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[quote name='Ziggamafu' post='1813552' date='Mar 21 2009, 10:27 PM']If then you admit to deliberate deception, yet refuse to apologize, why should I spend my time on your posts?[/quote]

I said alright, that is yes, you are correct. I felt it was fair use at the time, I am incorrect.

If it will allow us to move on, I apologize for misrepresenting your "argument".



[quote]The link explained the skeptical hypothesis and the BIV-scenario. As I said, Descartes' idea cannot be proven, but is certainly presumed nevertheless. This should not be dragged out; questioning the validity of the existence of one's own thoughts is fruitless and absurd.[/quote]

And I have pointed out that what Descartes meant by "I" is no longer coherent. The same with Hume's objection.



[quote]As I said (again), reality and truth are interchangeable terms, yet used in different ways by some (e.g., reality is what is, while truth is our perceptions of what is), and are thus listed together for that purpose, much like the terms "meaning" and "value". Something is valuable inasmuch as it is meaningful and vice versa. Meaning and value are [i]qualitative judgments [/i]made by a consciousness.[/quote]


Fine



[quote]And (yet again) I repeat that the absence of the belief in God is the very "universal" that I am referencing in each syllogism; hence, my previous recommendation that you replace the phrase you find troubling with the substitution "lacking the belief in God".[/quote]


You claimed that a number of things, extending beyond an isolated rejection of theism, are the universal assertion of atheism. This is absurd. The larger problem, is what you mean by "meaning" and "value"

Edited by Hassan
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If it helps you, forget Descartes'; leave it at the fact that you presume your own existence (in practice if not in advertence) as "fact" even though your own existence cannot be empirically verified - that is the parallel that I am drawing with the God. God is presumed in practice, even if not in advertence, which is what the syllogisms demonstrate.

I have already explained "meaning" and "value" as qualitative judgments of a consciousness.

My proven assertions demonstrate a number of things that logically follow the lack of a belief in God (hence the use of the phrase, "according to atheism..."). These are logical proofs built upon nothing other than atheism itself. Do you know how logic works? The syllogisms build off of one another.

Atheists are intellectually dishonest and the arguments of atheists are hypocritical. That is a logical fact, as proven by my argument. For the atheist lacks a belief in God - thus lacking a source and standard of objective meaning and value - yet inevitably, by the demands of practicality, engages in various disciplines with public passion, thereby presuming a value that is real and true - [i]objective [/i]- and stretches beyond the subjective confines of a mere evolutionary illusion.

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[quote name='Ziggamafu' post='1813941' date='Mar 22 2009, 10:02 AM']If it helps you, forget Descartes'; leave it at the fact that you presume your own existence (in practice if not in advertence) as "fact" even though your own existence cannot be empirically verified - that is the parallel that I am drawing with the God. God is presumed in practice, even if not in advertence, which is what the syllogisms demonstrate.[/quote]

I don't know what you mean by my "existence" or why it cannot be empirically verified.

[quote]I have already explained "meaning" and "value" as qualitative judgments of a consciousness.[/quote]

Alright. I suspect you will have to revise this later on but for now, fine.

[quote]My proven assertions demonstrate a number of things that logically follow the lack of a belief in God (hence the use of the phrase, "according to atheism..."). These are logical proofs built upon nothing other than atheism itself. Do you know how logic works? The syllogisms build off of one another.[/quote]

You have not proven anything as of yet. I assure you I know how logic works, I have never seen a modern logic text seriously cover the syllogistic system you are using or any modern logicians use them (In fact I have not seen such a use since I had to do a paper on Al Ghazali's philosophy) but I am willing to assume that, stripping away the considerable verbiage they could be translated into an acceptable logical syntax and be taken as deductively valid. The problem isn’t (necessarily) your logic but your assertions, a number of which are highly contestable.

[quote]Atheists are intellectually dishonest and the arguments of atheists are hypocritical. That is a logical fact, as proven by my argument.[/quote]
You may wish to be more humble about the strength of your argument.

[quote]For the atheist lacks a belief in God - thus lacking a source and standard of objective meaning and value - yet inevitably, by the demands of practicality, engages in various disciplines with public passion, thereby presuming a value that is real and true - [i]objective [/i]- and stretches beyond the subjective confines of a mere evolutionary illusion.[/quote]


Let's look at a few of the soft spots of your argument.

I am still not clear what you mean by "by that of the universe which exists independently of any consciousness in the universe"

I understand you wish to establish a definition of objectivity not dependent on consciousness but what you mean when you claim that this is that by which "reality and truth" are "defined" is vague, as is what you mean by saying that they are defined by that (?) "of the universe" which exists independently of consciousness.

You assert that by "meaning and value" you mean a qualitative judgment of the consciousness (why you added that qualification I do not know, as though there were some sort of qualitative judgment which is not conscious?) and that "according to atheism" (which again, is a meaningless phrase, I will assume you mean something more accurate like according to post enlightenment western materialism) neither meaning nor value exist objectively. Yet this is simply false. Qualitative judgments of course exist objectively. It is an objective fact that conscious agents do make qualitative judgments.

Let's pause there for a moment. I think that, by your definitions, your argument fails at the second syllogism. At least that is it's most obvious failing (at that point) setting aside more technical critiques.

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[quote name='Hassan' post='1815977' date='Mar 24 2009, 11:26 PM']I don't know what you mean by my "existence" or why it cannot be empirically verified.[/quote]

You cannot put your own consciousness under a microscope. You cannot prove that you are not a brain in a vat. Your own existence is an unverifiable presumption; you could be an npc in an advanced mmo and you would have no way of knowing.


[quote]You have not proven anything as of yet...The problem isn’t (necessarily) your logic but your assertions, a number of which are highly contestable.[/quote]

The assertions necessarily follow each other, so the first two syllogisms are, as far as I can tell, the only two with premises you can question.

[quote]You may wish to be more humble about the strength of your argument.[/quote]

I'm being deliberately provocative.

[quote]I am still not clear what you mean by "by that of the universe which exists independently of any consciousness in the universe"

I understand you wish to establish a definition of objectivity not dependent on consciousness but what you mean when you claim that this is that by which "reality and truth" are "defined" is vague, as is what you mean by saying that they are defined by that (?) "of the universe" which exists independently of consciousness.[/quote]

In other words, anything which owes its existence to a consciousness within the universe is strictly subjective; it has no objective reality relative to the universe. I word this in such a way that avoids begging the question in regards to God's own mind and the universe that sprang from it.

[quote]You assert that by "meaning and value" you mean a qualitative judgment of the consciousness (why you added that qualification I do not know, as though there were some sort of qualitative judgment which is not conscious?) and that "according to atheism" (which again, is a meaningless phrase, I will assume you mean something more accurate like according to post enlightenment western materialism) neither meaning nor value exist objectively. Yet this is simply false. Qualitative judgments of course exist objectively. It is an objective fact that conscious agents do make qualitative judgments.[/quote]

I told you that "according to atheism" could be replaced with "lacking the belief in God". That qualitative judgments are made does not mean that the qualities judged are objective. The act of judging is objective; the qualities discerned (that is, the very things that motivate the judgment in the first place) are subjective. When I say "theism is better than atheism", the fact that I made a statement is objective but the process of the judgment (that is, the discernment of qualities) is subjective. In other words, lacking the belief in God, "qualities" (read: meaning and value) do not have objective existence. "Qualities" only began to exist subjectively with the first consciousness and "qualities" will cease to exist subjectively upon the death of the last consciousness; they have no objective existence. In absence of any consciousnesses to discern it, radio waves carrying the sounds of Mozart will be no more "music" than the sounds of an asteroid colliding with a moon; both will merely be noise. If God exists, however, then meaning / value is objective since an eternal consciousness is the source and standard.

[quote]Let's pause there for a moment. I think that, by your definitions, your argument fails at the second syllogism. At least that is it's most obvious failing (at that point) setting aside more technical critiques.[/quote]

You're going to have to do better than that.

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Here is my independent musings. I am not a logician. I've read your posts Hassan and Ziggamafu with reservations and critically, disagreeing with you both. I really dont know if this here is relevant but I will post it anyway:


I know therefore I am &
I am therefore I know are mutually exclusive and both valid within the totality of finite human nature.
They are a circle dependent on one another since man is soul-body-spirit. Man is not a monad (angel), and man is not an animal.
Man knows in the totality of his existance including the spiritual and the physical. Man cannot be reduced merely to his transcendant musings nor to his historical concrete actuality. His knowledge cannot be reduced merely to the empirical nor merely to the metaphysical. Merely a priori or merely a posteriori.

The same is true of this God we talk about Whose knowledge of; cannot be reduced to syllogisms nor reduced to natural science. Our experience of God cannot be reduced to the deepest part of us namely our personhood or subjectiveness which is the ultimate principle of our being residing of the human soul, nor can he be reduced to the experiential animal sense-element which completes us. Both have a role to play and are in a sense equally important in our experience of God. We cannot know God unless we were established by Him in history, just as we cannot truly know Him unless He moved us in our souls by His grace. This mutual exclusivity is ultimately a mystery. Man is a mystery since he is modified and subsumed by His source who is God.

Grace residing in the depths of our soul does not exist without a historical grounding. Nor does grace touch us if it were not for God touching our soul directly independent of physicality. Let the influence of Plato's extreme dualism upon Church theologians/philosophers: die.

To reduce the experience of God to one or the other is shortsighted. If one would reduce the experience of God in an extreme way to one or the other, then Jesus Christ would make no sense. Then the sacraments would make no sense. Sacred Scripture would make no sense.

This said there is an order in human nature, namely the soul is greater than the body, and spiritual things are greater than physical things as Paul expounded on in Corinthians. Yet to reduce man to one or the other is a rejection of one's own human existance.

Edited by kafka
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just want to add here, that my thoughts above are very incomplete, and are presupposed that the one reading is basically a Christian or seeking God.

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[quote name='Ziggamafu' post='1816876' date='Mar 26 2009, 09:19 AM']You cannot put your own consciousness under a microscope.[/quote]

That does not mean it is not an empirical phenomena which has the potential to be studied and examined like any other. I follow Searle's biological naturalism so I doubt we are going to agree on this point. I'd recommend this discussion be put on hold or moved to another thread but if you wish to challenge it I will defend Searle's position.

[quote]You cannot prove that you are not a brain in a vat. Your own existence is an unverifiable presumption; you could be an npc in an advanced mmo and you would have no way of knowing.[/quote]


There is no logical reason personal existence cannot be demonstrated and the question of epistemological solipsism is another matter. They could be linked to an extent, thinking of Heidegger I suppose.




[quote]The assertions necessarily follow each other, so the first two syllogisms are, as far as I can tell, the only two with premises you can question.[/quote]


lol, I am granting for the sake of argument that the arguments follow simply because I am quite sure the argument is weak enough that it fails even assuming, a highly doubtful assumption, that the arguments are valid and frankly I do not feel like investing the time to examine the logical syntax in detail. I am by no means an expert on syllogisms. As I said it is a highly outdated system, Aristotle's logic has serious logical flaws as seen in modern quantifier logic, and I have not studied it since I had to look into Al Ghazali's philosophy. With the qualification in mind I will note that I believe that Aristotelian syllogisms operate with relatively simply propositions of strict subject predicate form. I am fairly confident that you have applied to this archaic system numerous assertions which are far to technical to be handled by the apparatus of Aristotelian logic. You wish to use an Aristotelian format because it is simple I suppose and you don't need to supply proofs to demonstrate the validity of your argument but do not seem able to stick to propositions appropriate for the Aristotelian logical apparatus.



[quote]I'm being deliberately provocative.[/quote]


Unfortunately without grounds.

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[quote]In other words, anything which owes its existence to a consciousness within the universe is strictly subjective; it has no objective reality relative to the universe. I word this in such a way that avoids begging the question in regards to God's own mind and the universe that sprang from it.[/quote]

There are plenty of things which "owe" their existence to a conscious agent and derivatively consciousness but which are objective. The computer you are typing on being a prime example.



[quote]I told you that "according to atheism" could be replaced with "lacking the belief in God".[/quote]


Whatever synonyms you use it will not help.

[quote]That qualitative judgments are made does not mean that the qualities judged are objective.[/quote]

I don't know what you mean by this. What "qualities"? I think you are a bit confused about what qualitative mental states are but that is just a suspicion.

[quote]The act of judging is objective; the qualities discerned (that is, the very things that motivate the judgment in the first place) are subjective.[/quote]
alright

[quote]When I say "theism is better than atheism", the fact that I made a statement is objective but the process of the judgment (that is, the discernment of qualities) is subjective.[/quote]

It is subjective in a sense, but not in the sense that the conscious judgment is not objective.


[quote]In other words, lacking the belief in God, "qualities" (read: meaning and value) do not have objective existenc[/quote]

Wait right here. Now you are defining "meaning and value" as "qualities"?

You originally defined "meaning and value" as "meaning and value are qualitative judgments made by consciousness" now meaning and value are simply "qualities" what in the world you mean by that I do not know. If you mean "qualities" in the traditional philosophical sense than this is quite distinct from meaning and value, they are nothing an atheistic world view would not permit, and your argument (why not) falls apart. If you do not mean qualities in the traditional sense you need to be clear what you mean by it.









[quote]You're going to have to do better than that.[/quote]


lol.

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  • 1 year later...

[quote name='Ziggamafu' date='26 March 2009 - 10:19 AM' timestamp='1238077143' post='1816876']
Your own existence is an unverifiable presumption; you could be an npc in an advanced mmo and you would have no way of knowing.

[/quote]
That would be amazing! :woot:

:mobile:

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KnightofChrist

One day we'll be read a story of how Hassan and Bonkers both when "From Atheist to Catholic"

Oh what a day that will be!

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