HV,
I pointed out that Sam the Cham was brainy and learned. I didn't draw any conclusions.
You implied them. Why else would you tell us, “
As for thinking, he was more intelligent and learned than you, me, or anyone else on this forum” (Reply 24) if not suggest that he was therefore right and the contributors here wrong to disagree?
The consequentialist fallacy is that of thinking that a belief which is pleasant or has good results is true, and one which is unpleasant or has bad results is false. I haven't committed that one, either. I pointed out that if we have no free will, we were pre4destined to believe what we believe, so how can we know that it's true? In other words, we may or may not have free-will, but if we haven't, we can never know it, or anything else. We all behave as though we can know things, so in practise we all believe in free-will.
No you didn’t. The construction of the
argumentum ad consequentiam is, “if X is true, then consequence Y follows, therefore X can’t be true” as if “consequence Y” in some way reaches back into the truth or otherwise of “X”.
That’s what you did with, “
We all feel instinctively that we have free will, and if we haven't, then punishment of criminals is unjustified, as they were predestined from all eternity to be criminals.” Punishing criminals being “unjustified” (which is isn’t by the way) tells you nothing about the nature of free will
Judgemental language? Where?
Here: “
I think his stone-kicking and free-will-asserting were born of his impatience with the kind of sterile, obsessive ratiocination common on this forum” (Reply 24). You might think 2+2=4 to be “
sterile, obsessive ratiocination” too, but that doesn’t make it wrong.
Anyway, your thesis was that there is a God who’s omnipotent but that there are parts of the universe (human minds for example) that are ring fenced from that. My response is that, definitionally, this god can’t therefore be omnipotent at all then.
Any chance of addressing that?