Prof,
What on earth does ontological naturalism or methodological naturalism have to do with it.
Nothing whatsoever. Trollboy’s playbook goes like this:
1. He had an “experience” that he’s attributed to a god (that by a remarkable co-incidence just happens to be the god with which he’s most familiar). So far, so subjective…
2. Then though he overreaches by asserting this god to be an objective truth for the rest of us too.
3. When asked why anyone else should take his causal explanation any more seriously than the countless different causal explanations countless others have had for countless experiences of their own he cannot or will not answer.
4. Instead therefore he’s cast around for terms that he thinks will help if he attacks them, and has lighted upon “ontological naturalism” to do the job. Now ontological naturalism can have various meanings, an extreme version being “the natural/material is necessarily all there is”. It’s a rare use though, the more usual one being something like, “the natural/material is all we know of that’s reliably accessible and testable” and so for the most part the proponent of it will proceed on the basis that, while anything
might be, there’s no reason to suppose that everything that might be actually
is.
5. Nonetheless, Trollboy labels us with his idiosyncratic version of the term, and then tries to critique us for ruling out the possibility that his personal god could also be a truth for the rest of us.
6. Leaving aside his definitional problem of having no idea what he means by “god” (which technically makes the rest of us
ignostic in response to his claims) he seems oblivious not only to the fact that he’s pushing at an open door re the possibility that anything might be, and not only to the problem that that same door also opens the way to anything else anyone else may happen to dream up, but also to the problem that it takes him no one iota of a jot of a smidgin towards an argument to take his god from “might be” to “is”.
7. Deepak Chopra styley he throws in the notion of a multiverse – apparently in the belief that it means that anything might be actually is. Even so, he seems blissfully unaware that a god boxed in to one such sub-universe would flatly contradict the claims he makes for his god – ie, that “He” is the creator of everything, and moreover that this god is the only show in town.
8. Finally, regardless of how many times he’s corrected he clings to this nonsense as a man clings to a lead lifebelt all the while wondering why the waves are closing over him. At first it was just stupid, but now it’s openly dishonest because he cannot or will not address the corrections he’s been given.
It’s a mistake too I think to think that – because he (mis)uses long words – there must be an intelligence at play. When you strip away the evasions, the misrepresentations, the desperately broken logic you’re left with the reasoning of a four-year-old.
And an unpleasantly petulant one at that.