Response to Coggins
Posted: Tue Jan 02, 2007 3:32 am
Hi Coggins, I've taken your post from the thread Wade has on lying and the church.
Coggins:
What I brought up in the thread with Wade was critical thinking concepts. It is true that religious "faith" does not employ critical thinking. In fact it is the antithesis of reasoning. All one needs for religious faith is acceptance of whatever one is told to accept by some authority.
I appreciate many religious individuals have little to no understanding of the concept of atheism and think it is a belief system. But it is not. If you'd like to discuss that further I will. In short atheism is a default position to theism. Critical thinking is also not a belief system...there are thinking tools which can employed which result generally, in better, closer to truth results and/or better decision making than if no thinking tools are employed and only complete reliance of gut feelings or authority. Sometimes there is little choice but to rely on authority but then that authority should be critically evaluated and it kept in mind.
If you read my posts to Wade, Coggins you will note I mention not just emperical evidence but reasoning as well. The phrase "extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence"..is shorthand for a logical concept which is a thinking tool, which when employed aids in decision making, improves the quality of critical thinking and probability of conclusion, theory, results, opinion etc. If you have a problem with the logic in that Coggins then argue that issue.
Coggins you may believe whatever you wish I'm not arguing against you doing that. But the thread both you and Wade set up ..had to do with applying reasoned judgment to church leaders/J.Smith claims as to whether the claims were likely true and if not why not. We live in a world in which generally reasoning leads to better choices. that isn't guaranteed but generally when one gathers information and then makes decisions, they are in a better position to reason to a good conclusion than if no information was gathered.
Where did I claim something does not exist? I didn't make any such claim. And I don't need to make any such claim. If anyone presents to me a claim for something existing, for which I am extremely skeptical and have good reason to be extremely skeptical ..then logically, rightfully so, the burden is on them to present their reasoning and evidence. It's not up to me to prove whatever they claim does not exist. Simply expecting me to believe without question or in other words to have faith is irrational. I have nothing against the existence of any strange extraordinary thing.. but I need to be persuaded with good reasoning that the thing in question exists.
Like it or not Coggins, people claim's can be evaluated rationally as to whether or not they are likely true and if not true, a determination given the data presented can be made as to the likely reason. In some cases, as in J.Smith's case ...there is good reasoning to conclude with high probability he lied in many of his claims. I don't expect you to believe that given your background.
Coggins:
It needs to be born in mind here that marg is clearly, from this thread and others, coming from an alternaive religous perspective that I will here just call naturalism or metaphysical materialism. The core metaphysical concepts of this belief systems are a stern epistemological empiricism and positivism which claims, not simply a methadological validity to scientific method and the necessity of observation and empirical confirmation in such normative matters, but claims also, a priori we should keep firmly in mind, that outside of these methadologies or intellectual templates, no other reality exists (including gold plates, God, heaven or what have you)
What I brought up in the thread with Wade was critical thinking concepts. It is true that religious "faith" does not employ critical thinking. In fact it is the antithesis of reasoning. All one needs for religious faith is acceptance of whatever one is told to accept by some authority.
I appreciate many religious individuals have little to no understanding of the concept of atheism and think it is a belief system. But it is not. If you'd like to discuss that further I will. In short atheism is a default position to theism. Critical thinking is also not a belief system...there are thinking tools which can employed which result generally, in better, closer to truth results and/or better decision making than if no thinking tools are employed and only complete reliance of gut feelings or authority. Sometimes there is little choice but to rely on authority but then that authority should be critically evaluated and it kept in mind.
If you read my posts to Wade, Coggins you will note I mention not just emperical evidence but reasoning as well. The phrase "extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence"..is shorthand for a logical concept which is a thinking tool, which when employed aids in decision making, improves the quality of critical thinking and probability of conclusion, theory, results, opinion etc. If you have a problem with the logic in that Coggins then argue that issue.
It must be kept in mind that these are metaphysical assmuptions, not any possible extrapolations from the intellectual framework of the methadologies themselves. Logic, empiricism, and the scientific method are excellent tools for the level of reality with which they deal and within which they were created and to which they have direct reference. Outside of this particular mortal realm, they have little, if any epistemological value. This template has severe limitations balencing their definate strengths, and cannot be used as oracles to tell us anything beyond the perceptive range dictated by their inherant attributes.
Coggins you may believe whatever you wish I'm not arguing against you doing that. But the thread both you and Wade set up ..had to do with applying reasoned judgment to church leaders/J.Smith claims as to whether the claims were likely true and if not why not. We live in a world in which generally reasoning leads to better choices. that isn't guaranteed but generally when one gathers information and then makes decisions, they are in a better position to reason to a good conclusion than if no information was gathered.
This is the fundamental problem of scientism and metaphysical materialism generally: the attempt to push methdologies and cognitive frameworks beyond their bounds into realms outside their stict delimitations, and then to claim that anything remaining outside those delimitations does not exist. At the same time, we demand that any possible spheres of existence outside what we call the "natural" world conform to both our present understanding of that world and the perameters of the intellectual superstructures we've developed to explain it and the methadologies we've developed to explore and discover its features.
Where did I claim something does not exist? I didn't make any such claim. And I don't need to make any such claim. If anyone presents to me a claim for something existing, for which I am extremely skeptical and have good reason to be extremely skeptical ..then logically, rightfully so, the burden is on them to present their reasoning and evidence. It's not up to me to prove whatever they claim does not exist. Simply expecting me to believe without question or in other words to have faith is irrational. I have nothing against the existence of any strange extraordinary thing.. but I need to be persuaded with good reasoning that the thing in question exists.
The problem is, of course, that the human methadologies and templates cannot be extracted from the very natural world within which they arose to explain that very natural world; their perceptual range, or shall we say, their perceptual depth of field, is embedded within the same empirical world as the phenomena they attempts to study and explain, and are therefore conditioned and limited by the rule, laws, and charactistics of that world.
Like it or not Coggins, people claim's can be evaluated rationally as to whether or not they are likely true and if not true, a determination given the data presented can be made as to the likely reason. In some cases, as in J.Smith's case ...there is good reasoning to conclude with high probability he lied in many of his claims. I don't expect you to believe that given your background.