pm
(This post was last modified: November 12, 2013 at 10:31 pm by Vincenzo Vinny G..)
I'm keeping my responses brief, since I have to make a lot of them.
(November 6, 2013 at 11:33 pm)Brakeman Wrote:
What in the world are you talking about here?
(November 7, 2013 at 1:09 am)Ryantology Wrote:
Ryantology, your post was refreshing to read.
But what does "has not been established" mean? Do you expect scientists to get photographic evidence of the finitude of the past? Perform experiments to prove it? Show that a past-finite regress is logically necessary? Have atoms rearrange themselves to say "Past-finite-regress?"
The vagueness of your criteria makes me skeptical. It also raises the question of whether it is even relevant- perhaps one does not need to "establish" a past-finite chain at all, but merely to show that it's more rational to believe in finitude than infinitude. So why must finitude be established?
(November 7, 2013 at 2:15 am)max-greece Wrote:
But why should we think causality doesn't apply outside of the universe? Isn't that ad hoc?
Usually this is tied to experience, and no surprise, you make that your second challenge. To that, I must ask whether a lack of experience of something renders it incoherent or illogical. If we have no empirical evidence of turtles in Antarctica, does that mean turtles cannot exist in Antarctica, or that turtles living in Antarctica is incoherent? When you think carefully about what you are arguing, you'll see that experience doesn't allow you to make the inference that things you haven't experienced don't exist.
By the way, your argument sounds very similar to something someone showed me from youtube. I'm glad you're at least thinking about this stuff instead of herp-derping about atheism and religion.
(November 7, 2013 at 5:13 am)Esquilax Wrote:
Could you explain how or why you think the MGB concept engages in special pleading?
I also think you're wrong about your use of "infinite concept"- I don't think mathematics has anything to do with it, so thinking in terms of an upper limit misses the point.
Also, "My MGB is the same as yours, except he can kill yours" seems to contain a contradiction. If a being can be killed, I assume it cannot be a MGB. So I think you don't understand the concept well enough. I hate to cite this guy, but I like his sweater:
Of course, his response raises the question, to me, of whether this concept inherently comes with some anthropocentric biases. He doesn't answer that in the video.
(November 7, 2013 at 3:02 pm)WesOlsen Wrote:
Actually, I just cited the first big proponent of the Kalam in the video above.
But my post doesn't touch the Kalam whatsoever. Perhaps the Kalam is the only argument you know of, in which case all that time you spent writing up your post should be spent looking up other arguments from a first cause like Aquinas' argument, Leibniz's argument, Aristotle's argument and the like.
How can you make such confident statements while being so ignorant about other arguments from a first cause?
(November 7, 2013 at 4:24 pm)Faith No More Wrote:
I'd rather you tell me why you think it's a bad argument. You seem so convinced, it should be easy to show, right?
(November 8, 2013 at 4:18 am)genkaus Wrote:(November 6, 2013 at 10:42 pm)Vincenzo "Vinny" G. Wrote:
As promised.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gYpfkdQ32...nuJ8d9SUlQ
Summarize what he's saying plz. 30 minute visual presentation needs to come with supplementary notes.