Sorry it took me so long to get back to you on this. Been busy.
I'll spoiler each section to keep it from being to long . . .
Burden of ProofThe "argument from ignorance" as addressed by Russel's teapot and other such arguments only works in situations where there is a complete lack of data.
What atheism is doing, or at least some atheists (as I should bear in mind no two people are likely to think
exactly the same thing) is conclude that all religions are false since there isn't any data available, then go on to discard any data presented, since it must be false since religion is false because there isn't any data. It just doesn't work
The problem with the atheistic position on this is that you're seeking to overturn belief in any sort of deity, something on which literally
every society in recorded history has maintained in the overwhelming majority of the population. There are literally more testimonies on "supernatural" events than there are people currently living. There are also countless logical arguments in favor of a God existing, and yes, even scientific studies that lend support.
God has not been proven absolutely true, but neither is the debate steming from an absolute lack of knowledge.
Consider Russel's Teapot. There's no reason why anyone would even think to look for a teapot floating through space, but what if a group nof astronauts reported seeing one? What if over the course of several years several different groups from different cultures reported seeing a teapot floating through space? It's at least enough to make people want to investigate. Applying the scientific method (observe, hypothesis, test) to religion simply gives us an observation and a hypothesis that no-one knows how to test yet.
In any debate
both sides must make their case. Even when "burden of proof" is established, the unburdened side must still establish
some basis for their case. Atheists have not done even that little bit. Allow me to demonstrate:
http://www.positiveatheism.org/writ/dawk911.htmhttp://www.sciamdigital.com/index.cfm?fa=Products.ViewIssuePreview&ARTICLEID_CHAR=0C9F4CBB-2B35-221B-628A70E93A04E86CIn the first article (and many others) Dawkins maintains his claim that the absolute entirety of the burden of proof must rest on the religous person, yet in the second one he maintains that he shouldn't have to listen to arguments in favor of religion in order to know that it's false.
What's that? Place the burden of proof on the other party and then not listen to what they have to say? Why I could prove
anything using that method. Including the sky being green and the grass being blue.
I recognize that not all atheists believe the same thing, and I hope most don't follow that particular brand of logic. But this is the main sort of reasoning I've encountered (never directly stated mind you) and I find it very frustrating.
As to Daxx's statement about "the God of the gaps", I find this odd, because many of the recent gaps were filled in by
exactly what I expected to see, based on a theistic perspective. I'll go into a bit more detail at the end of the post.
Oddly enough, Hume's Maxim sort of makes one of my points for me. You're automatically assuming any testamony that reports something that doesn't fit with your worldview must be false, simply on the grounds that it's hard to reconcile with your worldview.
Historical ContradictionsCould you please clarify what you mean by "special pleading"? I'm afraid I'm not clear on what you're trying to say there.
Evolution versus creationism isn't really part of what I was discussing with this argument; I was trying to get at was discrepancies between the Biblical account of an event and a different account from the same period.
I'm happy to discuss evolution with you, but that really doesn't fit with this argument. I think for the most part we'd just end up agreeing anyway.
The main point I was trying to make is that for any historical event different sources will differ in details, yet without a time machine there is no way to go back and check which one is true. In events that can be verified, Biblical accounts have been shown to be as accurate as we can reasonably establish.
Invisible Pink UnicornI've replied to this briefly on the other thread, but let me do a more thorough job here.
You have several times refered to this as a logical fallacy, but you have yet to provide any support to the argument. You say that, in spite of the fact that "argument ad populum" refers to an appeal to public
opinion that it should apply to things people see/experience. Okay, let's take a closer look at that.
In a given population, let suppose half of the population witnesses a phenomena. Of those that observe it, half of them misinterperet it as something else. There is one "correct" interpretation, but there are many, many incorrect ones. Therefore all of the 25% who correctly interperet the event will agree, whereas there will be several different opinions in the 25% who misinterpereted it. Therefore in matters of an eyewitness account a consensus opinion will hold, even if we assume witness accounts to be extremely innaccurate.
In order for there to be a risk of "false possitives" we would have to assume human perceptions have almost no bearing on reality whatsoever, whereupon I'm probably "typing" this post into an angry jellyfish, and the whole point is moot anyway.
Okay, so maybe there's a biasing factor? What about groupthink, or cultural bias? They've been referenced a couple times now. Except both of those could only bias things towards a religious interpretation of events if we assume that there is already an overwhelming majority holding those views. Therefore, such things could
potentially influence the spread of eyewitness accounts, but not their origin. On a side note, such things
could explain different cultures etc. having different interpretations of a phenomena, hence Christians vs Muslims vs Hindus vs Jews etc etc . . .
As a final note on this, please try to take a step back for a minute and think about what you're saying. You're asking me to discard my religious beliefs, any court system that uses testamonies, at least half of all news sources (probably more) and
what my own senses tell me based on nothing more than your say so.
I'm not trying to say that there can't be any legitimate reason for your views, but if there is
you haven't provided it. If I'm wrong then teach me why, don't just keep repeating "logical fallacy" like it's soem kind of mantra.
And finally, I'd like to introduce a new argument for commentary:
Fine-tuned UniverseI'll start with a wikipedia article, so you can get a basic overview:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fine-tuned_UniverseI am aware wikipedia isn't super reputable, use the articles to familiarize yourselves with the issue, but I'm hoping better citations will come out during the course of the discussion.
My summary of the argument runs something like this:
Our universe contains a certain number of physical constants (the precise number is unknown) each of which has an exact numerical value, and the numerical values of these constants do not change. If we were to make even tiny adjustments to these values we end up with a universe that would not allow for life in any form we would find remotely recognizable as "alive". Please note that many of these predicted changes are things like "matter would not form". The thought is that if the universe is rather uniquely balanced to allow for life, then this could point towards a creator.
and a now link to the wikipedia article on one of the more credible (in my opinion) responses:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthropic_principleBasically, the anthropic prinicple states that we can only observe a universe that could contain us, so there is an observer bias. This response is valid, but it still seems unusual that most possible universes would result in something like "the entire universe collapses into a singularity", why would the constant's just happen to balance one another? what's more, it only really works to explain fine-tuning if we assume there are other universes.
There is also some debate over how far the fine-tuning goes, largely due to the fact that 1) we don't know what all the universal constants are yet and 2) we haven't solved all of physics yet, so we can't predict with confidence what a universe with different laws/constants would look like. Notably however, this debate did not exist until after theism was implicated. (Going by publication dates of the articles cited on wikipedia, I'll try to look into this more)
There have been many hypothesis put forward to explain this phenomenon without invoking God, here's a sampling:
-There are many/infinite universes, and we're only aware of the one we can live in due to the anthropic principle (see the second link)
-Wheeler's Participatory Anthropic Principle, an interpretation of quantum mechanics in which only a universe containing observers (life) can exist. I believe Essence has referenced this a couple of times.
-Some part of the yet undiscovered "Theory of Everything" dictates that the laws of the universe
must allow for life
-"Life" would exist anyway, and we just can't imagine what form it would take in a different universe.
There are others, but I'll try to let someone else give a more thorough account of them to avoid biasing the treatment of the argument. I'll just leave off with this: none of these explanations (to my knowledge) is any more testable (or probable) than invoking God, so why are they considered more rational to atheists?
On a more general question to whoever wants to answer it:
Science shows us that there are mathematical constants & equations that govern the universe. Where do you think these equations & constants come from?
@Belthus:
I think Daxx is referring to "strong" athiesm as the belief that God has been conclusively
proven NOT to exist, whereas "weak" atheism is the belief that there is not sufficient evidence to suspect the existence of God/god/gods.
I should probably let Daxx answer for himself though.