Bryan - 12 May 2008 08:29 AM
faithlessgod - 12 May 2008 12:52 AM
Bryan - 10 May 2008 08:23 PM
That is false (another straw man).
My argument throughout places focus on the philosophical naturalist who accepts uncaused states.
http://www.centerforinquiry.net/forums/viewreply/37260/
Well your link -FSM - has to nothing to do with the topic at hand. Your argument is a straw man as I showed.
The link shows that I direct the argument at those who accept() uncaused states, not the one who thinks uncaused states aren’t really uncaused states. In other words, your suggestion that a straw man is in play is shown false. If you want to wave your hand in the air and say “Well, that argument doesn’t apply to me!” that’s your prerogative--but it doesn’t make the argument a straw man.
My mistake the link is to a post on the Buddha not the FSM. This has nothing to do with the topic at hand.
The argument stands as a straw man because you are (a) selectively relying on specific interpretations of QM that do posit uncaused particles and ignoring others that do not - and ignoring my previous post to that effect - and (b) imposing an absurd constraint on philosophical naturalism - that everything must have a cause with no possible exception, PN does not have such a requirement, any supporter on PN does not need to speculate on what happened before the Big Bang before example.
An additional point is that even if there were truly uncaused particles then your argument fails as a god of the gap argument and breaks Occam’s razor. Then again none of this can point to your god over any other god, indeed there may be no god involved at all and so this still does not get your god off a near zero probability of 0.0001 at best.
Bryan - 12 May 2008 08:29 AM
Bryan - 10 May 2008 08:23 PM
http://www.centerforinquiry.net/forums/viewreply/37368/
Another completely irrelevant link.
It accomplishes the same purpose as the first one. It documents the narrow and appropriate scope of my argument (and shows that your straw man accusation is inappropriate).
It accomplishes absolutely nothing. This was the FSM post. So now you have widened it to irrelevant points over the FSM as well as the Buddha? And you call this rational?
Bryan - 12 May 2008 08:29 AM
Is it fair to paraphrase your above-stated position such that your “philosophical naturalism” is not asserted as a truth about reality but a framework that follows empirical observations?
No
Bryan - 12 May 2008 08:29 AM
How would you define “philosophical naturalism” if quantum particles formed causelessly and randomly?
Exactly the same as I do now.
Bryan - 12 May 2008 08:29 AM
Regardless if you posit this challenge to a professional physicist (a career I nearly pursued but did not, still quite a few of my friends did) who also holds to philosophical naturalism they will come with an answer something like mine. Indeed I have had numerous arguments over causality - for different reasons to here - with them over the years and I have merely pointed out some thoughts in my previous post as to what I learned from those conversations.
I repeat QM/QED is one of the best exemplars of the success of methodological naturalism and is entirely consistent with metaphysical naturalism.
You can repeat it all you like, but there is a contradiction if philosophical naturalism posits a natural cause for all phenomena while metaphysical naturalism posits causeless phenomena. Unless there is some reconciliation of “natural cause” and “causeless.”
Referential opacity.