I agree - I wish he would do this. I wish you guys would start another thread and try again.Moonwood the Hare wrote:And I still say you have never adequately explained what you mean by demonstrate.
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I agree - I wish he would do this. I wish you guys would start another thread and try again.Moonwood the Hare wrote:And I still say you have never adequately explained what you mean by demonstrate.



Rian..... this brought my palm to my face. Your initial response to Emery and your replies to KTR, have been ..(a bunch of negative adjectives)..Rian wrote:...Now I'm not saying that atheists aren't moral; of course they are. I'm just saying that that very morality flies in the face of their worldview beliefs. And when something that big and consistent and spread throughout the human race so widely goes against a worldview belief, it is a negative mark against the probability of the worldview belief being true.
In the Christian worldview, it states that God has put morality in our innermost being, and that our own hearts tell us when we're acting rightly or wrongly, and this is just what I see all around me. Of course, this one thing didn't make me a Christian, but it's just one more point, along with so many others, in favor of the Christian worldview.


Rian wrote:Now atheists almost always counter this with "But I'm a moral person!" and "But I have meaning in my life!". I've only seen one person really grasp this and finally stop with those counter-arguments. She realized that if there is no God/higher authority, then there is truly no right or wrong or meaning. It finally hit her what we were saying. It didn't change her atheistic beliefs, but she was finally able to acknowledge that atheists borrow morality and meaning from theists, and when it comes down to it, she couldn't tell anyone that anything they did was right or wrong, based on her atheistic worldview.mitchellmckain wrote:BUT you must not mistake what was true of her for what is true generally. Some people DO think out the reasons why some things are right and some things are wrong, and I KNOW this doesn't require a belief in God because I did it myself before I had any reason to believe in God.
But Mitch, I'm not saying that at ALL.
Rian wrote: The key point here is in the last line that you quoted - that based upon her atheistic worldview, she couldn't tell anyone ELSE that anything they did was right or wrong. Do you see the difference? I'm not saying that a person didn't think out reasons why some things are right and some are wrong. I'm saying that
1) an atheist cannot logically say anything is right or wrong in itself; it's just what they think is good or bad, and
Rian wrote:2) an atheist cannot logically tell someone else that what they're doing is right or wrong; it's just their personal preference.
Rian wrote:Therefore I KNOW that many atheists certainly DO have a basis for understanding what is right and wrong based on reasoning rather than divine command because I was one of them -- and those reasons haven't changed now that I do believe in God, and I think I see the real value of Christianity all the better for having such a red herring taken out of it.
What I said above applies here, too. Atheists can decide what their personal preferences are and then reason out what is right or wrong based on those preferences, but they have no logical standing to say something is right or wrong in itself, or right or wrong for someone else.
Rian wrote:Thus it is true that as a Christian I look to what God values as what is most worth pursuing, not because real values are dictated and objective, but because I know that God knows better than I do what is most fulfilling and worthwhile in the long run, which is especially important if an eternal existence is on the table. On the other hand, I do not assume that God has the same answer (of what is best) for everyone.
I agree with you here. Shall we try to work on the parts at the top of the post together and see what we come up with? I'd like to hash it out with you, because I think that we both have a high regard for truth and integrity and are willing to follow things to where they lead instead of just trying to force things into our beliefs.

Keep The Reason wrote:I did do it. I'll try it again.
You know how I can take you by the hand and bring you to Gombe and sit you out in the forest so you can observe chimps in their natural habitat behaving in specific socialized ways? And you know how I can bring you to another such place where the chimps there have utterly no connection to the chimps in Gombe, and I can show you they still have similar behaviors?
I call this "demonstrating my position". If someone comes along and asserts something greater than what I have demonstrated, that's perfectly fine-- providing they demonstrate how thier assertion trumps my demonstrated position..
When you folks can demonstrate your claims like I can, then you can join the rest of us up on the shelf labeled "Demonstrable Claims" For now, you are on the floor wearing signs around your necks that reads, "Unsupported Assertions".
I think that's pretty explicit explanation. SHOW US. If you cannot, then say, "We cannot so I guess you're right-- we offer only unsupported assertions."
But you folks don't do that. You assert that your unsupported assertion trump my demonstrated ones, and insist you're right. You are not right.

Moonwood the Hare wrote:KTR I feel I have not been responding to some very important points you have made and have not spelled out a very clear position but to deal briefly with the problem of demonstration. What you give above is for me too specific and anecdotal; it looks like you are still saying that in order for something to be demonstrated there must be some facts commensurate with it being the case. You believe that God is a false or mistaken explanatory hypothesis that is to say people observed some things about the world they could not explain and postulated God in order to explain those facts - these could be facts like the appearance of design or the presence of human moral impulses or a number of other things. You are not denying that such facts exist and consequently you would agree that that are some facts which are commensurate with the existence of God being the case.
Moonwood the Hare wrote:However you think that with the emergence of modern scientific explanations the stuff God was meant to explain has now found a better explanation.
Moonwood the Hare wrote:Hence it is not a matter of two theories one of which can be demonstrated and one of which cannot, it is a matter of deciding which of two theories provides the best explanation of facts on which we agree.


JustJim wrote:The problem, I think, is that they'd only be "commensurate with the existence of God being the case" if the existence of God WAS the case, which has not been even remotely established.
Of course it has not been shown to be true. The fact that there is evidence for a theory cannot show it is true.That God exists is possible, that's true. But that God does exist, or even that it is likely that God exists, requires more than just possibilities, and has not been shown to be true.
I think KTR is "going with the odds" here, and asserting that things for which there is demonstrability are more likely explanations for things theists attribute to God than are things that are not demonstrable.
If you could just show some connection between moral behaviors among chimps and God, i.e., demonstrate that God is the most likely and best supported explanation to account for chimps as social animals with apparent moral behaviors, then your assertion would be worth serious consideration. But since you can't offer anything that demonstrates such a connection, why should anyone sit up and listen?
Moonwood the Hare wrote:However you think that with the emergence of modern scientific explanations the stuff God was meant to explain has now found a better explanation.
Exactly! Go with the BETTER explanation! Why on earth would you NOT?
Moonwood the Hare wrote:Hence it is not a matter of two theories one of which can be demonstrated and one of which cannot, it is a matter of deciding which of two theories provides the best explanation of facts on which we agree.
Well, I think we all agree on the "facts" but not on your assertion that the facts are "commensurate with the existence of God" - any more or less than we'd agree that the facts are commensurate with some experiment set up on earth by aliens, or that they're commensurate with there only being a brain in a jar that conjures up all this imagined reality. The existence of God is a "wild guess" explanation for what we observe. I prefer the more solid explanations demonstrability provides.
Jim

Emery wrote:What am I missing?

Just thought it should be pointed out that whilst the observation of only white swans is COMPATIBLE with both theories, it would not, as you indicate, SUPPORT the theory that black swans existed. That's just plain silly. In fact it was the very fact that a black swan hadn't been observed that would give rise to the theory that there [likely] were no black swans.MTH wrote:So yes the same evidence can support two different and contradictory theories. So for example the fact that all the swans we had ever observed were white which was true for many years was compatible with the theory all swans are white and also compatible with the theory that not all swans are white but the discovery of black swans proved the first theory false. This is not difficult. To say the evidence is compatible with a theory only if the theory is true is just plain nonsense.

OzAnt wrote:Just thought it should be pointed out that whilst the observation of only white swans is COMPATIBLE with both theories, it would not, as you indicate, SUPPORT the theory that black swans existed. That's just plain silly. In fact it was the very fact that a black swan hadn't been observed that would give rise to the theory that there [likely] were no black swans.MTH wrote:So yes the same evidence can support two different and contradictory theories. So for example the fact that all the swans we had ever observed were white which was true for many years was compatible with the theory all swans are white and also compatible with the theory that not all swans are white but the discovery of black swans proved the first theory false. This is not difficult. To say the evidence is compatible with a theory only if the theory is true is just plain nonsense.
And, let me tell you, the Christian god is a very very very black swan indeed. So much so that this conversation reminds me of that joke that explains that only a religious person would go look for a non-existent black cat in a pitch black room, to which the retort is, "ah, yes, but let's not forget that a philosopher would find it".
Ant

Moonwood the Hare wrote:Anyway observing large numbers of white swans just does not make it more likely that all swans are white.

VickiRW wrote:Moonwood the Hare wrote:Anyway observing large numbers of white swans just does not make it more likely that all swans are white.
To clarify, that isn't exactly right. The flaw in the all-swans-are-white conclusion is failing to see that the swans were not sampled randomly. There is no flaw in saying that the large number of observations of white swans all across England, along with no observations of non-white swans in England, makes it highly probable that all swans in England are white. It would be an error to say that a highly probable thing is certain. Is that what you are getting at?
In practice, it is often hard to see yourself making this sampling bias error. You easily and naturally assume that the way the world normally operates for you if the way it works always. You can be careful to sample randomly within your sphere of understanding. The limits of that sphere are hard to identify though because they are assumptions that you just don't think about.
Another way to look at this problem of viewpoint is to think about what the null hypothesis should be. The null hypothesis is the default position. When analyzing the data - you calculate the probability of making the observations that you have made if the null hypothesis were true. If the observations don't match the null - that probability is low. If it is low enough, you reject the null hypothesis. Unless you are doing Bayesian analysis, you don't even get into the probability of an alternative hypothesis being true. So, what should the null hypothesis be in this case? That all swans are white? That there is no coloration bias in swans? The answer can often seem obvious, but it depends on your viewpoint.

How did you get that out of what I said? What I said was,Moonwood the Hare wrote:Well now you have reverted to the idea that a theory that has strong confirmation is probably true. I think Popper defeats that idea about as thoroughly as any idea could be defeated.
Moonwood, if I said to you (pretending for a moment that we existed at a time that only white swans had been observed), “Well, we've only ever observed white swans, so it's apparent that there must also be orange swans.”, would you be inclined to say something like, “quite possibly” or would you think that my mental cheese has slid off my cranial cracker?OzAnt wrote:Just thought it should be pointed out that whilst the observation of only white swans is COMPATIBLE with both theories, it would not, as you indicate, SUPPORT the theory that black swans existed. That's just plain silly.
And the same principle is in effect today. That's why today under “Swan: colour availability” it doesn't say “all known colours man can dream up”.OzAnt wrote:In fact it was the very fact that a black swan hadn't been observed that would give rise to the theory that there [likely] were no black swans.

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