Gabriella,
I don’t have the time (or frankly the inclination) to engage in an ever-expanding dialogue, so I’ll just bullet point if that’s ok.
That's fine.
That’s disingenuous. By inviting him to talk about teapots you were missing the point of Russell’s teapot. The point was and is Russell’s argument, not the object used to illustrate it.
Of course I wasn't sincerely engaging in a discussion with Ippy. There was no sincerity in his post of wanting to engage in a discussion IMO. It was a series of one liners and I was not inclined to engage with a one liner.
No – people use phrases like “Russell’s teapot”, “needle in a haystack” etc as a shorthand way to explain a point, not as a “quip” as you put it. If you thought you weren’t attempting the negative proof fallacy (which Russell’s teapot illustrates) then you could easily have said, “I’m not attempting a NPF because…”. What you’re doing here is just throwing sand at missing the point of the thought experiment.
I could have said what you want me to say but frankly I wasn't inclined to say that (hope you don't mind me using your phrasing as Ippy seems to like it) any more than he was inclined to expand on his point. And yes people do use short-hand and when they use short-hand in a quip, which is what he did as is the way he often posts, no one is under any obligation to engage with it. If I want to throw sand as you put it, that's my prerogative or as you like to say, frankly I was inclined to throw sand at it. Ippy and I were aware of what was going on - if the situation went over your head, it went over your head.
That’s debatable at best. Once you’d given us the non sequitur that after you’d eliminated the impossibility of “God” believing in that god wasn’t difficult then the NPF component was fairly obvious I’d have thought (because non-falsifiability tells you nothing about probability) – if you felt it had to be spelled out though, then that’s up to you.
And as I have explained - I did not assign a probability so it was not an NPF.
Ippy has commented on what he perceives as your sometimes aggressive posting style. This is an example of it I think – you set up the straw man (“if you don’t like my choices”), then you wave your fists at it (“tough”) and you finish with telling me that if I said the thing I haven’t said then I have “a problem”. It doesn’t bother me overmuch by the way – I just see it as a case of “she protesteth too much” that deflects from any argument you might have had, but it does you no favours.
Your imagination has made an incorrect assumption. When I say "tough" it's with a shrug, not a waving of a fist and pretty much means "I'm not overly bothered or it's your problem". That's how I've grown up using the phrase "tough". Unless someone is issuing a threat or swearing at someone, aggression is conveyed in a tone of voice or body language. Message boards don't convey tone or body language.
A straw man is not a sign of aggression on a message board. Neither is telling someone that if they have a problem, it's their problem. But you can view it as a sign of aggression if you want as it doesn't bother me overmuch. Again I am using your phrasing if that helps you not see it as aggressive. Or I've an even better idea, why don't I PM you my posts and you can re-write them using the phrases you would normally use and PM them back to me and I'll post them as me - then you and Ippy will both be happy? He was hoping to see my posting style change so you would really be doing him a solid if you did that.
That’s not the object of the “must” though. Rather it’s the suggestion that non-falsifiability must makes a “"God that can't be defined" not that difficult” as you put it. Whether you actually take that “leap of faith” from “not that difficult” to belief is a different matter.
You're not making sense. You just used the word "must" again. I didn't use the word "must". What are we to make of your need to insert the word "must" where I have not used it.
Yet again: “I find the concept of a "God that can't be defined" not that difficult to believe in, once you get to the point where you can't rule out the supernatural entirely”. Why is belief in “God” more probable (ie, less difficult) when it’s unfalsifiable?
It isn't more probable - I did not use the word "probable" or assign a probability. Again, what are we to make of your need to insert the word "probable"? There is only the statement "I find the concept of a God that can't be defined" not that difficult to believe in...". For it to become a "probable" it needs to be something that is repeated multiple times and a probability can then be assigned as to how often it happens. It hasn't been repeated multiple times. It's happened once - to me.
You conflated the method of a teacher with the content of factual clams in a book.
Actually the book says parts of it should be taken literally and parts of it should be taken metaphorically and only the author knows for sure which parts are literal and which parts are metaphorical. But that's beside the point - even if the book makes certain claims as factual, that does not make the claims factual. For me to believe the claims I would have to take a leap of faith because we have no methodology to test whether the claims are factual or not.
Nope – see above. You might find the Koran to tell you all sorts of beneficial things about how to live your life. That still tells you nothing though about the veracity or otherwise of its claims of fact.
See above.
I’m not sure that yes/no/yes here is helpful. A straw man is a straw man – you’re not as given to it as some here, but it’s something you do sometimes nonetheless.
We'll just have to disagree about the straw man point.
That’s circular (“If it’s possible then it’s possible”) and it’s not what you said in any case – what you actually said was that “God” becomes “not that difficult to believe in” – a qualitatively different claim from “possible”. That leprechauns are possible does make them “not that difficult to believe in”. Why do you think otherwise for “God”?
What I actually said was "I find the concept.....not that difficult to believe in" and that is not a claim, it's a personal statement.
No, you made a conditional statement – that realising that a conjecture is unfalsifiable makes it not that difficult to believe in. Much as you duck and dive, all I was questioning was the conjunction of those two statements. If you have other reasons for believing either good or bad is a separate matter.
Not sure of the actual point you are arguing. I don't know if the problem is that you have inserted "makes it" which is a true for everyone statement, whereas I said "I find it" which is a true for me statement. Or if the problem is that you are taking the sentence out of the context of the conversation I was having with Rhiannon, where we were discussing if it possible to assess the pros and cons of belief in God vs atheism, which means that the pros and cons are part of the journey to belief.
To summarise:
1. Ippy’s point was about the argument of Russell’s teapot, not about its illustrative object.
2. As you‘ve been unable to provide one (or even to engage with the question) I think we have to conclude that you have no argument to link unfalsifiability with making “your leap of faith” “not that difficult”.
3. Incidentally, the “supernatural” stuff collapses very quickly anyway. It doesn’t even get its trousers off as an argument that’s truth apt – ie, that’s falsifiable or not. It’s just incoherent – equivalent to the white noise of 7yy78O&T*&^T. The moment you want to break that by saying something about this supposed supernatural then you’re forced into naturalistic claims.
In response to your summary:
1. Ippy needs to make an argument in his post without the quips and then I might feel inclined to respond to his post with more than a focus on the teapot. If you can't accept that this is how I intend to continue posting to him in future, tough. If you can accept that, great.
2.Not sure what you are trying to pretend I said. My statement that you keep quoting and sometimes misquoting was in the context of my conversation with Rhiannon about my faith and moreover that it was easier for me to believe in something undefined compared to objects that are defined that I could dismiss. Not sure what you mean by having an argument - I can only tell you the reasons behind my belief, which have been mentioned many times in the last few pages of this thread. I do not have an argument why everyone who can't falsify something must believe in it - that is not an argument I ever made.
3. White noise as a description is fine. I know the supernatural is unfalsifiable. I have been saying the same thing. That's what the leap of faith is about.
ETA: And given all the aggression on this board hidden behind the ridicule of posters, which is something you often engage in, frankly if you are inclined to view my posts as aggressive,
I'm not overly bothered, tough.