@theloconate:
I'm not entirely sure which “claim” you're referring to. Do you mean counters to my arguments in general?
I do make it a point to try and read up on atheistic authors and their arguments (indeed, I was doing so before I became Christian) and have not found any that I find convincing.
However, I think you may be confused on one point—for the most part I am not citing these arguments out of a book or another source. These are my own responses after reading through a given argument and considering it. Therefore, for many of these, there is no published attempt at a rebuttal for me to look up.
Invisible pink unicornLet me try to break down what I'm trying to get at with the teapot, as I don't think it's really gotten across yet
This is the scientific method in it's most basic form:
A Make an observation
B Hypothesize about why you observed that
C Test your hypothesis experimentally
Russell's teapot established the need for
A in order for an idea to be given consideration. As a result, you are insisting that I must provide
C.
1) They MUST be falsifiable. Anything that is unfalsifiable (as most religion is), is inherently unscientific.
Inherently unscientific and inherently untrue are NOT equivalent. Neither are inherently unscientific and inherently not worth consideration.
Why do you keep treating them as such?
All something being unscientific means, at least in this context, is that you can't investigate it via the scientific method and so you need to try a different approach.
At what point in there was the argument ignored? An argument was put forth, and it was succinctly refuted.
The problem lies not in the refutation (or attempt at one), but in the fact that the atheist has already decided the the argument to be presented is invalid before having even looked at it.
Consider two jurors being interviewed before being selected for a trial:
The first juror says that she will consider the evidence carefully, that she takes jury duty seriously, and will do her best to decide fairly. She is found acceptable to both the defense and the prosecution.
The second juror, however, starts off his interview with the following speech:
“Oh boy! I've always wanted to send someone to jail! Can I be the one to say 'GUILTY' at the end? I've got this really menacing tone to say it in. Oooohh! Do you think we could get him the death penalty?! Is that legal in this state?”
Clearly the second juror is unacceptable to the defense, because he's already decided on the verdict before he's seen any evidence. If he's in the jury then there's very little hope of a fair trial.
And lets be honest here, do you always fully examine the arguments of anyone who comes up to you for all possible truth, or do you dismiss some of them? If you do always fully examine them, then I claim that I'm invisible, but only when nobody is looking.
Invisibility can be safely dismissed for several reasons:
First, simply on the grounds that it's completely irrelevant—whether you're visible when unobserved or not has absolutely no bearing on how I'd live my life. It makes no difference in how I would act whether you still reflect light or not when I'm not looking at you or not, so it isn't worth my time considering it.
Second, from the context it's abundantly clear that even you don't believe the statement.
Third, I'm not going out of my way to try to argue against the possibility of your invisibility powers. If I was, then I would at least owe you the courtesy of listening to your case before discarding it. There's no way a person can be an expert on every given subject, so we have to choose our battles and simply accept that some things aren't worth debating over.
I could go into more, but the point is that, yes there are valid reasons for not considering something before discarding it, but those reasons don't apply to religion. This also heavily relates back to something I said earlier:
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 religious 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.
If I may, I'd like to go into more detail on the concept of “claims of supernatural powers”:
Atheists frequently cite things like this, in part because they want to discredit theism by lumping it in with various “out there” beliefs, and in part because they earnestly think this is true.
The problem is that the uneven distribution doesn't stem from certain claims as being easily grouped as unreliable, but an oddity in the way “supernatural” is classified.
Supernatural is often assumed to mean things that are untestable, unsupported by science or clearly contradictory with known science. Thus, as soon as scientific testing confirms something it immediately becomes no longer “supernatural” but instead science.
Let's have an example:
Around the Renaissance in Europe several disciplines emerged that are now referred to as “pseudo-science”. Among these were two I would like to focus on: alchemy and astrology.
Astrology is (as I'm certain you know) an attempt to predict events based on star positions etc. and alchemy was attempting to turn one substance into another. Both were considered “supernatural” and were given aspects of mysticism.
Then as time went on along comes Mendeleev and a host of other brilliant minds, and suddenly they're able to quantify and predict what changes will take place as different chemicals mix. Alchemy becomes known as chemistry. Suddenly chemistry is proof of what a logical mind can do, whereas astrology is proof that those quacks will believe anything. Nevermind that it was the same quacks who first started investigating both fields.
Not saying you should check your horoscope, as there are several underlying logic faults involved there that I'm certain you don't need pointed out, but in evaluating “supernatural” claims you have, essentially, taken only the failures into account and not the successes.
A more recent case of a “supernatural” thing that science has upheld is acupuncture. After a clinical trial it was found that acupuncture was extremely beneficial, especially in the case of muscle injuries. This is a particularly interesting case right now because (to my knowledge anyway) science has established that acupuncture
does work, but it can't fully explain
how it works.
Hume's MaximThe problem with Hume's Maxim is that how you're defining a “big” claim versus a “small” one is largely arbitrary. You're starting from an atheistic worldview, so to you anything inconsistent with that worldview looks like a much bigger claim than anything that is consistent with that worldview.
It's basically a very academic way of stating that you have a confirmation bias.
nothing existsUnfalsifiable = Bad is sort of the point.
What I'm trying to show here is that the reasoning as to why a theist must be the one carrying the whole burden of proof is inconsistent with itself.
As to Descartes, he started from the assumption that his thoughts exist.
And of course he did—after all what can you be more sure exists than your own thoughts? Yet it is equally impossible to
prove that those thoughts exist. This is actually very similar to the way many people experience God.