keithb wrote:Welcome to the board Kevin!
Thanks!
keithb wrote:On your first point, I would say that assumptions 5,6, and 7 don't necessarily follow, depending on your model of God. For example, we could have a Deist model of god where God exists but doesn't interact with humanity, negating assumption 5. Also, we could have a Calvinist God that chooses who to reveal the truth to or not independent of human effort, negating assumption 6.
My response is that I really don't see that much difference between
either a Deist model of God
or a Calvinist idea of God, and
no God at all. Think about it.
If the Calvinist model
really is accurate, and therefore God
really does choose "who to reveal the truth to or not independent of human effort," then what's to keep such a deity from doing
anything at all? Why would such a deity have any qualms about putting lies about himself into the scriptures? Sure, we think that would be a
bad thing to do, but there are plenty of people who think
choosing favorites where individual merit (or at least
some effort on the individual's part) doesn't come into the equation is
also a very bad thing to do. There's absolutely
nothing we can know about that type of a deity, because what seems good to us might not be good to that deity, so we could
never ever have a
clue as to what type of deity he really was.
The Deist model is just as bad, and the whole appeal of the Deist model was that it gave an explanation for how the world and universe came into being, and we don't need that anymore anyhow.
So, why even
consider the possibility that either the Deist model or the Calvinist model might be right? What's the
difference, as far as we mortals are concerned, between those two models and
no God at all?
I'm reminded of one atheist's argument some time back that belief in God was like belief in what he postulated as invisible pink unicorns. Belief in either a Deist God or a Calvinist God
is no different from belief in invisible pink unicorns. Sure, either of those two types of God
or invisible pink unicorns may in fact (hypothetically) exist, but why would anybody in their right mind
care whether they did?
It just seems to me to make more sense to believe in the existence of a deity that we can actually
draw conclusions about.
keithb wrote:As for the second statement, let me propose something. Let's say I claim to have been abducted by aliens. Is this statement objectively true?
If it is, you should inform SETI. :)
In all seriousness, though, I have
no idea whether or not you can objectively demonstrate that you've "been abducted by aliens." A lot of people turn skeptical when someone says s/he (or someone else) has "been abducted by aliens," and I'd probably include myself in that group. But I certainly don't know any
inherent reason I could use to conclude that someone that would make that claim must be out of that someone's mind.
I guess that someone's ability to objectively verify that someone had "been abducted by aliens" would depend on the care the aliens had been taking to keep people from knowing they exist. The greater the care they'd taken, the harder it would be to objectively verify the someone had been abducted.
keithb wrote:Is it subjectively true (whatever that means)?
The idea of subjective truth has been around for a
long time. Descartes thought he had discovered the subjective truth that
he existed back in the 1600s. His argument turned out to be flawed, but there's a certain amount of attractiveness to it that has won him disciples all the centuries since and probably will continue to win more for the rest of eternity.
The principal advantage of objective truth is that large groups of people can agree on a set of easily observable, easily verifiable, facts. The principal
disadvantage of objective truth is that, technically, not one person out of that large group really knows that any of the rest, or even the non-animate observable universe,
really exists.
But peple who listen to Descartes (and I do to some extent) would say that
regardless of what we see in the observable universe, each one of us can be
certain that
that one exists, and I think I agree with Descartes that far.
If you have
actually undergone an experience that makes you believe you've been abducted by aliens, then that's a real phenomenon, and it's
perfectly understandable that you might be interested in exploring its implications. It might be wise for you to consider the possibility that you hallucinated the whole thing, but it would be
unwise in my opinion to let that possibility overshadow everything else.
keithb wrote:Because I believe it strongly, does it mean that mean that belief should be respected?
Respected how? I personally believe that
anybody's strong beliefs should be respected, to some degree. So I guess I need to know what you mean specifically by respected.
keithb wrote:What would be some methods to decide if the statement was true in a factual sense or not?
Once again, that depends on the care the aliens had taken to keep people from knowing they exist.