VG,
The other night I watched a film called “Denial” (you may have seen it too). It’s about the Deborah Lipstadt libel trial (“David Irving v Penguin Books and Deborah Lipstadt”) when DI sued for libel and lost. The defence team considered having holocaust survivors as witnesses, but decided against. The reason was that they knew that DI was smart enough to look for a detail (“You said the transport arrived at Auschwitz on a Tuesday, but it actually arrived on a Wednesday so why should we trust anything you have to day about Auschwitz?” etc) and they wanted instead to focus on the facts and evidence that the holocaust happened.
This tactic is essentially what you do – we could disappear down a rabbit hole about whether the god Vlad thinks he experienced was a “tangible” one or not, even though the definition of tangible isn’t concerned with the natural/supernatural issue – just with being "experienced" (which is what he claims to have done). The point though remains that Vlad thinks that, even if he fell under a bus tomorrow and wasn’t around to conceptualise it, this supposed god would continue to exist. On the other hand, his subjective preference for coffee or for 80s music would die with him.
You were the one focused on words like "tangible" and experience" as though there was some kind of point to be made that hadn't already been agreed on (see my reply #1056 that Vlad's belief is that god is a separate party from him).
Yes we are in agreement that theists believe their god exists even if the theist no longer exists. And I am not comparing god to preferences for coffee, as coffee clearly does exist as fact, because there is objective evidence for it.
Can you see the difference?
Irrelevant – see above.
It does matter though doesn’t it, because a phenomenon that exists whether or not there’s someone to conceptualise it is in a different epistemic category to an idea that exists only as a concept.
Try to understand this - it’s fundamental.
I agree a theist believes that the phenomenon (that people refer to when they say 'god') exists whether or not there's someone to conceptualise it.
But the god we're dealing with in our discussion of Vlad's god is the human conceptualised version and this human concept of god ceases to exist when the human who conceptualises that god is no longer there. The Christian version of god that Vlad's brain has constructed to make sense of his belief and his experience where he felt a non-physical god was present in his consciousness is based on the information about the Christian religion that was already stored in his brain - this Vlad's brain conceptualised god he believes in dies with him.
Some other out there phenomenon, necessary entity, first cause of the universe, higher power that transcends human understanding and limits etc etc may exist but I am not seeing where Vlad is claiming this as fact rather than arguing for it philosophically, nor do I see where he is claiming that Vlad's brain conceptualised god he believes in is fact.
Oh dear. When “honour” is defined and measured by behaviours (helping old ladies across the road for example) then the extent to which someone does these things can be counted. Thus they can be said empirically to have behaved honourably (or not) according to the lights of the societies in which they happen to live. Note that this doesn’t imply an absolute definition of "honour" – just the working one the claimant is referring to when he says he’s honourable.
But Vlad does – that’s the point.
And I hear the Pope’s a catholic too…
Relevance? New idea or not, Vlad does think his experience is evidence (albeit not the material type apparently) for a god (who just happens to be the god he knew most about anyway). That’s the point.
All very nice no doubt if that works for you as therapy but still not relevant. The POINT is that pointing to narratives of objectively real gods to explain subjective experiences of “presences” and such like is untenable.
You’re still mixing up your categories here. The claim about the lion is that it exists as an objective fact, whereas the claim about coffee is just that you prefer it to tea. The former concerns whether or not something exists; the latter concerns how you feel about something that’s axiomatically already accepted as existing.
Epistemically, these are different categories of knowledge.
Then you should do give how many times I’ve explained it to you. It’s not a “contrast with the supernatural” at all – it’s a contract with a belief about the existence of something (whether supernatural or not) compared with the belief about how you feel about that something (that’s already assumed to exist). Subjective vs objective. Again.
And I’ve corrected you for doing so – repeatedly.
Again, I'm not going to waste my time responding point by point to your assertions about what you think Vlad or I are saying. The point I am making repeatedly is that from what I have seen on this thread, Vlad expresses a belief in the existence of a god that he believes exists separate from him, and will exist after he is dead, which is to be expected, given he is a theist. He said pretty early on in this thread that his posts regarding the Christian version in response to points made to him was from a position of belief. I have not seen him expect you to become convinced of god's existence, based on his belief.
I've seen him try to use philosophy to argue for the existence of a necessary entity on other threads, and I've seen him mischaracterise other people's challenges to his necessary entity claim - he seemed to think they were making claims themselves rather than just pointing out that he had not proved his claim.
I have seen him use his personal experience and the philosophy to explain why he believes in god (his version of god based on his claim of a necessary entity e.g. that god is immortal, invisible, creative and sovereign). I haven't seen him characterise his personal experience or his arguments for a necessary entity as some kind of incontrovertible reason for god to be fact or for the Christian god to be fact. He seems clear that he is stating his belief.
My interpretation of what I have read is that his subjective experience is offered as evidence of what he thinks was present - he thinks a god that is a separate entity from him was present in his consciousness .
By the way, BHS, just to clarify, are you saying consciousness is "tangible" because we can experience it?
Vlad has said "I am aware that things which cannot be falsified are generally termed beliefs" and has offered his experience as a foundation of his belief.
Vlad said in the post I quoted earlier "if you will not accept my experience" as opposed to saying that his experience must be accepted and makes god a fact. Even if you did accept his experience, which he offers as subjective evidence for his concept of god, nowhere on this thread am I getting the impression that Vlad is expecting your acceptance of his evidence will make his concept of god a fact.
I have also repeatedly corrected you on referring to lions or tea or coffee. We are discussing abstract concepts that our brains have created that we treat as if they exist separate from us and will exist after we die e.g. terms such as 'honour' or 'goodness' or 'morally right' i.e. undefined or individually defined labels i.e. not collectively agreed upon labels, which we attach to some sensations or feelings we experience, which are based on input peddled to us when we were young, We are not discussing objects for which we have objective evidence of their existence such as lions or tea or coffee.