What you mean to say is that YOU don't care.
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Current time: November 16, 2024, 4:05 pm
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The Ontological Argument for the Existence of God
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As far as I'm concerned, you're damn right.
At the age of five, Skagra decided emphatically that God did not exist. This revelation tends to make most people in the universe who have it react in one of two ways - with relief or with despair. Only Skagra responded to it by thinking, 'Wait a second. That means there's a situation vacant.'
In Plantinga's version, it is a part of the definition of maximally great being that it exists necessarily. It is also a part of the background assumptions that this is a conscious being, and not simply some prior natural cause. Thus premise one states that it's possible that there is a conscious being that exists necessarily. This appears to be the crux of the matter, whether or not that is actually possible. We don't know. So we don't know if premise one is sound. It doesn't seem probable that the necessarily existing entity that started everything was also a fully developed conscious being, so that casts doubt on the possibility that such a first entity is possible. The rest is just elucidating the analytical truths contained in premise one. So it really is one premise away from being argument by definition.
It would be nice if, instead of 100 people making 200 feeble objections to the ontological argument, there could be one, singular, comprehensive refutation that would convince people the ontological argument was fallacious.
Can someone come up with something like that? That would help.
Post #174. Try to keep up.
(December 18, 2015 at 7:22 pm)athrock Wrote: Alternatively, it may be that theists deploy a cluster of arguments (Kalam, Teleological, Moral, Ontological, etc.) knowing that the net effect is to persuade that the existence of a supreme being is more likely than not to be true. *sigh* That's what we always get told. Theists seem to mistake quantity as being the key component here, as if they just need to round up lots and lots of arguments for god, and then suddenly they'll be able to logic him into existence. Not only is that not how it works, as you need evidence to demonstrate a thing, not just arguments about how it must totally exist, but the success or failure of a "cluster of arguments," is predicated on those arguments being successful, which none of the ones for god are. You don't build a cumulative case out of sheer numbers, each one of the arguments within it must actually be cogent in some respect for the case to accumulate, which is where theistic rambling falls down every time. You can have a million bad arguments and still not have a case that the focus of those arguments is probabilistically likely. Quote:IOW, Cato, theists have quite a few arrows in their quiver, and it only takes one to strike the target. Atheists, on the other hand, must successfully dodge them all as they rain down... Are you kidding me? You're going to ramble on about argumentation and then, at the very end, completely fuck it up by committing one of the most obvious logical fallacies of them all, in shifting the burden of proof? No, we don't actually need to refute every single argument or else you're right, you need to demonstrate the accuracy of your argument's claims, which no theist ever actually does. Instead of just getting simple evidence that god does exist, we instead get all these vague, philosophical, poorly defined weasel arguments about how he must exist, because the actual burden of proof is one theists can't shoulder, and so they seek to swap it out with a different criterion more amenable to allowing their predrawn conclusion. Arguments are not evidence. For an argument to be rationally justified, it must rely on evidence that is demonstrably accurate, and nothing in these hand wringing, pathetic little wheedling pleas about how god is logically possible do that. It's all just heavily curated rhetoric, delivered in a vacuum, with no regard to the idea that the real world is what demonstrates what's real, not how far you can twist logic to come to a conclusion you had before you even started thinking about it.
"YOU take the hard look in the mirror. You are everything that is wrong with this world. The only thing important to you, is you." - ronedee
Want to see more of my writing? Check out my (safe for work!) site, Unprotected Sects! (December 21, 2015 at 1:52 pm)Delicate Wrote: It would be nice if, instead of 100 people making 200 feeble objections to the ontological argument, there could be one, singular, comprehensive refutation that would convince people the ontological argument was fallacious. Its shit from start to finish. You can fix ignorance, you can't fix stupid. Tinkety Tonk and down with the Nazis. (December 21, 2015 at 1:52 pm)Delicate Wrote: It would be nice if, instead of 100 people making 200 feeble objections to the ontological argument, there could be one, singular, comprehensive refutation that would convince people the ontological argument was fallacious. It's an argument that doesn't demonstrate any of its premises, nor even that they're possible. It requires no refutation at all; empty assertions never do. However, I've already given a refutation: a "maximally great being," is logically impossible, given that greatness has no upper bound and any purported maximally great being can be overshadowed simply by positing an identical being that has all the properties of the first, only more of them. The moment you define a maximally great being- which you'd need to do- it becomes possible to posit a greater one.
"YOU take the hard look in the mirror. You are everything that is wrong with this world. The only thing important to you, is you." - ronedee
Want to see more of my writing? Check out my (safe for work!) site, Unprotected Sects! (December 21, 2015 at 1:59 pm)downbeatplumb Wrote:In other words, you have no evidence that it's an unsound argument?(December 21, 2015 at 1:52 pm)Delicate Wrote: It would be nice if, instead of 100 people making 200 feeble objections to the ontological argument, there could be one, singular, comprehensive refutation that would convince people the ontological argument was fallacious. (December 21, 2015 at 1:52 pm)Delicate Wrote: It would be nice if, instead of 100 people making 200 feeble objections to the ontological argument, there could be one, singular, comprehensive refutation that would convince people the ontological argument was fallacious. It would be nice if, instead of 40,000 Christian denominations making a myriad of different unsupported claims based on a single source, there could be one, singular, comprehensive display of evidence that would convince people that god was real. Can someone come up with something like that? That would help. |
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