E-mail address to contact Admin direct is admin@religionethics followed by .co.uk.
Not necessarily. If there's no God, why have our brains convinced us that there is (or are) since we started walking upright? It might be evolutionarily advantageous for us to believe certasin illusions.
Yes we do tend to invent invisible beings (not just gods) probably for the same reason we see faces in clouds and fire, and it probably was an evolutionary advantage to over-recognise agency and other creatures.That is a long way from saying "we can't understand anything unless we assume God".
That isn't the claim the counterclaim of which is you do not need God or the supernatural to understand REALITY.
That isn't the claim...
Is the universe rational?
Why should it be rational?
Isn't the idea that the universe conforms to our evolved rationality just a sophisticated version of Adams Puddle and hole analogy?
You are perilously close to saying science established what reality is rather than chipping away to discover reality. The old invention/discovery thing.
If there's no God, and we are merely the product of unguided evolution, then our thoughts and reasoning are simply the result of chemical and electrical changes in our brains, which evolved to help us survive, not to do valid reasoning, so how can we trust our reasoning, including the reasoning that led us to the conclusion that there is no God? Strict atheism is thus an argument against the possibility of arguments.
Which bit of the word understand did you fail to get Vlad.My whole point was about the value of science in understanding reality - in other words discovery. Where did I ever suggest that science invented reality - I didn't, not even close.
Do you mean in the sense of logically consistent? If so, it appears to be, yes.
One problem with Plantinga's argument, is that it seems to treat cognitive operations by the brain as somehow suspect, whereas operations by other organs are reasonably reliable. Of course, you could go nuclear and say nothing is reliable, but you contradict that immediately by using your faculties to make breakfast. Pragmatically, the body works well enough. (Repeating Dennett really.)
It's striking how these arguments, like Plantinga's, often use words like "merely" and "simply", hence we are merely the result of unguided evolution, hint, not the magnificent result of an all-powerful intelligence, which doesn't do merely.
Thought I remembered this, here is Daniel Dennett on the subject: Plantinga's Attempted Reductio ad Absurdum of Naturalism.
If there's no God, and we are merely the product of unguided evolution, then our thoughts and reasoning are simply the result of chemical and electrical changes in our brains, which evolved to help us survive, not to do valid reasoning,
so how can we trust our reasoning,
Strict atheism is thus an argument against the possibility of arguments.
All I've done so far...
Exactly.I requested counter examples to the initial statement. You could have shot it down but providing them. Instead you burble on about stupid hammer and nail analogies. Clearly, you do not have counter examples to the initial statement which therefore still stands.
The initial statement is a form of cosmic view.... what examples demonstrate it?
There's no separate "you" for your brain to convince. You are your brain.
Given then your proposition here of the illusion of self....what is it that is being illuded.
Oh sorry. I thought that was pretty obvious. Science has had enormous success in improving our understanding of reality.
Oh dear science is not naturalism Jeremy. How stupid of you.