VG,
Not from what I've seen. He said he thinks god is non-physical so not getting the impression that he thinks god is tangible or a person. But yes he holds the belief that the supernatural entity 'god' exists but not as something tangible.
Tangible: "
real and not imaginary; able to be shown, touched, or experienced:"
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/tangibleVlad thinks he’s “experienced” a real, non-imaginary god, not just conceptualised it. QED
I know he thinks it's an entity - he believes it is a supernatural, non-physical one for which he has no objective evidence so can't claim it to be fact,…
Which doesn’t stop him from making that claim nonetheless but ok…
…and so he has come up with a concept of what he thinks this non-physical god is, which makes it abstract.
But he still thinks it exists whether or not he conceptualised it remember? He thinks that, even if he fell under a bus tomorrow (heaven forfend), this “god” would still exist even with no Vlad around to conceptualise it.
He said he believes he felt the presence of this non-physical god in his consciousness. If he withdraws that statement and now thinks god is a physical entity or a person, then it's a different matter.
No it isn’t. The “physical” is a red herring – it’s enough to think “god” exists (whether as a physical or a non-physical version) independent of his ability to conceptualise it.
People speak about their subjective belief that they have honour or have lost honour even though they can't really agree on a definition of honour and it is an abstract concept. Their interpretation or concept of honour is based on the ideas pedalled to them when they were younger, which is stored in their brain and which the brain retrieves to interpret their experiences.
It's “peddled” and this doesn’t change anything. Tastes, preferences, responses to objectively real phenomena are all subjective; the phenomena themselves though are objective, and Vlad’s claim is of an objectively real god (that he’s also supposedly “encountered”) that exists whether or not he happens to be around to conceptualise it.
As explained in my previous post, he believes there were 2 parties - one is a non-physical supernatural entity, not a physical entity. He believes he encountered a non-physical god in his consciousness, for which he has no objective evidence, only his subjective experience interpreted by his brain, therefore it's not a claim of fact but a statement of belief. A fact needs objective evidence.
FFS. Yes,
but that doesn’t stop him from making it as a claim of fact nonetheless. I’ve explained this to you many time now, yet you keep returning to the same mistake. It’s not that I think he can make it a claim of fact, it’s that HE thinks he thinks he can make it a claim of fact. He may say that he has no “empirical evidence”, but he does think his “experience” is nonetheless “evidence” of some different type that means he really did encounter a god who exists independent of his conceptualising of it. WHY he thinks that’s evidence for this supposed god is anyone’s guess (he won’t or can’t tell us), but nonetheless evidence is what he claims his experience to be, albeit not the material kind.
I have stated on this board that I have no empirical evidence for God since the necessary being is empirically undetectable, I believe I have said that God doesn't fit into a physicalist definition as he is not physical.
I believe that my relating my experience is probably acceptable evidence in the legal sense e.g. in the event that somebody declared in a legal setting that God did not exist and therefore a minister or priest was guilty of fraud or misappropriation.
Let us not forget that you have had God guilty of homophobia, assault etc on an ''if God existed'' basis. In fact agnostic atheism is based on the possibility of God existing and no, I don't believe like you do that anything is possible.
If you do not accept my experience then there is always the argument for God from contingency, the philosophical argument.
The above reads like Vlad stating a belief in God and not claiming a supernatural entity as a fact, and Vlad putting forward a philosophical argument for a necessary being to argue for the existence of a supernatural higher power entity "god". He says relating his experience could be taken as testimony (subjective evidence) in the legal sense.
"Could be" doesn't sound like a claim of evidence for a fact.
DU, Your opinion that most of the people on this forum know what Vlad is thinking is not a claim that can be taken seriously as you have provided no evidence for it. But I didn't take it as a claim of fact but merely you stating your opinion.
Some people on this forum seem to have double-standards. DU's statement about what most of us know, and the recent claims about a consensus on consent or the position on consent being clear by PD and BHS are not supported by evidence. I take these claims or statements to be opinion and belief and not a claim of fact, as the posts are related to interpretation, morality .
Yet when Vlad states his opinions and beliefs about the supernatural, a lot of time seems to be wasted dissecting them as though Vlad is claiming that his beliefs about god is him claiming God's existence is a fact. They don't read that way to me. Vlad may want to clarify, but on the other hand it's more entertaining on here if he doesn't.
Suggest you try reading his post again: he still thinks there’s a “god” whether or not he, Vlad, happens to have conceptualised it. He thinks “god” and he met too – not just that he conceptualised a meeting. Not sure why you keep indulging in increasingly convoluted post rationalisations to get him off the hook about this, but it isn’t working.
Sorry - missed this.
That just seems to be an assumption on your part, which you can make if you want, but not sure how you decided it's a reasonable one.
Why do you expect people to know something more from the experience? I don't think Vlad is relating his experience as one where he received any revelation, he states he doesn't think god is a physical entity - so I'm not expecting him to know something more from his experience.
No, it’s just the deduction that when people who think they’ve met a “god” almost invariably tell us the god they met was the exact one they happened to be most enculturated to it raises a pretty big red flag don’t you think?
It suggests to me that our brains use prior information stored in them to make interpretations of our experiences. Why should it be any different for experiences we think are related to supernatural entities?
Because, obviously, when people “use prior information stored in them to make interpretations of our (ie, their) experiences” then the gods they come up with will always be the ones they happen to have been taught about
a priori. Should we therefore take all such claims as reliable evidence of a countless panoply of gods with all their various (and often mutually contradictory) characteristics, or as evidence of confirmation basis at work?
As for the natural/supernatural claims difference, it should be (and is) different because claims of encountering a physical entity of some sort (“I saw a lion in Tesco today” etc) can be validated by reference to intersubjective experience: there’s a commonly accepted understanding of what a lion is. For claims of the supernatural thought, there’s no intersubjective point of reference – any claim of such is as equally (in)valid as any other.
And epistemically that's a category difference – objective v subjective again.