Sword,
I’m taking your use of the word rebuttal as a euphemism for “ he disagreed with you”
No – the
logic disagreed with him. Until and unless he finds a way to engage with and counter-argue that logic, the rebuttal remains.
I could equally say, “you responded with exactly the same mistake you’ve had rebutted by him countless times, and then run away from the rebuttal?” Why?
Flat wrong again. You seem to think that someone asserting “2+2=5” and someone else taking to time to explain why 2+2≠5 is mere difference of opinion.
It isn’t.
You have the problem the wrong way round. It is materialism playing on theists’ ground! Round pegs into square holes come to mind.
No, you have. Some theists will attempt to use materialistic terms to validate their beliefs. When they do this, they lose.
Your materialism assumes the nature of that which it is investigating, so why are you applying it to claims of the non-material?
First, it’s not my materialism – it’s just materialism.
Second, materialism assumes no such thing. It’s just
indifferent to claims of the supernatural because they offer nothing with which the tools of materialism can engage. That’s why neither I nor anyone else here tries to apply it to non-material claims.
The problem for those who would make those claims though is that they have no method to put in its place so as to distinguish their claims from just guessing.
Vlad: On your question, I think that perhaps one reason is due to something you were highlighting a while back…philosophical naturalism! See e.g. your #1066 on the Karma thread
Bluehillside would swear blind that he is not doing this (i.e. only involved in methodological naturalism), but he is, because his methodological naturalism assumes that it can be applied to everything!
Why are you lying about this?
When used outside of its scope, it cannot be anything but philosophical because it has to come up with ways to avoid all the errors, fallacies and logical contradictions that emerge as a result, hence the need to talk about celestial teapots, pixies, leprechauns, etc. The goal is not to establish truth, but to establish a kind of truth that doesn’t allow for anything non-natural.
Even for you this is particularly dim. Celestial teapots and the like are arguments in
logic (itself a naturalistic phenomenon by the way) used to rebut bad attempts at logic made by theists (“you can’t disprove it, therefore it’s true” etc). For that purpose, they’re fine.
Have you any sense how far out of your depth you are here?
Anything?