Re: God
Why doesn't it matter? This is just an easy way for you to escape the limitations of the human mind.
Nevertheless, you cannot show with absolute certainty that logic or reason is the best way to comprehend the universe. At best using logic and reason to comprehend the universe is a subjective choice.
What are you talking about? I am not "arbitrarily categorizing" - I am saying that God and philosophy in general are unfalsifiable. All philosophical ideas are unfalsifiable - this does not mean that they are untrue. Certainly you are not a nihilist?
Philosophy needs to be logical? By what standard of value? You are using your own value set and applying it to what you think philosophy should be. Western philosophy generally accepts this fact (at least in the past it has) but Eastern philosophy does not necessarily agree with this. Does this render Eastern philosophy obsolete or "wrong"? Not necessarily.
As Anonymouse so aptly and concisely explained, the issue of God is outside the realm of science. Both atheism and theism are taken on faith.
You've said it, but have yet to explain it.
It is an argument to consider when someone, such as yourself, comes along and upholds the virtues of logic and reason as the only way to percieve the universe. The principles of logic are not, and cannot be axioms. I am assuming you are familiar with Godel.
Originally posted by Stark Evade
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I said it is not based on the senses of a single individual. That's why you have peer review. You can still argue that even that is somehow potentially fallible but again that doesn't matter because it is the best way to gather knowledge and there for it is our logical responsibility to adhere to the principles.
I see where you want to take this. You're essentially arbitrarily categorizing things as being either in the realm science or in the realm of philosophy opening up the possibility of relegating religious dogma to philosophy and therefore not in the reach of science. That becomes a game of semantics and word manipulation.
I'll first repeat that even philosophy needs to be logical and that a fallacious argument, philosophically is utterly useless. Further, it is inescapable that believing in a god as a cause is an attempt to make conclusions about the physical nature of the universe and therefore subject to scientific scrutiny.
As Anonymouse so aptly and concisely explained, the issue of God is outside the realm of science. Both atheism and theism are taken on faith.
Like I've said, the fallibility is a non-issue.
Some physical laws "break down" in black holes. And appear to "break down" in quantum physics. This is no argument. I don't see the point. All you are saying is that science does not know everything and that is something the scientific community already accepts. It is a principle in science. And it has nothing to do with this debate. It is a red herring.
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