MrStakhanovite wrote:Sometimes I can watch someone talk out their ass, and other times I’m compelled to say something, like I did with Sethbag. Out of the 8 or 9 different strategies for making an Ontological argument (using different logics and ideas), I really understand two, and maybe have a semi decent grasp on two others, leaving another 4 or 5 I don’t know much about, much less enough to honestly call it mental masturbation. Is Seth justified in making that comment? No, not at all, I genuinely enjoy studying ontological arguments, and I can’t even fathom how much I’d have to know before I could honestly say it’s mental masturbation; I doubt Seth even cares there is more than one style of argument.
I think it's just fine and dandy that you enjoy ontological arguments. I don't have a problem with that. I can see how they can be like a logic puzzle, and that a person could enjoy thinking about them, parsing them, coming to grips with the arguments, etc.
What I called mental masturbation was the idea that such argumentation actually has any bearing on whether a God really exists or not. I am also aware that there are different ontological arguments that are or have been made. I realize that the one I quoted was just one, the one by St. Anselm I believe.
Here's a quick quote from the wikipedia article on ontological arguments:
it must be true, because someone on the Internet wrote:The exact criteria for the classification of ontological arguments are not widely agreed, but the arguments typically start with the definition of God and conclude with his necessary existence, using mostly or only a priori reasoning and little reference to empirical observation. [my emphasis]
Since ontological arguments start with a definition of God, they already fail. Such definitions of God are always invented by humans, since there are no observed, verifiable facts of the universe which include explicit definitions of God. They are begging the question, because they require the validity of a definition of God, when it has not been established that there is in fact anything to define, nor any reasonable explanation given why that definition must obtain.
Do you agree or disagree that the definitions on which ontological arguments hinge are simply assertions made by the developer of the argument? Would you disagree with my assertion that they therefor beg the question?
You can say honestly that the arguments don’t impress you, not convinced, or whatever, but mental masturbation? That’s him on a Hitchens-rhetoric high.
I really dig Hitchens, yes. But my rejection of the kind of thinking that will pull out an ontological argument as proof of God is based on the fact that humans' ability to create logical paradoxes for themselves has really no bearing on what really does, or does not exist in the universe.
You can reject all religions and all belief in God/the divine without recourse to emulating Hitchens, or reading a ton of books, or getting three PhDs, or whatever, you just have to be more modest in how you do it.
I think you've misunderstood me. My argument is a
reaction against a particular type of apologetic approach. The approach I object to is typified by someone claiming that simple uneducated rubes like me have no reasonable basis for rejecting the likelihood of God, or the Bible, or whatever, because the real evidence or meaning or Truth about God really is in the Bible, or whatever other scripture, but one simply has to read it in the original ancient language, or spend years studying the source texts and learning about the cultural context in which it was written, or whatever.
My argument against this apologetic goes something like this: the more ancient languages it is argued that a person must know in order to stand a chance of learning and understanding the real Truth about God who really does exist, the less likely that argument is to be true. The more PhD level studies of the ancient culture which produced a given piece of scripture that supposedly contains the Truth about God that is required to tease out said truth, the less likely that argument is to be true.
Do you see the trend here?
What I'm arguing is
not a form of anti-intellectualism. I am very pro-intellectualism. I value reading and learning and thinking very highly. What I'm arguing is that the more intellectually elitist and exclusive an approach to the truth about God is argued to be in order to learn said Truth, the less likely that argument is to be true.
I could be wrong about this. It's entirely possible that a God really does exist, who buried his/her/its Truth deep down in ancient writings, whose content and circumstances essentially guarantee that of the billions of human beings on Earth, only a few dozen, or even a few thousand can ever tease it out and learn the real deal. I simply think that's unlikely. Again, I could be wrong, just like I could be wrong in my belief that we're probably not all in the Matrix right now and just don't know it.
Ever notice how Tarski or Blixa are hesitant to take a hardline stance on a subject they are not intimately familiar with at that moment?
That's admirable. I've freely admitted that I am not qualified to engage in philosophical argument with you. I've admitted this numerous times. That's not the issue here though. The issue is that many of us believe that the best scientific evidence currently available disproves, or to head off the insufferably pedantic, renders highly improbable many of the claims of the faithful. Then you or MFB or whoever comes along and claims that all of this is simply wrong-headed, as science really can't have anything useful to say at all, because of various philosophical arguments which are great within the discipline of philosophy, but don't amount to much in the empirical world in which we (imagine?) we really live.
And if it's not you trying to undercut the value of scientific evidence in evaluating scriptural claims, it's Aristotle Smith or someone else coming along and saying ok, well you're right there was no Flood, but if you read the Old Testament in its original Hebrew, and then studied the cultural context of the time in which it was written, you'd see that such and such a word actually had some nuanced meanings that render it unclear exactly what was being claimed. Or if you studied ancient Middle Eastern culture as much as I had, you'd realize the ancient bronze-age goat farmers never intended their writings to be taken as literal history, and you have to delve in and get a PhD in Near Eastern Studies to have a ghost of a chance of teasing out of the Old Testament the real Truth about God that he allowed to be buried deep within these stories, because he loves us all and wants us to know of Him, in his infinite mercy.
I would characterize my objection as a wielding of Occam's Razor: the higher the educational hurdles set up by God in order to have a chance at correctly understanding what's been written about him, the less likely those explanations are to be correct. The more ancient languages asserted as necessary for this understanding, the less likely those assertions are to be correct. The more philosophy of science (as opposed to actual science) one must master in order to properly contextualize what we can and cannot test or evaluate about scriptural claims, the less likely it is that these requirements are true. And so on.
I’m trying to think of a study (hook me up here EA) that showed the more confident a person was in their skills were less competent than those who were less confident.
So, there you have it.
I'm familiar with the Dunning-Kruger study, and other related ideas. I don't think that's what we're talking about here. I am not overestimating my grasp of the philosophy of science here - on the contrary, I readily concede I'm sorely deficient, especially compared to you. I'm also not overestimating my grasp of ancient Hebrew culture - again, I would have to defer to someone like Aristotle Smith who has done a lot more reading on the topic than I have.
I am merely arguing that a loving and merciful God, the claimed Father of tens of billions of human beings, would probably not A) require and wish us all to know the Truth about him, and B) bury that truth in layers so thick and convoluted that PhDs in philosophy or ancient Near Eastern Studies would be required to get to the bottom of it, because that would exclude almost everyone who ever has lived on Earth, both past and present, defeating the stated goal of said God in A).
Mormonism ceased being a compelling topic for me when I finally came to terms with its transformation from a personality cult into a combination of a real estate company, a SuperPac, and Westboro Baptist Church. - Kishkumen