Originally posted by BoulderHead
People who just ‘take it on faith’ that all the questions have been answered through evolution, yeah, I know some people like this.
This is one of my all-time favorites and congratulations are in order because I had begun to think I’d never live to see it mentioned so straightforwardly here at PF.
I was running out of options with which to annoy Russ.
Really though, when someone first hit me with this idea, I was effectively reduced to saying: nah uh – a philosophical statement of faith at best.
I call this the “Tricky-God Scenario”, but ultimately I reject it because it is simply unnecessary; all that is required for a lack of belief in a god/s (and thereby requiring the ‘faith-thing’ that god/s always seem to be so keen on promoting) is for god/s to remain absent, and this is exactly the position I believe we find ourselves in. To perform intentional acts to confuse us about its existence is going far beyond the call of duty. Also, if one holds this view, I think it becomes an extremely powerful reason to accept that nobody can ever get to know god/s, for the whole design of creation has then been constructed so as to leave god/s existence ambiguous, yet most of the time when I have heard this argument, it has come from someone claiming to ‘know’ that god/s exists. I think they do it because of a perceived threat brought about by science. IMO, they are suffering from a bad case of Orwellian Doublethink in which they hold the conflicting simultaneous views that;
1) God/s has set up its existence to remain a mystery.
2) They know god exists.
Omnipotence isn’t required to hoodwink someone.
It may not be our business to understand. What is the philosophy of a divinity? [another thread, another forum. I think this is really a philosophy of science discussion anyway.
I do not ‘believe’ in evolution, I merely accept that of the possibilities which I ‘believe’ exist, that evolution has much more in support of it, making it more probable. I have nothing I can consider evidence to support a belief in an invisible god/s that constructs the universe in such a way as to mislead people. Accepting one view as being more probable than another is not the same as saying "I believe" in evolution.
Again, really you and I mostly agree, but...
I want to reiterate that this argument does not represent my beliefs. I try to consider all options, and then when possible, rule out the inconsistent ones with logic. I see no logical way to beat this argument therefore I think it must be considered. Even though, again, we probably agree on many issues, I stand by my point: If we are to have any beliefs whatsoever, they are ultimately taken on faith. This must include all science and mathematics. Why do you think fundamentalists smirk when you hit them with evidence? Answer: They are not bound by the evidence. Now, many rush to equate this to a statement of equal probability. Clearly our logic tells us that this proposition that not only does God exist, but that he plays tricks seems most improbable. But, no matter how many times you halve the odds, the chances of a Tricky God [good name] are and will always be greater than zero. This being true, all of science and mathematics will always be tentative. Ther is no way around it that I can see.
By this, evolution may have never happened. No belief is needed. This is logic.
Much more likely, seemingly by enormous odds, evolution did happen.