Chap wrote:In such cases, Proverbs 26, 4-5 really gives one a difficult call in deciding how to answer.
Wow, that was a brutal indictment.
V/R
Dr. Cameron
Chap wrote:In such cases, Proverbs 26, 4-5 really gives one a difficult call in deciding how to answer.
lostsheep wrote:MrStakhanovite wrote:Abstract numbers cannot causaly interact with this universe.
Why not, beyond just assumming that the physical universe must be causally closed? I'm a novice at this sort of stuff, so I apologize if my questions seem naïve.
MrStakhanovite wrote:Here is a good place to start, but it's wordy, if you need help, lemme know.
lostsheep wrote:MrStakhanovite wrote:Here is a good place to start, but it's wordy, if you need help, lemme know.
Ok, I’ve looked at the link you posted. If I am understanding correctly, it is stating that the standard definition of “an abstract entity is a non-spatial (or non-spatiotemporal) causally inert thing”. I suppose my questions would be
1) Is it possible that there are non-spatiotemporal entities that are not causally inert? The god of traditional theism would be non-spatiotemporal (or immaterial and eternal to use old fashioned language), but would certainly not be considered by theists to be causally inert but rather the first cause. And as the article states, “But Plato's Forms were supposed to be causes par excellence, whereas abstract objects are normally supposed to be causally inert in every sense.” Are there good arguments that non-spatiotemporal entities must of necessity be causally inert?
2) If there are non-spatiotemporal entities that are not causally inert, would numbers/mathematics fall into that category? The universe at its most fundamental level seems to have a mathematical structure so in what way would our physical universe participate in whatever mathematical world may exist? As the article puts it, “the challenge is therefore to characterize the distinctive manner of "participation in the causal order" which distinguishes the concrete entities. This problem has received relatively little attention. There is no reason to believe that it cannot be solved. But in the absence of a solution, this standard version of the Way of Negation must be reckoned unsatisfactory.”
Chap wrote:I can't say I have noticed a lot of discussion on the part of Hoops. It's usually more a matter of 'You don't understand the Bible' or 'Sure, you're always right aren't you?' one-liners.
In such cases, Proverbs 26, 4-5 really gives one a difficult call in deciding how to answer.
MrStakhanovite wrote:Some Schmo wrote:So you're in the "tip toe around theists/don't actually say what you think/BS them into thinking you value nonsense simply because they think it" camp. I see.
No, I’m about making Theists more thoughtful and deepen their own understanding of their faith from discussion. Reducing every Theist’s philosophical beliefs about God as mere “nonsense” is arrogant as all hell.
Yes, I do value Theist input, because I’m not some omniscient calculator, I suffer from the same cognitive limitations they do. Just because I’ve come to different conclusions than someone else, doesn’t mean I get to dismiss them as mere nonsense.
The caricatures of God you guys (the majority of the agnostic/atheist posters here) bring up and knock down are a far cry away from what serious believers actually think.
Hoops wrote:Chap wrote:I can't say I have noticed a lot of discussion on the part of Hoops. It's usually more a matter of 'You don't understand the Bible' or 'Sure, you're always right aren't you?' one-liners.
In such cases, Proverbs 26, 4-5 really gives one a difficult call in deciding how to answer.
Do you don't want me to answer you anymore. Gotcha.
Some Schmo wrote:So you're in the "tip toe around theists/don't actually say what you think/BS them into thinking you value nonsense simply because they think it" camp. I see.
lostsheep wrote:MrStakhanovite wrote:
No, I’m about making Theists more thoughtful and deepen their own understanding of their faith from discussion. Reducing every Theist’s philosophical beliefs about God as mere “nonsense” is arrogant as all hell.
Yes, I do value Theist input, because I’m not some omniscient calculator, I suffer from the same cognitive limitations they do. Just because I’ve come to different conclusions than someone else, doesn’t mean I get to dismiss them as mere nonsense.
The caricatures of God you guys (the majority of the agnostic/atheist posters here) bring up and knock down are a far cry away from what serious believers actually think.
Having read Mormon themed boards like this one for a while now, I can't tell you how refreshing your attitude is. These are serious philosophical and religious questions that have engaged some of the best minds in the Western intellectual tradition on both sides of the theist/atheist divide. And a little bit of cognitive humility is always healthy for believers and unbelievers alike.
Chap wrote:On the other hand ... (and there always is another hand) ... I passed many years as a 'serious believer' myself. I was familiar with the Bible, was a member of a church in which there was a tradition of thoughtful and questioning preaching by clergy with a high level of intellectual formation, and I read a fair bit of theological and philosophical writing. (No, I am not interested in listing authors, nor in responding to questions of the 'But have you read X?' variety). I was, I think, a goodish example of the kind of educated believer who has a not-bad-at-all answer to most objections to religious belief, though I am not pretending that I was a C.S. Lewis, or even a DCP.
Nowadays, however, if someone asks me what the difference is between my belief in The Deity Formerly Known As Yahweh and a belief in Santa Claus, I might have to say something like
"Well, belief in Santa Claus has always been limited to children, and he has never been given the huge investment of centuries of prestige, artistic creativity, philosophical justification by the best minds available, emotional commitment and (from time to time) persecution of non-believers that the The Deity Formerly Known As Yahweh has had. But maybe in principle there is not such a great difference after all."
So from time to time I think it does no great harm for the Yahweh/Santa comparison to be raised on a board such as this. Not all theists are philosophically sophisticated or dialectically subtle (indeed, in my experience the majority are far from that, and unlikely to make much progress despite all Mr Stakhanovite's missionary work). It is unreasonable to impose higher standards on non-theists.