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Disproving Odin - An Experiment in arguing with a theist with Theist logic
RE: Disproving Odin - An Experiment in arguing with a theist with Theist logic
(March 10, 2018 at 11:50 am)Huggy74 Wrote:
(March 9, 2018 at 6:18 pm)Jenny A Wrote: One faith healer exposed cheating with a radio transmitter.


A practical demonstration of how to cheat.



It took about ten seconds to find these Huggy.

That is one of the problems with trying to prove a negative.  The proponent for the positive just comes back with one more worthless bit.

It took ten seconds to find a case totally unrelated to what we're discussing? Are you suggesting that one con artist preacher equates to all preachers being con artists? William Branham started preaching in the 1930's, so how is the guy with the earpiece remotely related?

What I saying is much more basic. If a particular type of miracle can be faked, then absent controlled conditions to prevent faking, it's not proof of anything.

If I showed you a video of a man pulling a coin out of his or someone else's ear and testified I saw it happen would you believe he was magic? No? Why not? Because it's a common magic trick that's why. To know he'd really pulled a coin out of his ear or mine you'd have to first strip search him, use a bare room of your own choice, and deprive him of most of his clothes.

Many, many, fake faith healers have been exposed over the years. Not surprisingly, it's often magicians who expose them. The methods are shared in common with psychic readers who have been faking a along time too. Because it's commonly faked, more than just I saw it happen is required to show it really happened. Controlled conditions are required

Fake healers use a variety of methods. Not all communication requires radio. Just memorizing what you've been told before the show works just fine. So does suggestive questioning. So no, the year it happened doesn't matter. Without controlled conditions no report of a faith healer, including the accounts in the Gospels, can be assumed to be real.
If there is a god, I want to believe that there is a god.  If there is not a god, I want to believe that there is no god.
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RE: Disproving Odin - An Experiment in arguing with a theist with Theist logic
I think that examples of miracles are perhaps both the most pathetic and most hilarious attempt to prove God.




Wow, I really mumbled like I had a mouth full of shit there didn't I?


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RE: Disproving Odin - An Experiment in arguing with a theist with Theist logic
(March 10, 2018 at 1:49 pm)Hammy Wrote: I think that examples of miracles are perhaps both the most pathetic and most hilarious attempt to prove God.




Wow, I really mumbled like I had a mouth full of shit there didn't I?



Why would it have to be shit?! 😋
Nay_Sayer: “Nothing is impossible if you dream big enough, or in this case, nothing is impossible if you use a barrel of KY Jelly and a miniature horse.”

Wiser words were never spoken. 
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RE: Disproving Odin - An Experiment in arguing with a theist with Theist logic
(March 10, 2018 at 1:56 pm)LadyForCamus Wrote:
(March 10, 2018 at 1:49 pm)Hammy Wrote: I think that examples of miracles are perhaps both the most pathetic and most hilarious attempt to prove God.




Wow, I really mumbled like I had a mouth full of shit there didn't I?



Why would it have to be shit?! 😋

Believe it or not, I was quoting George Carlin.

"Every child is clearly not special. Did you ever look at one of them? Did you ever take a good close look at one of these fucking kids? They’re goofy. They’re fucking goofy looking. They’re too small, they’re way too fucking small. They’re malproportioned. Their heads don’t fit their bodies; their arms are too weird and everything. They can’t walk across the room in a straight line. And when they talk, they talk like they got a mouth full of shit. They’re incomplete, incomplete, unfinished work. I never give credit for incomplete work" - George Carlin from his stand up "It's Bad for Ya"


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RE: Disproving Odin - An Experiment in arguing with a theist with Theist logic
What really fucks up theists like Stevill is that our understanding of life and intelligence is practically useful precisely because of its explanatory power. This is because explanations allow us to not only understand a process but use it too.

What theists think have explanatory power (god-did-it) actually does not, and as a result can't be used practically.

The classic example is evolution. They think that intelligent design has greater explanatory power, yet none of them can explain how I can create a program on my computer to intelligently design something, say an electronic circuit. Yet it is far simpler for me to create a genetic algorithm to do this. The end result will be something very complex which would take a long time to understand but the evolutionary process behind it is actually very simple.

Because the theory of evolution has explanatory power I have been able to use that theory for over 20 years to evolve things.

The same applies to intelligence. Because it can be explained in terms of self organisation and consequently the laws of thermodynamics, I can use this to create very simple models of strong intelligence on my computer. Algorithms that adapt to unknown environments, that can relearn in real-time and which can be re-applied to different tasks. This allows me to obtain reproducible results that I can then write up as a paper and publish, allowing other scientists to do the same.

For a theist to then say that evolution is implausible and that intelligent design makes more sense is something I can recognise as incorrect because it does not provide any explanatory power. How can I write a program to intelligently design something? I am not saying that it can't be done, I have often tried to figure out how to do it myself, but the fact of the matter is that it is actually far harder to achieve than using an evolutionary algorithm.

For a theist to try to convince me that naturally occurring intelligence need not obey the laws of thermodynamics but without explaining how is equally useless. Such a statement has no explanatory power.
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RE: Disproving Odin - An Experiment in arguing with a theist with Theist logic
Lol I just find it especially hilarious that God is used for an explanation where no explanation is needed, and he's like made up out of thin fucking air and he DOES require a big explanation. Because we already fucking know the universe exists, but no, we don't HAVE to know exactly how it came to be. But there's no fucking reason to believe a God exists, so to make a God up out thin air, DOES require an explanation.... BECAUSE IT'S FUCKING SUPERFLUOUS.


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RE: Disproving Odin - An Experiment in arguing with a theist with Theist logic
(March 10, 2018 at 1:11 pm)SteveII Wrote:
(March 10, 2018 at 10:56 am)LadyForCamus Wrote: No. You are asserting that a timeless, changeless, immaterial, supernatural being who has intelligence but no physical prescience, is capable of causing physical events and interacting with the physical world.  Boy, that’s quite a claim! I don’t know of anything in existence that isn’t subject to the laws of physics. You say there is one thing, and it’s God.

Nope. I am not making an argument (just picking one apart). So, I make no assertions. Mathilda originally said that God does not make sense because all intelligence is subject to the law of thermodynamics. My point was and is that if God exists, he is by definition an exception.

Your assertion is that god is intelligent. So yes, there is an assertion AND a contradiction here. You are assigning a physical property to a non-physical entity. If god, by definition, is supernatural and immaterial, how can he possess a quality (intelligence) that is rooted in the physical, material processes of a physical, material brain, within a physical, material universe? I’m simply asking you to explain how; to support your assertion. The answer you gave was, ‘because he’s god.’  That’s a non-answer. It elucidates nothing.

Quote:That might be a point if I was making an argument that contained those components. I know better. You are confusing an argument with try to explain what the meaning of a couple of words are, like 'supernatural'. By pointing out that Mathilda's claim is flawed, unknowable, and her conclusion is an argument from ignorance is not the same thing as making my own argument. Go ahead, show me where I made an argument with a premise and conclusion that I can't defend (definition of an assertion).

Are you not at least making an assertion that god is intelligent?

Quote:The definition of God guarantees an exception to the law of physics. I don't have to explain definitions.

Sure.  So, why should we take seriously the positing of an entity that, by definition, requires no explanation for its alleged attributes and powers, if it can’t even be demonstrated to exist?

Quote:Consider this conversation:  [snipped for brevity]

Quote:Well, for starters

1. "Throwing" is an activity involving matter.
2. "Air" actually is matter
3. "Gravity" would not have an effect on something supernatural

So, by definition alone, I can rule out your analogy. But it does serve to illustrate my complaint about Mathilda's comments. She demands that I defend definitions. I don't have to. She can't show that the concept of 'God' or 'supernatural' is problematic. She is stuck with the possibility that these are exceptions. I don't have to prove their existence to point out these are exceptions. She keeps demanding why? By definition.
The analogous point in my example is that I am asserting a thing exists, and following up by saying that the thing I allege exists requires no explanation, and cannot be understood.  On those terms, should anyone take seriously my claim that a Flim Flam exists at all?
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RE: Disproving Odin - An Experiment in arguing with a theist with Theist logic
SteveII Wrote:Well, for starters

1. "Throwing" is an activity involving matter.
2. "Air" actually is matter
3. "Gravity" would not have an effect on something supernatural

So, by definition alone, I can rule out your analogy. But it does serve to illustrate my complaint about Mathilda's comments. She demands that I defend definitions. I don't have to. She can't show that the concept of 'God' or 'supernatural' is problematic. She is stuck with the possibility that these are exceptions. I don't have to prove their existence to point out these are exceptions. She keeps demanding why? By definition.

This bit right here completely blows up his own argument. He claims that his gawd, an immaterial, supernatural being created all of existence then in point three refutes the very idea that the natural and supernatural can interact.

Clap Way to go there, Stevie.
Thief and assassin for hire. Member in good standing of the Rogues Guild.
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RE: Disproving Odin - An Experiment in arguing with a theist with Theist logic
Addendum to my previous reply to Steve:

Sorry for all the editing! Two years here and I still fuck up the quotation system regularly. 😝
Nay_Sayer: “Nothing is impossible if you dream big enough, or in this case, nothing is impossible if you use a barrel of KY Jelly and a miniature horse.”

Wiser words were never spoken. 
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RE: Disproving Odin - An Experiment in arguing with a theist with Theist logic
(March 10, 2018 at 1:36 pm)Jörmungandr Wrote:
(March 10, 2018 at 1:26 pm)SteveII Wrote: Bullshit

Here was her original statement:
"Conversely an eternal god is thermodynamically implausible for two reasons. First it violates the second law of thermodynamics because entropy can never decrease in an isolated system and no process is 100% efficient. Secondly, the formation of intelligence is best explained as a thermodynamic process". https://atheistforums.org/post-1712719.html#pid1712719

Go ahead, defend that. OR tell her to drop this. Ball is in your court.

I just did.  Are you deaf?  Exactly how is this a response to what I said?  Her latter statement is a clear example of an inductive argument.  The key word here is "implausible," which, despite your earlier misrepresentation of the definition of the word in an argument with me has "improbable" as one of its definitions.  

What are you talking about?!? Your:

 "All examples of intelligence we have are subject to the laws of thermodynamics, therefore we are justified in believing that all cases of intelligence are subject to the laws of thermodynamics." 

is not what she was arguing. See above RED. 

Since every observation we have ever made is within the universe and the universe is subject to the laws of thermodynamics, your statement is logically equivalent to: "the universe is subject to the laws of thermodynamics". What on earth information does that give us or what conclusion does that premise work toward. 

No argument against the existence of God that had the word 'thermodynamic' in it will ever make sense. It is a category error.

(March 10, 2018 at 1:40 pm)Mathilda Wrote:
(March 10, 2018 at 1:26 pm)SteveII Wrote: Here was her original statement:
"Conversely an eternal god is thermodynamically implausible for two reasons. First it violates the second law of thermodynamics because entropy can never decrease in an isolated system and no process is 100% efficient. Secondly, the formation of intelligence is best explained as a thermodynamic process". https://atheistforums.org/post-1712719.html#pid1712719

Go ahead, defend that. OR tell her to drop this. Ball is in your court.

Yet you haven't provided a single way of refuting that statement. All you have done is come up with circular logic along the lines of:

"I postulate that X exists which I define as something as something contradicting your statement, but I am going to complain when you ask for evidence that X exists or even reason to believe that it exists."

Garbage in garbage out.

Your whole argument relies on the existence of X and without it your whole argument falls apart.

So again, I ask you to provide one single example of intelligence that is not subject to the laws of thermodynamics.

Again, you are unable to admit that you are unable to.

I AM NOT MAKING AN ARGUMENT! I cannot be arguing in a circle BECAUSE I HAVE NOT MADE AN ARGUMENT. Mentioning God's definition is NOT AN ARGUMENT.  Mentioning the definition of supernatural is not an argument. Can I be clearer? 

Every one of my points have been centered around definitions AND pointing out that your whole argument is the same as demanding that I prove the existence of God.  It has nothing at all to do with thermodynamics! You could have said "give me one example of advanced consciousness that isn't human". None of these types of arguments make any headway against the question of whether there is a God or not. Every one of them is constructed to demand that I prove you wrong. 

Your original statement above that started all this is huge category error. You cannot use natural laws to prove or disprove God's existence because by the very definition of God, they are meaningless to the question. I don't know how to say this any clearer.
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