(August 8, 2010 at 5:59 pm)ozy123 Wrote: Please respond. Thanks.
It's not so much 'indesputable proof' so much as an attempt at a logical arguement for the existance of a creator.
Clearest Rational Arguement for the Existance of a Creator Wrote:Using only intuitively deductive modes of argument which have their origin in the Qur’an and which no sane human being can reject, the argument seeks to establish an Entity attributed with necessary existence (ithbat al-wajib) and attributes of perfection such as life, will, power and knowledge, and also free of resemblance to the creation in any way which would allow one to pose the question, Who created him? This will all be done based only on universally accepted absurdities (musta’hilat).
I can already see the failing logic and reasoning here because we've already scaled down the arguement to include only one religious faith instead of all of them simulataneously.
You can't seriously argue for the existance of a creator that wants something of the human race by using only one (necessarily interpreted) book covering only a smaller portion of the entire human population. It's been argued that the reason that any one holy book couldn't be the one true word of god is because if such a being of immense power and intellect ever wrote a book, then there would be only one such book written with unparalelled eloquence that no mere human intellect could ever make in comparison.
Still, we've also decided to immediately say that the Qur'an is something that 'no sane human being can reject' which tells me that we're already presuming the Qur'an's truth with no other logical reason to do so other than 'no sane human being can reject.' That's not a reason to rely on that book for anything.
Clearest Rational Arguement for the Existance of a Creator Wrote:Premise 1: [I lift my hand in real life, point to it and say:] The movement of my hand is something which began to exist.
I really have to say something about the verbioseness of this article. It really just seems to go on and on when it could easily be re-worded to be far more concise and clear on its points. I understand they're giving this article a degree of seriousness and rational thought that I find somewhat refreshing from the old adage of "goddunit" but it still seems unnecessarily long.
In any case, premise one appears to be logical in the sense that we can logically say when something can not exist, is beginning to exist, exists, and ceases to exist. There are many physical constants that can certainly account for this.
Clearest Rational Arguement for the Existance of a Creator Wrote:Premise 2: Whatever begins to exist must have a cause.
As it says in the quote, every action must have something to cause that action. It's not a difficult concept to comprehend but for some reason the author of the article seemed to think it would be difficult to swallow for some reason. Yet, there is a point that seems to have been made for no reason whatsoever.
Clearest Rational Arguement for the Existance of a Creator Wrote:We have a second method of demonstrating the truth of the proposition. This second method is nothing more than taking one 1st principle (the causality principle) and explaining it in light of another more clear 1st principle, namely the impossibility of contradiction. The questions to our opponent at this time would be: Do you accept that contradictions are impossible? Do you accept that every thesis has an antithesis? Do you accept that if one of two direct opposites is false on account of involving contradiction, then by rational necessity the other must be true? If these three obvious points are conceded, we may proceed:
Impossibility of contradiction?
Every Thesis has an antithesis?
One of two direct opposites are false on account of involving contradiction, then the other must be true?
Having any one of these presumptions is... well, presumptuous. We're supposed to be providing a rational arguement to indesputable proof of a god. This only works if you don't restrict the arguement so you can restrict the answers to the one you want beyond what you should expect in a logical, rational arguement. Otherwise, you may as well just say the answer can only be 'either god exists or he doesn't but you can't say he doesn't.'
Even so, these 'principles' are flawed. Not every contradiction is impossible, not every thesis has an antithesis, not all answers are multiple choice with one correct answer.
Clearest Rational Arguement for the Existance of a Creator Wrote:Premise 3: Therefore, the movement of my hand must have a cause.
Eh. Yes. Yes it does have a cause. This entire thing is really painful.
A few of the fruits of false reasoning is starting to come to bear in some of the arguements both behind and ahead, it seems with things like 'the rule of opposition.' You don't get to make the rules of a logical arguement. You don't simply
decide on what the assumptions are. You make logical assumptions based on facts and truths. You can twist an arguement to be logical in and of itself without necessarily to 'prove' anything, but we're trying to prove the existence of god here so these assumptions should reflect the goal without trying to tie the hands of a logical arguement to support the end arguement you're attempting to achieve.
Further, the author is making huge assumptions based on tenuously logical arguements, at best.
Clearest Rational Arguement for the Existance of a Creator Wrote:Premise 4: This cause will either be A: contingently existent [along with what that entails], or B: necessarily existent [along with what that entails]. There is no 3rd possibility.
The author seems to have a love for the thesaurus. This article is becoming more and more painful to read. Plus, another logical fallacy - you have one or the other possibility but no others.
Eh. This is irksome to the point to where this arguement is ceasing to be worth paying attention to. I'm going to attempt to find an actual point to skip to because this arguement is already based on several logical fallacies that some of the trolls on these forums have been able to better explain more concisely.
It's like the author is trying to cloud his arguement by sounding intelligent by throwing a lot of words at me without any real intended meaning.
The article seems to go on about there not being infinity, but it fails to go into details about much of anything other than, I suppose, the fact that we're still on the arguement's premises.
Clearest Rational Arguement for the Existance of a Creator Wrote:At this point, our opponent will say something along the lines of: Fair enough. We do not entertain an infinite regress. We have our reasons for this. According to us, we begin a journey from the present moment and keep going back in the past until we hit a certain event which occurred approximately 13.7 billion years ago. We maintain that all matter, energy, space, time and everything else came into being at this point in time. Prior to this there was no spacetime. Existence and causality can not occur independent of spacetime. Therefore, the journey stops at this event. If you want to continue the journey beyond this point, you must bring proof.
Whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa... whoa... whoa...
Whoa there a minute. Back up.
Yes, as a matter of fact, science has aged the known universe to be around 13.7 billion years old.
None of the other assumptions are based on evidence of any kind. None. They are baseless assumptions.
Clearest Rational Arguement for the Existance of a Creator Wrote:Premise 6: Therefore, by rational necessity, it must be a necessarily existent Being who created the movement of my hand [along with all of what this entails].
That's not rational at all. Just because you can create the movement for you hand doesn't mean it's analogous to the creation of humanity or the universe. This is neither proof or even the rational arguement of the existance of a creator. It's entirely conjecture based on a false premise.
Clearest Rational Arguement for the Existance of a Creator Wrote:Moreover, He does not need a Creator, because He is not attributed with events or any of the spacetime dependent attributes that things in the universe are attributed with. In short, He is exalted and pure from all of the possible reasons why someone can ask the question, Who created him?
More baseless assumptions. I can't believe it took this long for less than the assinine assumptions done by young-earth creationists.
As to the rest of the article, there's nothing there worth noting. He seems to go on about his assertions being fully defensible and providing other examples of what he was saying earlier, but nothing new or evidencing his conclusions, which like all assumptions on god or his character, are based on nothing.