Ok - I'm halfway though part 6 now.
At this point, I think Bahnsen is the better debater. And the better philosopher.
He's up to his eyeballs in **** mind, but still...
Bahnsen did corner Stein concerning the immaterial issue - I don't think Stein had thought that one though...
Stein isn't grasping onto Bahnsen's arguments. Bahnsen was talking about 'universal' laws, and yet Stein's reply I'm just listening to now is:
"I don't think Bahnsen understands what scientific laws are.
...but Bahnsen wasn't talking about scientific laws. He was talking about universal ones.
But Bahnsen's argument! Oh my. Only someone this proficient can make such a dumb argument sound so impressive. I feel like I'm back on MAD talking to Log.
YES - without God what we consider 'universal' laws might not actually be 'univeral'. (In fact, QM is actually giving us empirical evidence that challenges all kinds of so-called 'universal laws'...)
But how does this prove God again? So what if the laws we believe to be universal don't turn out to be actually universal? So what if we can't 'prove' anything to a point that fundy's approve of? So what if we can't be 100% no-doubt-at-all sure that the debate being held can actually be held to any external, ultimately objective 'standard'?
YES - without God we might not be able to say that a certain standard of morality is THE answer.
YES - and ...so what?!
How does any of this 'prove' the existence of God? How does it even approach it?
So Bahnsen can't stand to live in a world where uncertainty is permissible? Where there aren't necessarily ultimate answers to ultimate questions? Well, I feel for him. I'm sure it feels good to believe that the ship your sailing in isn't capable of sinking. In fact, I
know it feels good, because I remember the feeling...
...I wouldn't call it particularly smart though...
The reason to have a debate based around reason and logic is because reason and logic have a better track record when it comes to understanding and predicting the universe around us than other methods. Needing to establish some 'ultimate' source for reason and logic before a debate based on them can even be considered legitimate is just as nonsensical as saying that everything needs a cause EXCEPT the cause we are going to call 'God'.
Bahnsen's approach is this:
"I'll talk about logic and reason when it's 'convenient' to me. But there will be a point where I will bring up something 'magical'. This 'magical' thing will not be bound to the same 'universal' laws I've been banging on about for so long. And I don't need to explain why - it just won't be. So there..."
Nope - I'm not particularly impressed so far. By either side - in truth.
I expect to hear something new and impressive from these 'official' debates. I'm always disappointed...
Don't get me wrong - it IS enjoyable. But more for the banter than anything else ;)
I mean, Stein seemed to spend nearly 10 minutes on the 'You can't prove a negative' point. I would assume that at this kind of 'level', you wouldn't need to belabour such things...
cksalmon wrote:Per a materialistic worldview, there is no such thing as an abstract universal, and so the atheist's pronouncements on morality, for example, are utterly ungrounded in anything other than, I suppose, evolution.
There are ALL kinds of ways to construct a moral approach within a materialistic world-view. And one based on evolution would be no more 'grounded' than any other. All a moral system needs are consistent rules. You don't need to base it on evolution to have that...
I also don't see how a theistic moral view is any more grounded just because they declare it so though the power of 'magic'...
And - of course - I don't see what it has to do with the existence, or non-existence, of God either way...