PassedOut, on 2011-February-05, 18:00, said:
Thought I answered that. Here's just one example: I don't consider rules, such as the rules of logic and some generalized rules of set definition, to be material. This has no connection with atheism.
I think you are wrong here. A philosophy of Life should explain all the aspects of reality. This is its purpose. Thus when you say "atheism = I don't believe in God", you are misstating the issue. *Not* believing in God is only one aspect. Indeed, one should never get caught defining a philosophy by what its not. What you are really saying is that "A world view with No God better describes our observed reality". Logic is one aspect of our reality, therefore, it must be one of the aims of atheism to explain why logic exists, as opposed to does not exist. Let me pose the question in a more strongly exclusionary form: "Do you believe that the rules of logic exist separate from material reality? If yes, then what do you beleive created these rules? If no, then what material process resulted in such an immaterial outcome?"
PassedOut, on 2011-February-05, 22:27, said:
I think you know that free will and determinism have a long philosophical history with many different takes. If you are really interested, look here:
Causal Determinism
and here:
Philosophical Questions of Free Will.
The philosophy of religion is replete with arguments to prove the existence of god, starting with Anselm's ontological argument. Refutations of those arguments and subsequent attempts to conceal the problems with those arguments continue to this day (in our time Plantinga has tried to fix the ontological argument).
If you are honestly interested in these questions, you can look here for more material:
Ontological Argument: Immanuel Kant. And, of course, there is always wikipedia:
Existence of God.
I'm not sure why you brought this up, no one has really mentioned explicitly the 6 "proofs" of Gods existence as a reason for believing. Even their creators did not think of them as particularly convincing, more like idle intellectual curiosities which might help people better understand some of the difficulties/solutions. Indeed, their validity or not doesn't seem concerning at all. Certainly, disproving them does not disprove God's existence.
barmar, on 2011-February-05, 23:05, said:
So if you could be convinced that free will is just an illusion, you might be willing to give up your belief in god?
I think that if I ever became convinced that there was no such thing as free will I would probably just Kill myself. What is the point in life if you cannot affect the outcome of anything that happens? FWIW I doubt that neuroscience will ever furnish convincing proof. Certainly your given experiment does not furnish any evidence. It merely says that our perception of when we make a decision and when we make a decision differ by a small amount of time. Further, when they talk about the parts of the brain concerning "will" they really mean "impulse" - i.e. the parts of your brain that control movement/actions. It is also well known that our experience of consciousness is some 0.5 seconds behind real time, and your brain can occasionally step backwards and forwards in this sequence. This is the root of the "long second" effect when you look at a clock, the time before the first second normally seems long, which is only because your brain "back dates" your visual on the clock to when you started to move your eyes, such that you never have the impression of blurry vision while yo move yoru eyes from one place to another.
luke warm, on 2011-February-06, 09:58, said:
i can't speak for phil, but there are those who believe an omniscient God exists... iow, free will isn't a necessary precondition for his existence - in their view, in fact, free will *is* an illusion.
Omniscience and free will are tricky. But you can certainly have both. The problem is that in the classic thought experiment of the man in a room making a decision, we implicitly give a preferred notion of time to God. Indeed, if God is present "simultaneously" at all points in space, then he necessaries sees all the past and future history of a single space time point. (I am free to use Lorentz invariance to reverse the precedence of any two space-like separated points).
Of course, I don't really like these kind of thought experiment as essentially one is trading one impossibility for another, if you use the everyday sense. Nevertheless, it does highlight the problem that if time is inherently a property of our universe (and it certainly seems to be), then we can still have both free will and omniscience.
luke warm, on 2011-February-07, 12:49, said:
they all were... the 'law' was a whole
This isnt true (this is abit our of context, but he is referring to the OT laws). I refer you to acts fifteen-ten, when The apostle paul revokes the ceremonial requirements. Moroever, it was the unanimous opinion of the early commentators that this also referred to the specific form of OT laws, but not to the moral precepts. Eg if the OT says "You must stone a woman for adultery" you must accept that adultery is bad, but you are free to decide on appropriate punishments. But all ceremonial laws were revoked.
kenberg, on 2011-February-07, 13:32, said:
Another way of putting it: I believe there is no God. If philosophy cannot support this view, so much the worse for philosophy because I am not changing my mind. Of course philosophy is fine with supporting this view and really seems to be able to support pretty much any view.
A surpsingly biblica point of view from Passed out:"When I came to you, I did not come with eloquence or human wisdom as I proclaimed to you the testimony about God." or "Where is the wise person? Where is the teacher of the law? Where is the philosopher of this age? Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world?"
PassedOut, on 2011-February-07, 14:05, said:
I do dismiss of centuries of arguments proving the existence of god as sophistry, because each iteration has been carefully crafted to conceal the problems pointed out by the latest refutation. You only have to examine a small number of those iterations to realize that arguments for the existence of god will always fail. No word game can create an actual god. Note that I only dismiss one side of the long-running disagreement.
Those who want to add god to what is actually known have the burden of demonstrating why that extra complication is necessary, and those who have attempted to do so over the centuries have failed. And it is not difficult to see why such attempts are bound to fail.
I have no problem with people believing in god, if they need that level of comfort. However, atheism is simpler and more elegant and, unlike theism, does not run into logical difficulties that require oceans of pages of writing to explain away.
Spoken like a philospoher or mathematician. They always want the minimal explanation. Well I want the *best* explanation. Indeed, there is so much that atheism does not explain that I feel justified in referring to it as a "content free" explanation. Above I discussed the difficulty in having non-material rules when material things obey. Note that this is a very different problem to classification. To make non-material observations about the material world is a trivial thing. To demand that the non-material world should obey non material rules is something else entirely. This is a deep problem, and not one that can be adequately discussed in this type of format but let me summarise it as "Nothing is so incomprehensible about the universe, as that it is comprehensible".
PassedOut, on 2011-February-07, 19:07, said:
There is no conflict between atheism and free will.
Well, this is technically true, but there is certainly conflict between materialism and free will, and it seems weird to be an atheist and believe in the reality of some non-material objects, and simultaneously hold that non material objects have no material cause, or non material creator. In practice all of the atheism espoused is predicated on the idea that the universe is wholly material and therefore scientific statements about how things are are the only meaningfully "true" statements. This latter form certainly has a conflict with free will which arises in the following way:
I have decided to go to the cinema. How did that come about? Well it was some kind of chemical release by my neurons. How did that come about? well my neurons received some input from other neurons? How did that come about? Well I remembered that there was a movie that I wished to see. How did that come about? well I was told about this movie by x? How....
And every step we can find a causal relation back to either the first second, or back to some wholly random quantum event. Indeed, the only way you can have free will if is there is some part of you which can influence this causal sequence without having anything which causes it to do so. In order for this to happen it must necessarily be non-material. Indeed, it is for this reason that QM was such good news for religion. It must have been impossible to believe in God back in the days of Maxwell's demon. However, now you have a system of physics that seems custom built to allow spiritual interference. Since all quantum mechanical outcomes are an ostensibly random outcome of an observer dependent property, if you could via spiritual means decide the outcome, this would be indistinguishable from a random event. However, you still require some violation of the "natural order" which is why you cannot have free will in a materialistic world-view.
PassedOut, on 2011-February-08, 00:08, said:
I have a general policy of not believing in the existence of anything for which 1) there is no evidence and 2) the properties ascribed are implausible.
These kind of statements are slightly irritating. Clearly there is "some" evidence, it is just whether you regard it as "convicing" in some sense. And literally hundreds of philosophical texts testify to the fact that the existence of God is not "implausible" in that it does not contradict any known fact. Nor does it represent any inherent contradiction. Now, the fact that an idea is "not contradictory" does not prove that it is "right". But you have failed to advance any argument that makes the non existence of God more likely that the existence of God.
The physics is theoretical, but the fun is real. - Sheldon Cooper