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@Amoranemix
I didn't say no one understands morality.
You did in the link you referred me to.
I didn't say no one understands morality.
what is your personally preferred definition of god ?
if your food looks good, but smells like rotten roadkill, you might not want to eat it
Pediatric cancer?
" I cannot imagine a God..."
"...who rewards and punishes the objects of his creation, whose purposes are modeled after our own — a God, in short, who is but a reflection of human frailty."
"Neither can I believe that the individual survives the death of his body, although feeble souls harbor such thoughts through fear or ridiculous egotisms.“ — Albert Einstein
We all die at some point, right?
[104] Given that your support for an example case, i.e. claiming that God does not exist is irrational, was ambiguous
I assumed your support was an application of the more general principle that claiming Y (for any Y) does not exist is irrational. The reason is that you appeared to attempt to support the general case i.s.o. the example case.
You have yet to honour your burden to prove the example case.
[105] Where have I stated that ?
Athias #460[104] You stated that skeptics would scrutinize the soundness of my first premise,Amoranemix #444Under assumption A, since you stand by P1, for you that is a sound argument.Skeptics, understandably, dispute P1.
[106] I already gave a description of existence in post 445. More than one may apply as we are discussing more than one subtopic.
Possibility is a requirement for existence.
'X is possible' means 'It is possible for X to be true or to exist.'
[107] You are mistaken again. A premise is not an argument and an argument is not a premise.
[108] No. I never made that argument.
You still have to prove that it is irrational to claim something impossible does not exist, but I think we are already debating that elsewhere.
[a] I don't know. How much disbelief I hold depends on what is meant with impossible. Even with lax impossibility I still disbelieve it is irrational to claim something impossible does not exist.
The overlap consists of those people who fall into both categories, namely not questioning their own beliefs and always being certain of themselves.
[91] What definition is that ? If you wanted clarity you would have repeated that definition i.s.o. having me and anyone following along looking it up.
post 440 :exist: To have real being whether material or spiritual.real: true or actual.material: denoting or consisting of physical objects rather than the mind or spirit.spiritual: relating to or affecting the human spirit or soul as opposed to material or physical things.What does spiritual existence of God mean ? Does that mean that God exists in people's minds ?
I suspect that when people claiming God doesn't exist, they are referring to physical nonexistence.
Everything: all things that existNothing: all things that do not existHence, if square circles dont' exist, then they are part of Nothing.
93] We are not discussing the use of 'God does not exist' as a presupposition.
[94] Assuming the author is being honest, (s)he may not know and merely believe.
And since the presupposition proposes that God is in the realm of nothing or nonexistence, it is presuming that nonexistence can be known.[95] Please demonstrate that.
Perception is instrument of knowledge, i.e. rationalized and cultivated information. Thus, "If one claims, "God does not exist," one presumes the nonexistent can be perceived."[96][96] Please explain how that is supposed to follow.
[97] Not yet.
Why do we die?
Isn't it to enable Evolution?
no morality, no afterlife, no wonder, no magic, no nothing.
Yes it is irrational. I don't get why people even want to be atheists, I mean there is no morality, no afterlife, no wonder, no magic, no nothing.
Yes it is irrational. I don't get why people even want to be atheists, I mean there is no morality, no afterlife, no wonder, no magic, no nothing
Yes it is irrational. I don't get why people even want to be atheists
A spiritual being at the very least. I don't take issue with the modification of this being as "supreme."
The thing that really bugs atheist more than anything is service. If what they're doing doesn't somehow benefit them they want no part of it. Since religion is about service especially service to something they can't see or feel without any actual reward for them they're not interested. And they believe whatever they think is right is moral whether it is or not. I don't believe there's any sort of line you can cross that makes something bad even though we all know there are certainly things that happened to people that are bad and they've been done to people with the intent of being bad.
Is a 5 month old soul the same as a 83 year old soul. ?
I don't get why people even want to be atheists,
I mean there is no morality,
no afterlife,
no wonder,
no magic,
no nothing.
what is your preferred definition of "spiritual" and what is your preferred definition of "supreme" ?
spiritual: relating to or affecting the human spirit or soul as opposed to material or physical things.
highest in rank or authority; paramount; sovereign; chiefof the highest quality, degree, character, importance, etc
Spiritual.
Supreme.
spiritual: relating to or affecting the human spirit or soul as opposed to material or physical things.
Imagine getting re- married.When heaven gets awkward. ...
In my opinion, some puddings are spiritual and some are just nice.
Athias 454 :[1.] I never stated that my disagreement with your claim was an expression of private gnosis. I stated that private gnosis on its own needs not be rationally defensible.[2.] I was not confirming your statement. I meant, "No, it isn't."[3.] Stating belief is based on value is redundant.[4.] I remember stating this in response to your statement:[quotes from Amoranemix 439 and Athias 440 with definitions]And you responded:“ Why are you referring to mind or spirit in your definitions ? Why treat mind or spirit to be the relevant alternative to physical objects ? Is a quantum wave function material ?The sufficiency of a definition depends on its use. I won't bother substantiating objections that may be irrelevant.”We are still in the middle of this argument, as you will see below.[4.''] Humor me: why haven't I supported my position to your satisfaction?Amoranemix 465 :[1.] You forgot to answer my question.[2.] I suspected as much. That is why I corrected you.[3.] Why is that ?[4.'] We are arguing about definitions while you should be supporting your claim.It is the prerogative of the side that presents a case / argument to choose definitions, within reason.[4.''] Because it is false.Athias 469 :[1.] Your question was already addressed in post #440.[2.] You've corrected nothing; once again, I was not confirming your statement.[3.] Because of the meaning of "value."[4.'] The two aren't mutually exclusive.[98] And that's my point. You questioned the definitions I've submitted,[99] and when pressed to expand on your scrutiny, you provide rather than substantiation, more questions.[100]"Within reason"? What would be an unreasonable choice?[101][4.''] Substantiate your assertion that my position is false.
Athias 454 :[78] Substantiate this assumptive characteristic.[a] I have not assumed.[b] Seem is not an argument.[c] We are still disputing the definition of exist (or maybe not? I haven't grasped your position on this.)Amoranemix 465 :[78] Name-giving is not an assumptive characteristic. In the interest of understanding I gave the substantiation of a verb form according to a method common in the English language.[a] Your discourse in post 440 seemed to be missing the point without that assumption. I assumed you were actually trying to support your position about Spino and that appeared to be the way you were reasoning. Apparently I misunderstood. Please explain how “[b] Because the nonexistent does not exist. The nonexistent provides no information. How does one identify a "Spino" if its nonexistence renders information on itself logically incoherent?” is supposed to support that one cannot know Spino does not exist.[b] In debates I have the habit of using words that are not an argument. I have noticed you do that too. Is that inappropriate ?[c] If you can't find the right terms to make your argument,[c'] you may even invent terms.[c''] That is what I did with 'inverse implication'. You could for example add a qualifier before or after 'exist' or 'existence'.[c''']Athias 469 :[78] This has nothing to do with what we were talking about. You claimed "knowing something about X requiring information from X" is an assumption. I rejected your characterizing it as an assumption, and then subsequently demanded that you "substantiate this assumptive characteristic."[a] Because, "Spino" is an identifier, i.e. a name which provides information. Once you've identified "Spino," acknowledged information of its existence.[b] No matter how many times you attempt to reciprocate in this tit for tat, "seem" is not now nor has it ever been an argument. And when you employ it in your discussions with me, I will without fail point that out.[c'] I already did and submitted them.[c''] Are you being facetious?[c'''] No need.
Amoranemix 465 :[93] You have done and keep doing that. You break up sentences and omit quoting parts of sentences. I am even combining and readding fragments you have separated to put them in context. I am also usually quoting farther back to provide more context.[94] That you (pretend to) know what you your burden is and what my burden is does not exclude your confusion. Moreover, usually people try to confuse others.[95] Maybe. Maybe not. I have shown no unwillingness to assume my burden.[*] You on the other hand have shown unwillingness to assume your burden of proof.[**]Athias 469 :[*] Yes, you most certainly have.[**] I'm the only person in our discussion providing information to his argument. You see, I am not lazy.
Athias 469 :[a] I didn't fail to answer your question. Your question was already addressed in post #454.[a''] What? Do you not remember this:“[a] I asked first, but I will humour you. You would not refer to mind and spirit in your definition of 'to exist' and 'material' to avoid bias, unnecessary limitations and unnecessary complications and filling.”[b] Stalling? Buddy, I asked you about these definitions over a month ago. And it's just in latest response that you've made a decision about them one way or another; I am not the one who's stalling.[c] My politeness is not a subject of discussion.[d'] You have affirmed that my position is false. Is that not based on a counterexample or counterfactual?[d''] Is this the position you maintain? Because I'm not having a discussion with "people." I'm having a discussion with you.[f] Then what was your point in stating that it didn't answer your question to begin with? And yes, I excluded the last sentence of the portion because that is your response, not mine. I only own that I which I state.[g] The laws of physics or nature are inextricably tied to Mathematics--an abstract; logic is abstract. So when you state you measure "impossibility," you are applying abstracts, correct?[81] Neither. The nonexistent does not exist, and therefore there is no "it" to imagine. And if "it" exists prior to one's imagination, then its existence is independent of one's imagination.
i'm quite certain nobody "wants" to be an atheist
If according to atheist, atheism is the superior choice