-->
@secularmerlin
All you need to do is pick a new word. Pasta is defined by its composition of physical characteristics.
Could you please think of another way of saying this the double negative makes my head swim.reject to be untrue.
I've said many times that I do not care about people's psychology of belief/disbelief. I care about that claims that they accept to be true and the claims they reject to be untrue.
Ok spiritpasta. It is identical to pasta in every way except that it is nonphysical. So essentially nonphysical pasta.All you need to do is pick a new word. Pasta is defined by its composition of physical characteristics.
Well statedI haven't heard a refutation of my argument that it violates the law of identity but you are free to give your opinion on the matter.You just redefine the item with "special" properties. Like when someone says "god is love".Does this mean that god is a human emotion that facilitates the propagation of the species?Does love have any physical properties?Is love omnipotent and omniscient?No, of course not. In every example "god" is a "special case".The same is true for the Flying-Spaghetti-Monster.
Please explain how you can make decisions WITHOUT physics OR chemistry.I don't see how doing that would be relevant in avoiding the implication I talked about.
I say "reject to be untrue" because that's not what the atheist experience hosts mean when they say they "reject" the existence of God claims. By "reject" they mean to remain merely non-acceptant.
Yes, "consciousness" is defined as the state of being awake and aware of one's surroundings. There is no physical component indicated.
"Pasta" is defined as "a dish originally from Italy consisting of dough made from durum wheat and water, extruded or stamped into various shapes and typically cooked in boiling water." There are physical components indicated by its definition.
I don't think the number of false claims on a particular subject is indicative of whether a particular claim on that subject is true or false. That's a variation of the genetic fallacy.
What makes a claim "fantastical"?
What's interesting is that the example of the 10ft tall gold statue of Zeus is more likely false than true, yet your view is that this negative claim should be harder to justify than the positive claim.
What's interesting is that the example of the 10ft tall gold statue of Zeus is more likely false than true, yet your view is that this negative claim should be harder to justify than the positive claim.Not harder to justify--harder to verify. Justifying belief in the absence of any such statue is straightforward. If no such statue has been observed or reported, that, along with knowing the difficulty of constructing such a statue and the rarity of gold, are enough justification for disbelief. Presumably this is how you determined it to be more likely false then true.
It's worth repeating that whichever claim is more rational to believe depends on the preponderance of the underlying evidence.
Mere non-belief is the default position, not disbelief.
To disbelieve something based on lack of evidence is an argument from ignorance.
Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
The claim should be evaluated on its own merits. That's the most rational approach.
Is the claim "a prime, eternal consciousness and creator of the universe exists" fantastical?
Please restate the merits of your claim. I don't think anyone here is actually refusing to evaluate your claim.The claim should be evaluated on its own merits. That's the most rational approach.
It is not true that absence of evidence is not evidence of absence
If i were to make a claim without a supporting argument it would be playground standard for me to insist you prove me wrong. There is nothing to be gained by engaging in such faux-debates and a rapid bail out is in order! But you might (unwisely!) choose to prove the claim wrong, in which case you would aquire the BoP for some counter-claim.
There's no logical difference between rejecting "God exists" as untrue versus the positive claim that God does not exist.
Non-physical sounds like another word for nothing. This includes non-physical beings, non-physical consciousnesses and non-physical pasta equally. If you are making am exception for your personal pet hypothesis why not make an exception for everyone personal pet hypothesis?Spiritpasta sounds like another word for nothing.
In which way are you rejecting the flying spaghetti monster?I say "reject to be untrue" because that's not what the atheist experience hosts mean when they say they "reject" the existence of God claims. By "reject" they mean to remain merely non-acceptant.
It is not true that absence of evidence is not evidence of absenceI agree. That adage is downright misleading! I'd accept 'absence of proof is not proof of absence'.
Can you prove the Loch Ness Monster, Big Foot, and Space Aliens do not exist?I agree with your first sentence but disagree with your second sentence. If you claim X does not exist, all you have to do is show evidence that X does not exist.
I find it amazing that you say there is no evidence for free will when the fact that you are choosing to post on this forum is clearly evidence, whether or not it constitutes proof to you.I think you really have to make an active effort to ignore reality to maintain that there is no evidence.
Dismissing evidence does not negate it.