PIT2 said:
Not knowing something for certain, but believing it to be true. Thats what i call faith. I don't think there is anything special about religious faith that sets it appart from any other type of faith.
Almost.
Religious faith is the same as the "faith" that the Invisible Pink Unicorn exists.
Religious faith is not the same as my knowledge that the Earth is round even if I haven't actually been into space to see it with my own eyes.
PIT2 said:
U state that god is supernatural, but u cannot define what is supernatural without first finding out what constitutes 'nature'. God (to me) represents a number of ideas about reality, such as "the universe was created by an intelligence" and "life was created by an intelligence".
The only intelligence we know has evolved - from lower forms (bacterias) to us (humans).
Do you have any proof that an intelligent being(s) exist(s) ? You stated it, you have to prove it.
We don't need to disprove anything. It's only after you bring some evidence that we can debate on them.
There is a possibility open for everything, but when the probability is so small (we're talking ~0.(..0..)1..% here) then it's not worth taking into consideration over the rest 99.(..9..) %
I'm all open for evidence though. Evidence can be both direct (apples fall) and indirect (planet Mars has a solid core).
Without evidence, i could say something is as if it didn't exist.
My position is: why try to disprove something that doesn't exist
PIT2 said:
How can u use an argument of ignorance ("we don't know"), as an argument against god? It doesn't make sense.
I'm not trying to disprove god(s) as I have already stated.
I'll let god(s) disprove him/themselves by lack of evidence :)
PIT2 said:
Eyes can be stimulated with light. So what? Does it mean the sun doesn't exist?
Nope, what I was trying to prove is that we have found brain areas that correspond to certain mind processes.
Your theory sais that there is something extra "out there" (soul?), so now you have to make two things
1) Show it exists.
2) Explain the findindgs of the scientists about the relation between sensations and brain areas.
PIT2 said:
How much mass does the number 9 have? What is the size of joy?
Rhetorical questions are not arguments.
Does number 9 have to have a mass? Why is that? You must show me before you ask me what you just did.
The same about the size of joy.
Here's a question for you: what is the weight of your mouse cursor? :)
PIT2 said:
Matter and experiences are so different that even a comparison becomes meaningless. I realize that u believe that experiences are material, but there is no secret experiment that has been carried out by some genius-ahead-of-his-time-scientist which has demonstrated this to be the case. Dont jump to conclusions, just accept that we do not know.
The theory that experiences are natural is a scientific theory that can be falsified.
You can falsify it by showing another possible cause. Not just showing it as in telling me on the forum about it. I mean bring forth evidence supporting the claim.
Meanwhile, neurology and psychiatry have made strong connections between experiences and brain functions, connections that must be explained by your theory.
- where is this "soul" located?
- what is it made of?
- how does it interact with the "material world"?
You can't just say that my "faith" that counsciousness is a result of natural processes is the same thing as your faith that we have a soul.
Why?
- there is no evidence for souls
- there is tons of hard evidence linking consciousness and the brain and absolutely no evidence that sais otherwise.
- in fact, statistics[/url] have pretty much narrowed the probability of the supernatural's existence to a minimum.
The problem is not of posibility (yes, we can't disprove spagetti monsters, god(s) or souls) but of probability (yes, they are indeed highly unlikely).
PIT2 said:
Go to the search section on this forum, and read through some topics opened by les sleeth. He (and i think someone else on this forum) seem to have experienced 'god' (they don't usually call it god) through meditation. Many other people throughout history and all over the world have had similar experiences.
I don't doubt they think they did.
Let's say I get high on crack, and experience the fact that god doesn't exist (because we know that "spiritual" phases just enhance what's on the person's mind).
What does that say? :)
I don't doubt les sleeth thinks he's experienced god(s), but as far as I know: the appeal to the ipse dixit of a false/anonymous authority is illogical.
Further more, many of those experiences are contradictory (as in the case of allah and god). They can't all be true, now can they?
PIT2 said:
But this is an invalid argument, because no experience can be (u cannot prove that u love ur mother, that ur happy, etc.).
Wrong analogy.
You can prove you love your mother by measuring your levels of cortisol (stress hormones) if she dies. (We could turn this into a little experiment, but I doubt your mother would agree

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You can prove you're happy by measuring the levels of dopamine and other "happiness" hormones in your head.
That was just to show you how science stands on those issues.
Now, returning to your "argument": Just because certain things are true without being proven does not mean all things that can't be proven are true

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