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Even if theism is a failure, it's still superior to atheism
RE: Even if theism is a failure, it's still superior to atheism
The number 0 is a bit special, because, any nonzero number divided by zero is undefined (at least in standard arithmetic), but 0/0 is indeterminate, and there exist an infinite number of solutions.
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RE: Even if theism is a failure, it's still superior to atheism
(October 12, 2022 at 1:51 pm)R00tKiT Wrote:
(October 11, 2022 at 7:11 pm)Jehanne Wrote: If p -> q, then whenever p is false, then p->q will always be true.  And, so, what's your point?

It's not the truth value of the assertion "p->q" that is of interest here, it's only that of q. When you start by a false propostion p, you can sometimes get a true propostion q by employing sound logical principles. This means that we cannot say that q is false just because p is false, we have to evaluate q on its own merits. The part in bold is extremely important here. polymath claimed that starting with false assumptions leads to false conclusions, and this isn't always true.

On a personal note, I completed a Master's degree in mathematical statistics 3 years ago, so for anyone here who just wants to show me high school math, like how material conditionals work, you really can save your breath.

Goody for you. I got a PhD in mathematics 36 years ago and have been a research mathematician since.

But you are right, we cannot say the q is false simply because p is false and p-->q. But we can say that the argument attempting to prove q is invalid.

Now, are you suggesting the the existence of a deity is independent of other axioms? That it can neither be proved nor disproved?

And if that is the case, how do we choose whether to assume q or not(q) as an axiom?

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(October 12, 2022 at 8:41 am)polymath257 Wrote: Anything involving prophecy being realized, outside of science, is making stuff up.

The effect of Al Ghazali's teachings were the decline of the Arabic Golden age and the adoption of an attitude that makes actual intellectual progress impossible. Closing the gates of ijtihad is one of the many things that lead to the decline of the Islamic civilization.

Trying to change the topic again? You just accused al-Ghazali of twisting the meaning of Qur'anic verses without providing us any concrete examples. Then when you were pressed to give one, you said you don't care, then you moved on to discuss the effects of Al-Ghazali's teachings, which you clearly never read anything about?

Furthermore, you don't seem to understand what the word "ijtihad" means, it means applying the basic elements of islamc faith and jurisprudence in order to assess, for a given contemporary issue, whether it conforms to islamic rulings/sharia or not. This activity is done routinely by Muslim scholars, all over the world, every single day and hour. The claim of "closing the gates of Ijtihad" appeared in the 3rd/4th century (in the Islamic calendar) when many amateur Muslim thinkers tried to solve legal questions of Islamic jurisprudence independently, this became a widespread phenomenon, and the ijtihad profession was threatened by the flawed work of unqualified people (think about modern-day crackpots that send papers to renowned physics journals, claiming that general relativity is wrong, or that they have a theory of everything). Some Muslim scholars reacted strongly to this and suggested to stop the ijtihad altogether, as a prophylactic measure. This suggestion was obviously abandoned later on in most, if not all Sunni schools.

But the closing of the gates also meant that independent thinking was suppressed and that lead to the decline of Islamic civilization. of course, the Mongols helped with that decline.

Quote:Al-Ghazali never spoke in any of his books against the ijtihad, this is the second time you make unsubstantiated accusations against al-Ghazali. You're really lucky the members here are essentially ignorant of Islam.

(October 12, 2022 at 8:41 am)polymath257 Wrote: If you use false assumptions, you are guaranteed that some of your conclusions will be false. 

That's true. So not all conclusions that derive from these assumptions are false. This means that we cannot dismiss a conclusion simply because the initial assumption is false. 

But we can dismiss the argument. And, let's face it, the more faulty arguments presented in favor of a position, the worse that position looks. Theology has a very poor track record in that regard.

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(October 12, 2022 at 8:41 am)polymath257 Wrote: What, precisely, do you mean by the term 'universe'? I define it as the collection of all that exists. So there cannot be anything that exists outside of it.

If you have a different definition, please give it.

If you define it like that, then obviously the creator belongs to the universe, but this definition is not really useful here. Better definitions of the universe would be : anything that is accessible to empirical investigation, or all matter that obeys the physical laws. I am not sure if these definitions are watertight, but they should be enough for this discussion.

OK, that is a good start. Empirical investigation. How, precisely, do you define that?

As for obeying physical laws, I very much doubt that we know what the ultimate physical laws are, so we cannot tell what obeys them. I assume you would agree.

But perhaps you can clarify what is meant by the term 'physical laws'. In the process, you might want to define what it means to be 'physical'.

BTW, I usually identify 'physical' and 'natural', so your usage is interesting.

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(October 12, 2022 at 8:41 am)polymath257 Wrote: So you don't consider humans and human creations to be part of the natural world? Strange definition.

I defined natural as anything that isn't the product of human intelligence. And humans are obviously not the product of human intelligence, they're the product of human reproduction. Therefore, this definition does include humans as part of the natural world.

But the objects of human ingenuity are not, right?

Now, would a human born from in vitro fertilization be 'natural' or not? They would be the product of human intelligence, no?

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(October 12, 2022 at 8:41 am)polymath257 Wrote: So is God the product of human intelligence? No. So God is natural by your definition. Hence God is NOT outside of the natural world.

This does follow from the definition I gave, and so it's probably not sufficient for our purposes here. But even granting that the deity is part of the natural world doesn't really mean anything. The natural/supernatural distinction is completely arbitrary.

Probably a better the definition of nature, or the natural world, would be exactly like that of the universe - all matter that obeys the physical laws.

Which means we definitely need to determine what is meant by the term 'physical law'. I suspect that will require some sort of definition of the term 'physical'.

I would also like to know what it means for something to 'exist'. How would this be determined/ How could it be tested? For example, does the number 2 exist/
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RE: Even if theism is a failure, it's still superior to atheism
(October 12, 2022 at 1:51 pm)R00tKiT Wrote: On a personal note, I completed a Master's degree in mathematical statistics 3 years ago, so for anyone here who just wants to show me high school math, like how material conditionals work, you really can save your breath.
That is a fine accomplishment.  I hope you continue your education.  I also hope you share your thoughts on Bayesian Analysis and the probability of the failure of theism.
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RE: Even if theism is a failure, it's still superior to atheism
(October 12, 2022 at 9:31 pm)Ranjr Wrote:
(October 12, 2022 at 1:51 pm)R00tKiT Wrote: On a personal note, I completed a Master's degree in mathematical statistics 3 years ago, so for anyone here who just wants to show me high school math, like how material conditionals work, you really can save your breath.
That is a fine accomplishment.  I hope you continue your education.  I also hope you share your thoughts on Bayesian Analysis and the probability of the failure of theism.

I could also discuss probability measures and whether they serve as good models of probability in quantum mechanics (they do not).
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RE: Even if theism is a failure, it's still superior to atheism
(October 13, 2022 at 8:36 am)polymath257 Wrote:
(October 12, 2022 at 9:31 pm)Ranjr Wrote: That is a fine accomplishment.  I hope you continue your education.  I also hope you share your thoughts on Bayesian Analysis and the probability of the failure of theism.

I could also discuss probability measures and whether they serve as good models of probability in quantum mechanics (they do not).

Bell's Inequality?
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RE: Even if theism is a failure, it's still superior to atheism
(October 12, 2022 at 9:20 pm)polymath257 Wrote: Goody for you. I got a PhD in mathematics 36 years ago and have been a research mathematician since.

But you are right, we cannot say the q is false simply because p is false and p-->q. But we can say that the argument attempting to prove q is invalid.

Now, are you suggesting the the existence of a deity is independent of other axioms? That it can neither be proved nor disproved?

And if that is the case, how do we choose whether to assume q or not(q) as an axiom?

36 years as a research mathematician, that's really impressive, doc. Mad respect for you and your profession. Mathematics is the only discipline that I used to be good at, it helped me build the confidence that I can actually do something significant in this life.

It seems we agree now that starting with false assumptions doesn't always lead you to false conclusions. So even if one grants you that theism fails, it doesn't follow that everything else that the theist argues for is necessarily false. As for the existence of a deity, my central argument has always been and remains the teleological argument. "Look around" is the reason why people believed in God for millenia, it doesn't require any advanced training in logic or modern physics to understand it, which is what an actual argument for God should look like.

My position is that this argument should continue to enjoy the same stature it once had. The sudden shift that happened after Darwin's ideas is simply unwarranted, and I might say motivated by a strong bias against the church at the time -which is understandable-. How can an argument for a designer become invalid or fall out of favor just because we understood some of the designer's work, or just because we know more about the history of His design? 

Perhaps it's better to use an analogy here : let's say you have a dozen of highly intelligent AI robots. These robots started investigating their own origins and eventually ended up tracing the entire history of technological progress made by mankind. One day, one robot suggested that : we have a lot of evidence of less intelligent machines, we found ((fossils)) of analog computers, calculators, floppy disks with laughably limited storage, and countless other machines in nature. It seems we can explain our origin or genesis without appeal to some intelligence called "human". Now, it's not hard to see that something is wrong here.

One often finds the following criticism : A deity is purportedly omniscient and omnipotent, and so doesn't need any evolutionary mechanism to bring about human beings. The answer is that : yes, ofc the deity doesn't need any of that, it doesn't need to bring about any universe at all, but the fact that it doesn't need x doesn't imply that x's existence invalidates the deity's existence. People didn't really need to create AI robots to survive, but now that they did, AI robots can't plausibly argue that they didn't need a designer.

(October 12, 2022 at 9:31 pm)Ranjr Wrote: That is a fine accomplishment.  I hope you continue your education.  I also hope you share your thoughts on Bayesian Analysis and the probability of the failure of theism.

Thank you. I hope I can do that one day.

The bayesian approach is a fascinating topic in statistics, it introduces the ideas of priors, likelihoods, among other things. But the underlying logic is pretty simple : the probability that some assertion A, in and of itself, is true, may be difficult to determine. Instead of directly trying to determine this probability, we can take an additonal assertion B that we're familiar with, and which is linked to A, and then assess the probabilities of A given B (called conditional probabiltiy), or of B given A. Bayes' theorem tells us that P(A) is directly linked to P(A|B) and P(B|A).

This approach is extensively used today in philosophy of religion journals, many theist (and atheist) philosophers rely on its formalism in their arguments. But like any argument, they rely on controversial assumptions. if you reject the assumptions, all the subsequent calculations are false, and using heavy machinery like bayesian analysis doesn't help in this case. 

Swinburne used bayesian probabilities to prove that probability that Jesus ressurected from the dead is pretty high (more than 0.8, if I recall that correctly). I didn't read his argument in its entirety, which he developed in a well-known paper, but I can't really take any argument for Jesus's ressurection seriously, the initial plausibility of such an event is close to 0 for me. Given that the initial sayings of Jesus are lost, and that the Bible doesn't inherently warrant a supernatural explanation -unlike the Qur'an, I would argue- I don't see how any argument in favor of christianity is even possible.

(October 12, 2022 at 9:20 pm)polymath257 Wrote: OK, that is a good start. Empirical investigation. How, precisely, do you define that?

As for obeying physical laws, I very much doubt that we know what the ultimate physical laws are, so we cannot tell what obeys them. I assume you would agree.

But perhaps you can clarify what is meant by the term 'physical laws'. In the process, you might want to define what it means to be 'physical'.

Something being reachable by empirical investigation means that we have some means to detect its existence, even if undirectly. This is what we do routinely in science, we collect evidence and clues about various objects or particles and come up with models that fit the evidence. As for the definition of physical, I would say an object is physical if its essential constituents are elementary particles. 

And we all know what physical laws are, our knowledge is probably not final or ultimate, but we can't really do better anyways.

(October 12, 2022 at 9:20 pm)polymath257 Wrote: But the objects of human ingenuity are not, right?

Now, would a human born from in vitro fertilization be 'natural' or not? They would be the product of human intelligence, no?

In vitro fertilization is simply assisted reproduction by artificially combining male gametes or sperm with a female egg, it doesn't really replace the reproduction process which occurs naturally. So this type of feritlization doesn't really amount to  human intelligence. I might as well argue that the very act of a male penetrating a female to introduce sperm is somehow human intelligence, and that, therefore, all humans are a product of human intelligence.

(October 12, 2022 at 9:20 pm)polymath257 Wrote: I would also like to know what it means for something to 'exist'. How would this be determined/ How could it be tested? For example, does the number 2 exist/

Now that's an interesting question. It's probably the most important issue hanging between theism and atheism. Probably a good start is to think about things that all people agree that they exist, regardless of their beliefs. The next thing would be to ask yourself why you believe in their existence so strongly. 

Perception is a basic source of forming beliefs for all human beings. Now, lo and behold, the most curious thing about beliefs from perception is that they are inherently fallacious : you know that the wall in front of you exists because you trust your perception, and you trust your perception because, well, everybody else says that the wall really exists! 

Or maybe you believe walls exist because the pain you feel once you hit a wall makes it more probably than not that walls exist, but pain is just another category of perception. Surely an unpleasant sensory experience can't be a serious proof that walls exist ! 

I can go on and on to show how difficult it is to prove that walls exist. I would argue that it's impossible to do so, unless you make some epistemic concessions, the same epistemic concessions that led people to believe that the appearance of design implies a designer...
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RE: Even if theism is a failure, it's still superior to atheism
It always impresses me R00t how you manage to type so much and simultaneously say so little
"For the only way to eternal glory is a life lived in service of our Lord, FSM; Verily it is FSM who is the perfect being the name higher than all names, king of all kings and will bestow upon us all, one day, The great reclaiming"  -The Prophet Boiardi-

      Conservative trigger warning.
[Image: s-l640.jpg]
                                                                                         
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RE: Even if theism is a failure, it's still superior to atheism
28 pages in, it's worth remembering...that -all- we're angling for now is showing A, that presupposing theism is wrong...that (b)....even so, it would be preferable to be wrong about x. Talk about managing expectations. Why not just get x right off the bat, in a way that presupposes the (alleged) benefits of A without the acknowledged pitfalls of b? Since we're presupposing either way, and all?

In the common tongue; if we have to fake it until we make it, aren't there worse and better ways to fake it?
I am the Infantry. I am my country’s strength in war, her deterrent in peace. I am the heart of the fight… wherever, whenever. I carry America’s faith and honor against her enemies. I am the Queen of Battle. I am what my country expects me to be, the best trained Soldier in the world. In the race for victory, I am swift, determined, and courageous, armed with a fierce will to win. Never will I fail my country’s trust. Always I fight on…through the foe, to the objective, to triumph overall. If necessary, I will fight to my death. By my steadfast courage, I have won more than 200 years of freedom. I yield not to weakness, to hunger, to cowardice, to fatigue, to superior odds, For I am mentally tough, physically strong, and morally straight. I forsake not, my country, my mission, my comrades, my sacred duty. I am relentless. I am always there, now and forever. I AM THE INFANTRY! FOLLOW ME!
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RE: Even if theism is a failure, it's still superior to atheism
Quote:Even if theism is a failure, it's still superior to atheism

Nah dude, atheism rocks. I'm loving our atheistic American society.
"Imagination, life is your creation"
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RE: Even if theism is a failure, it's still superior to atheism
(October 13, 2022 at 7:27 pm)Ahriman Wrote:
Quote:Even if theism is a failure, it's still superior to atheism

Nah dude, atheism rocks. I'm loving our atheistic American society.

You really need to pick a lane.

One day you are all about god the next you are atheist.

Every day you are annoying.
  
“If you are the smartest person in the room, then you are in the wrong room.” — Confucius
                                      
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