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guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 01:07 PM Dec 2018

Let he who is without cognitive bias cast the first lecture.

I read an interesting sermon this morning on the subject of cognitive bias.

The one giving the sermon, or the lecture if any prefers, claims with zero evidence that the impulse to religion arises from the reptile brain. And that baseless claim is itself an interesting display of something, but it hardly qualifies as evidence of anything other than the cognitive bias of the one preaching, or lecturing.


And often I read pieces claiming that non-theism is the more logical position on the theism versus non-theism debate.

Again, another instance of cognitive bias on the part of anyone making the point, but hardly proof of anything other than humans do suffer from cognitive bias in many ways.

The impulse to spirituality, which evolved, so to speak, into more formalized things such as religion, is one that has been with us probably since we evolved enough sentience to think abstractly.


While our brains can use logic, we cannot remove emotion from our thinking.


72 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Let he who is without cognitive bias cast the first lecture. (Original Post) guillaumeb Dec 2018 OP
True. eom KPN Dec 2018 #1
Everybody has them. Turbineguy Dec 2018 #2
Understood. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #6
No, Guillaumeb. Cognitive biases and emotional decisions MineralMan Dec 2018 #3
I don't think you understand what he's trying to say Major Nikon Dec 2018 #8
Oh, no, I understand what he's trying to say just fine. MineralMan Dec 2018 #12
I'm not sure his research is limited to just that one site Major Nikon Dec 2018 #14
Well, there are also random blogs on Patheos. MineralMan Dec 2018 #16
So what is your logical argument for theism? Major Nikon Dec 2018 #4
My argument, guillaumeb Dec 2018 #5
You didn't understand the question Major Nikon Dec 2018 #7
I removed the ad hominem from your response, guillaumeb Dec 2018 #9
Sure, because calling bullshit on bullshit is ad hominem Major Nikon Dec 2018 #10
Reverting to your default setting? guillaumeb Dec 2018 #11
Your first fuckup is claiming that I don't find dialog with theists here Major Nikon Dec 2018 #13
OK. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #15
Just one cognitive bias? MineralMan Dec 2018 #17
The word one was your addition. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #18
You wrote: MineralMan Dec 2018 #20
Cognitive bias describes behavior. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #22
Read the article. MineralMan Dec 2018 #23
Did you read the link? guillaumeb Dec 2018 #24
Goodbye. MineralMan Dec 2018 #25
Goodbye. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #31
He clearly read the link Lordquinton Dec 2018 #41
Neither of you did, in my opinion. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #47
So you read the article too, right? Lordquinton Dec 2018 #62
No, his "point" was to accuse me of making an error by referrign to it in the singular. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #64
And he was not incorrect, was he? Lordquinton Dec 2018 #67
He was incorrect. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #68
"Cognitive Biases or Errors Are at the Heart of Religion" Lordquinton Dec 2018 #70
... Major Nikon Dec 2018 #69
One reason you complain about the lack of dialog... Major Nikon Dec 2018 #19
I provided an answer. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #21
OK, so "faith" is your idea of a logical argument Major Nikon Dec 2018 #27
Not at all what I actually said. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #34
Please continue as this just keeps getting better Major Nikon Dec 2018 #37
Incorrect on your part. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #43
Please continue... Major Nikon Dec 2018 #48
Sad. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #49
Please continue to say you didn't say what you said Major Nikon Dec 2018 #51
Logical violetpastille Dec 2018 #26
What is a spiritual experience? wasupaloopa Dec 2018 #29
Here was mine violetpastille Dec 2018 #30
Church services provide a community. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #35
Humans need community. violetpastille Dec 2018 #36
Very well put. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #32
Tell us again how "faith" is your logical argument Major Nikon Dec 2018 #38
You are misframing what I said. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #44
Thanks for giving me another opportunity to prove your faceplant Major Nikon Dec 2018 #50
Unintentional humor on your part. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #52
Thanks for the unintentional laugh Major Nikon Dec 2018 #59
"I don't think anybody ever had a spiritual experience hacking away on a laptop. " Lordquinton Dec 2018 #42
If the Buddha, or Jesus or Mohammed violetpastille Dec 2018 #63
I can attest that many actual "hackers" Voltaire2 Dec 2018 #71
I said "I don't think that" violetpastille Dec 2018 #72
You cannot prove a negative so your question to athiests is irrational. wasupaloopa Dec 2018 #28
I never talk about proof. I talk about faith. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #33
Meanwhile you reveal you can't tell the difference between a fact and a claim Major Nikon Dec 2018 #39
And you continue to reveal your agenda, and tactics. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #45
True Major Nikon Dec 2018 #53
The first citation reveals that you misframed my response. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #54
Please continue to claim that Major Nikon Dec 2018 #60
That makes no sense. You base it all on your belief wasupaloopa Dec 2018 #40
I have faith. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #46
I find it interesting that you always focus on the unprovable Eko Dec 2018 #55
What an interesting response. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #56
Here. Eko Dec 2018 #57
Okay. guillaumeb Dec 2018 #58
Great. Eko Dec 2018 #61
He won't Major Nikon Dec 2018 #65
I know. Eko Dec 2018 #66

Turbineguy

(38,383 posts)
2. Everybody has them.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 01:17 PM
Dec 2018

Last edited Wed Dec 26, 2018, 04:57 PM - Edit history (2)

But some are good, others, not so much.

As for theism, I refer to Pascal's Wager.

There's a pretty good, often updated Wikipedia page on the subject. I talk about cognitive biases in my management classes because these biases often cause people to take the wrong course of action. I was first introduced to cognitive bias by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky in their book "Choices, Values, and Frames".

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
6. Understood.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 01:33 PM
Dec 2018

But it can be difficult for some to recognize that, even when they feel that they are thinking about something in a purely rational way, that is an illusion. We are a combination of ration and emotion.

MineralMan

(147,591 posts)
3. No, Guillaumeb. Cognitive biases and emotional decisions
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 01:19 PM
Dec 2018

are not centered in the "lizard brain," which is pretty much purely reactive to stimuli. Instead, they are centered in the limbic system, which deals with our emotional responses and learned habitual behaviors.

We all are affected by cognitive biases. Recognizing that fact is an important step in knowing those tendencies and shifting our thinking to the cerebral cortex, which is more capable of rational thinking based on evidence.

We all have emotions, but we can also choose to switch to rational thinking instead of relying only on emotional responses to make important decisions.

Good luck with your endeavors. I have a lot of thinking to do right now about how best to handle a difficult situation with regard to my parents and their end of life needs. The decisions that I need to make are not ones that should be based on my emotional responses. Instead, they need careful consideration and planning.

So, as I said in another post, I have no time to spend bantering about nonsense with you today, nor will I in the near future.

However, if you'd like to learn more about neuroscience as it applies to marketing, you can read my book. Or not, as you choose:

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07DY6T6WG

While still not complete, there is this information on cognitive biases, again as they relate to marketing, on a website I have written for the company I am part of. More pages will be added shortly to this section of the website:

https://www.neuromarketingservices.com/cognitive-biases/

Now, Sir, Good Day to You!

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
8. I don't think you understand what he's trying to say
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 01:47 PM
Dec 2018

What Gil is saying is that everyone departs from reason. Therefore all such departures are equal and self-cancelling. Someone who claims god resides in a spaceship hidden by the Hale–Bopp comet is no less relevant than someone who calls bullshit on that claim because neither can be proven.

At least that's what I got out of all the argle-bargle. For all we know it could actually be a metaphor for something that actually makes the least bit of sense.

MineralMan

(147,591 posts)
12. Oh, no, I understand what he's trying to say just fine.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 01:57 PM
Dec 2018

I think he's wrong, though. I also think he doesn't have all the information about cognitive biases that he might have. I don't think there's much on those subjects at religionnews.com.

MineralMan

(147,591 posts)
16. Well, there are also random blogs on Patheos.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 03:05 PM
Dec 2018

Who writes for Patheos and religionnews.com? Pretty much anyone who wants to. I have an author account at religionnews.com. I have not contributed anything there. I just wanted to see what was involved in establishing such an account. They were very happy with my application and encouraged me to contribute.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
4. So what is your logical argument for theism?
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 01:25 PM
Dec 2018

The answer has the potential to be interesting, but since you never provide a straight answer to a relevant question I suppose one must just have faith you actually have an answer to your implication.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
5. My argument,
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 01:31 PM
Dec 2018

as I have stated many times, is that my belief is faith based.

And I recognize the unprovable nature of my faith.

Now, what is your logical argument for your own, equally unprovable position regarding atheism?

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
7. You didn't understand the question
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 01:43 PM
Dec 2018

First of all what you do or don't believe isn't actually all that clear since you have claimed to be both a deist and a theist which are mutually contradictory terms.

Next, what you do or don't believe is irrelevant. What I'm asking for is a logical argument for theism, not an emotional one for whatever it is you believe or don't.

Finally, your assumption on what I can or can't prove regarding atheism is obviously from a position of ignorance at best or at worst duplicitous.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
9. I removed the ad hominem from your response,
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 01:49 PM
Dec 2018

and was left with the fact that you misunderstood what I said.

There is no logical or provable argument for atheism or theism. And that is actually what I said so I cannot understand how exactly you did not see that.

I understand your need to feel that your own position is somehow the only logical one, but holding an unprovable position cannot in any way be called logical.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
10. Sure, because calling bullshit on bullshit is ad hominem
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 01:53 PM
Dec 2018

Argie-bargie.

Meanwhile all you've managed to prove is you have no clue what atheism is, as if everyone hasn't already figured that out.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
11. Reverting to your default setting?
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 01:56 PM
Dec 2018

That might be why you find no dialogue with theists here.

Your own position, or belief, is unprovable. Atheism, like theism, is unprovable. Perhaps cognitive bias is preventing some from realizing that.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
13. Your first fuckup is claiming that I don't find dialog with theists here
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 02:17 PM
Dec 2018

I've been here longer than you and do so from time to time. I don't find dialog with those who refuse to engage in it and instead substitute half-fast allegations and nonsense. So far the realm of theists who fall into that category number exactly one. I'll leave it to your imagination to figure out who that is.

Your second fuckup is the assumption of what my position is or isn't. You don't know and obviously don't care to know and instead pretend you know in order to manufacture strawman bullshit.

Your third fuckup is the insistence that atheism is something that it's not.

I'm pretty sure cognitive bias explains your fuckups, or at least I hope it does as the alternatives aren't as favorable.

MineralMan

(147,591 posts)
17. Just one cognitive bias?
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 03:06 PM
Dec 2018

Last I looked there are about 40 identified cognitive biases. Some are related to others. You should really look into it. Really.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
18. The word one was your addition.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 03:09 PM
Dec 2018

So was your addition of the word one an unconscious decision on your part?

Or a conscious decision?

MineralMan

(147,591 posts)
20. You wrote:
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 03:15 PM
Dec 2018

"Do you have cognitive bias?" Singular. You did not write "Do you have cognitive biases?" Plural.

Try arguing with someone who does not understand English. You'll do better, I'm sure.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
22. Cognitive bias describes behavior.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 03:20 PM
Dec 2018

Perhaps you need to understand that.

This might help you:

A cognitive bias is a mistake in reasoning, evaluating, remembering, or other cognitive process, often occurring as a result of holding onto one's preferences and beliefs regardless of contrary information. Psychologists study cognitive biases as they relate to memory, reasoning, and decision-making. Many kinds of cognitive biases exist. For example, a confirmation bias is the tendency to seek only information that matches what one already believes. Memory biases influence what and how easily one remembers. For example, people are more likely to recall events they find humorous and better remember information they produce themselves. People are also more likely to regard as accurate memories associated with significant events or emotions (such as the memory of what one was doing when a catastrophe occurred).


https://www.chegg.com/homework-help/definitions/cognitive-bias-13

Note the use of the singular construction, which I highlighted for your convenience.

MineralMan

(147,591 posts)
23. Read the article.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 03:26 PM
Dec 2018

Your boldfaced words include the word "A." That sentence describes what "A cognitive bias" is. In the third sentence, you would have read this, if you read the entire paragraph: "Many kinds of cognitive biases exist."

You did not include an article or quantifier in the statement you wrote, and you used the singular form, "bias." "Do you have cognitive bias." Without the article, the sentence is actually ungrammatical. I supplied the missing article by using the word "one" in my question.

You really don't understand, do you? Your sentence was in error. I clarified it.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
24. Did you read the link?
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 03:28 PM
Dec 2018

Did you read the title of the article?

One assumes not, or you would have seen that the title of the article was "Cognitive bias", singular.

Lordquinton

(7,886 posts)
41. He clearly read the link
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 07:12 PM
Dec 2018

and responded with an appropriate rebuttal.

One can easily conclude that you did not read your own link... Again... because it fully undermines your own position.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
47. Neither of you did, in my opinion.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 07:31 PM
Dec 2018

Here, again, is the article:

Cognitive Bias
A cognitive bias is a mistake in reasoning, evaluating, remembering, or other cognitive process, often occurring as a result of holding onto one's preferences and beliefs regardless of contrary information. Psychologists study cognitive biases as they relate to memory, reasoning, and decision-making. Many kinds of cognitive biases exist. For example, a confirmation bias is the tendency to seek only information that matches what one already believes. Memory biases influence what and how easily one remembers. For example, people are more likely to recall events they find humorous and better remember information they produce themselves. People are also more likely to regard as accurate memories associated with significant events or emotions (such as the memory of what one was doing when a catastrophe occurred).

See more Psychology topics

Note the actual title. I bolded it for both of you.

Lordquinton

(7,886 posts)
62. So you read the article too, right?
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 08:28 PM
Dec 2018

Past the title?

Cognitive Bias
A cognitive bias is a mistake in reasoning, evaluating, remembering, or other cognitive process, often occurring as a result of holding onto one's preferences and beliefs regardless of contrary information. Psychologists study cognitive biases as they relate to memory, reasoning, and decision-making. Many kinds of cognitive biases exist. For example, a confirmation bias is the tendency to seek only information that matches what one already believes. Memory biases influence what and how easily one remembers. For example, people are more likely to recall events they find humorous and better remember information they produce themselves. People are also more likely to regard as accurate memories associated with significant events or emotions (such as the memory of what one was doing when a catastrophe occurred).


Note the part I bolded, and like every sentence after that introducing a couple different kinds of biases, which was the whole point of MM's response to you.

Lordquinton

(7,886 posts)
67. And he was not incorrect, was he?
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 08:39 PM
Dec 2018

You are intentionally using a broad category to discredit others and claim victory. It's clearly not working.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
68. He was incorrect.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 08:44 PM
Dec 2018

The title uses the singular to indicate a condition. MM was incorrect, as the link shows.

And actually MM was the first to use the term to discredit theists.

https://www.democraticunderground.com/1218301931

Sorry, but the threads contradict your attempt at defense. And it is clearly not working.

Lordquinton

(7,886 posts)
70. "Cognitive Biases or Errors Are at the Heart of Religion"
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 10:52 PM
Dec 2018

You didn't even read the title on that one, did you?

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
19. One reason you complain about the lack of dialog...
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 03:13 PM
Dec 2018

Is because you’re always demanding answers to questions while never providing any. Then when someone calls bullshit on your antithesis to dialog you pretend to be a victim.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
21. I provided an answer.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 03:17 PM
Dec 2018

The same answer I have previously given.

But if you are the one to define what constitutes an acceptable answer, I understand. But my answer, that I have faith, is my answer. Science, as I have repeatedly stated, is not a factor. Nor is science a factor in making an assertion that there is no evidence for the existence of a deity.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
27. OK, so "faith" is your idea of a logical argument
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 03:35 PM
Dec 2018

Got it. Funny as shit, but if you really want to go there don’t let me be the one to stop you.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
43. Incorrect on your part.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 07:25 PM
Dec 2018

And if I felt it would serve as an opportunity for dialogue, I would suggest looking for the error on your part.

violetpastille

(1,483 posts)
26. Logical
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 03:32 PM
Dec 2018

Logic is great. Logic makes the trains run on time. Logic made time. Logic made trains. Logic makes weapons and logic makes modern wars. Logic creates ecological catastrophe and logic is busy trying out-logic those catastrophes. And logic made "religion".

I've read Richard Dawkins. I've read Christopher Hitchens and Sam Harris. Their arguments were sensible. They were logical. They were rational. They made good sense.

Yet I still believe in God.

I don't think anybody ever had a spiritual experience hacking away on a laptop.
Most people get it in nature.
Some feel the nature of God when they care for another being without thought of recompense.

One needn't call it God. But one needn't call it a cognitive bias, either.







violetpastille

(1,483 posts)
30. Here was mine
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 05:02 PM
Dec 2018

And it's pretty typical.

I grew up with beauty and nature - beauty and nature all around me and ugly and petty and addicted human behavior all around me.

I knew that there was a disconnect. If adults just stopped what they were doing and played in the woods instead of drinking and fighting and watching television and having intrigues and trying to be smarter than each other everyone would be much better off.

So first I was open to the possibility of the mysterious. The ineffable. That's the first part of the show. The intro.
You know that there is a benevolent force in the world because the world is beautiful. If there were no more than simply the miracle of creation that would be enough. That the universe is abundant.

On a nothing different, particularly beautiful day I went into the woods and met a particularly beautiful ancient redwood.
I felt the life force vibrating from the tree as though it were speaking to me. Without words.
I put my arms around the tree and felt at one with the tree, with the earth with the past and the future.

Other people experience the interconnectedness of everything in different ways. At different times. Some people experience it as their constant state of being.

I don't feel that way in church. Halfway through I get impatient and want to talk about what we can actually do in the world to be more Christlike and then do it together as a group.
Sitting together and proclaiming superiority over those not present may be "religion" but for me it's too far removed from God. Not my thing.

It's easy to think of interconnectedness when you are a child in a beautiful wood. It's more of a trick when you're an adult getting hassled by the cops or struggling to pay the bills, but once you've felt it, you kind of always know the way back.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
35. Church services provide a community.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 05:32 PM
Dec 2018

DU provides a virtual community of sorts.

Humans need that community, but as you pointed out, actions are also important.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
32. Very well put.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 05:28 PM
Dec 2018

But some on both sides feel that their choices are the best ones. And the logical ones. And so they feel compelled at times to point out to those whose choices differ that the difference must be due to a fault of intellect.

A very human failing.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
44. You are misframing what I said.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 07:26 PM
Dec 2018

2 possibilities:

1) You misunderstand, or

2) you do not.

Either way, what you claim that I have written is unsupported by what I wrote.

Lordquinton

(7,886 posts)
42. "I don't think anybody ever had a spiritual experience hacking away on a laptop. "
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 07:19 PM
Dec 2018

Why do you think that?

violetpastille

(1,483 posts)
63. If the Buddha, or Jesus or Mohammed
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 08:32 PM
Dec 2018

Last edited Thu Dec 27, 2018, 12:30 AM - Edit history (1)

had their first spiritual awakenings in the marketplace or the synagogue or the mosque they as teachers would have pointed it out for sure.

It seems like they had to get away from the hubbub and sit in a cave or wander the desert or sit under a tree and be very quiet...and then it happens.

After they are fully enlightened a person can have spiritual experiences in all kinds of Seussian locales.. They would always be in that place of oneness.

But would they be hacking away on that laptop? Arguing on message boards?

A lot of "holy men" seem like multi-level marketers. I give the Dalai Lama a wide berth for instance.
He's probably working on his laptop right now. Setting up some speaking deals.

ETA: Add to that, "Pope Your Name Here".

Voltaire2

(14,719 posts)
71. I can attest that many actual "hackers"
Fri Dec 28, 2018, 05:19 AM
Dec 2018

as in people who code as an avocation, have had transcendental experiences while coding.

Luther had a transcendental experience taking a shit.

Your limits on the transcendent are self imposed.

violetpastille

(1,483 posts)
72. I said "I don't think that"
Fri Dec 28, 2018, 01:26 PM
Dec 2018

Not "I know that."

Nearly everyday I find something I was taught in school is no longer true. I was told never to give my baby peanut products. Now that she is in school with a bunch of kids with deathly peanut allergies new parents are being told to give babies peanut butter as soon as possible.
Even facts change.
What can I know with certainty? What authority can I hand over my trust? The more I "know" the more I know I don't know.

I experience that the world exists. That it is a beautiful world. That the creator and the created are not two separate things. That I can't hurt you without hurting myself.

If I were enlightened I could always be in that place of oneness and not have to work so hard against economic and technological exigencies to stay there.
Technology does not get me there.
(I'll let others to their otherness.)


I had to Google to find out about Luther coming up with the Reformation whilst straining on the toilet. He was constipated a lot and from the links I read he was really into the excrement metaphors. “I’m like a ripe stool and the world is like a gigantic anus.”
Jeepers, do you kiss your mom with that mouth, Martin Luther?
Lots of farting in the Devil's general direction and etc.

But good for him calling BS on priestly celibacy and paying for indulgences. That is a load of crap.

At the end of Einstein's God Letter he says, (I paraphrase) "Whatever. Even though you totally believe this stuff and I totally don't, I still believe we could be friends as long as we talk about concrete matters."

Unfortunately...

My neighbors all go to the same prosperity gospel church and they do everything they can to make us unwelcome. They leave their stuff all over the street and let their dogs run in the street and poop on our grass and blame it on other peoples (leashed) dogs. They let days go by before they bring in their garbage cans. Their kids tell my kid she's going to hell. They have about three cars per person that they can't park in their garages because that's where the Christmas decorations go. It's their own little Dominion.

I don't feel very "interconnected" on these occasions. No poops nor code strings seem to help. I need to go into nature and pray.


We could use another Reformation. imho. And a better HOA.

 

wasupaloopa

(4,516 posts)
28. You cannot prove a negative so your question to athiests is irrational.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 04:25 PM
Dec 2018

Atheists do not have to prove there isn't a god. You have to prove there is one. If it wasn't for people who say there is a god, there would be no need for the term atheist, because there would not be anything to not believe in.

You cannot go around saying there is a hoochit, and I have faith in hoochits and believe in the existance of hoochits. Now someone prove there are no hoochits.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
33. I never talk about proof. I talk about faith.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 05:29 PM
Dec 2018

But if any person claims that there is no proof of the existence of the Creator, that tells me nothing about the Creator and everything about the claimant.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
39. Meanwhile you reveal you can't tell the difference between a fact and a claim
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 06:42 PM
Dec 2018

Which leads to all sorts of fallacies like “faith” is somehow a logical argument for anything.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
54. The first citation reveals that you misframed my response.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 07:42 PM
Dec 2018

No need to go any further. And THIS mis-framing explains why there can be no dialogue with some here.

 

wasupaloopa

(4,516 posts)
40. That makes no sense. You base it all on your belief
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 07:04 PM
Dec 2018

that you take on faith. You can’t make a statement about a person using your faith as the basis if you mean it as rational.

Eko

(8,492 posts)
55. I find it interesting that you always focus on the unprovable
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 07:49 PM
Dec 2018

instead of the provable. Actually I don't, it explains tons about you.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
56. What an interesting response.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 07:57 PM
Dec 2018

Incorrect, as any review of the many things that I post here will clearly prove, but interesting.

Eko

(8,492 posts)
57. Here.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 08:06 PM
Dec 2018

"And I recognize the unprovable nature of my faith.

Now, what is your logical argument for your own, equally unprovable position regarding atheism?"

I am an atheist not because it is unprovable that god exists, I am an atheist because no one has been able to prove that he exists. You believe in something that you know is unprovable, I dont believe in something because it has not been proven.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
65. He won't
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 08:36 PM
Dec 2018

Gil is fully predictable. Soon he’ll be in another thread spewing the same nonsense that atheism is an unproven position and therefore no more logical than the claim of an invisible sky daddy.

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