John,
We need to have some sort of system for sorting the wrong beliefs from the less-likely-to-be-wrong
ones. This is what science tries to do, although of course it can never arrive at "ultimate truth" precisely
because it has to be open to new evidence should it come along. But we have to have some basic standards
for evidence, and if we are honest we should apply that standard consistently. If someone believes that Elvis is alive
because lots of people have seen him then, IMHO, that person's standards of evidence are too low. But if someone
believes that Jesus rose from the dead because it says in the Bible that people saw him, but not that Elvis is alive,
then not only is that person's standards of evidence too low, he is also being inconsistent. If you believe the incredible
things it says in one holy book then you have forfeited your reasons for disbelieving all sorts of other incredible things.
As for values, once we have ironed out our disagreements on empirical matters on which our values depend, then all
we can say is, I think this and you think that: there is no basis for saying one of us is right and the other wrong.
Oh, and the atheist/ agnostic thing: are you atheistic or agnostic about Santa Claus?
Stathis Papaioannou
________________________________
> From: jamikes.domain.name.hidden
> To: everything-list.domain.name.hidden
> Subject: Re: Evil ? (was: Hypostases (was: Natural Order & Belief)
> Date: Mon, 8 Jan 2007 09:19:08 -0500
>
> Interleaving in bold
> John
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Stathis Papaioannou<mailto:stathispapaioannou.domain.name.hidden>
> To: everything-list.domain.name.hidden<mailto:everything-list.domain.name.hidden.com>
> Sent: Monday, January 08, 2007 4:55 AM
> Subject: RE: Evil ? (was: Hypostases (was: Natural Order & Belief)
> Tom Caylor writes:
> ---SKIP
> >
> Stathis Papaioannou:
> People disagree on lots of things, but they also agree on lots of things, many of which are on the face
> of it either incredible or unpleasant - because the evidence leaves them no choice. On matters of values and
> religion, however, they disagree far more frequently. In the case of values this is because they are not
> actually disgreeing about any empirical or logical fact:
> --who's empiria and who's logic? Are YOU the ultimate authority?--
> they are just saying this is the way I wish to live my
> life, this is what I hold to be good or important, this is what I would like other people to hold good or important.
> --Doesn't everybody. including yourself?--
> In the case of religion, people disagree because they are selective in the evidence they accept because they
> want to believe something.
> --Everybody's prerogative.--
> Jews believe that God spoke to Moses, but they don't believe that God spoke to Muhammed. I don't think there is evidence that God spoke to either of them, but if your standards of evidence are much lower than mine....
> --who (else) told you which one is "lower"? Different, maybe. --
> and you accept one, you are being inconsistent if you don't accept the other. That is,
> if you think the sort of evidence presented in holy books, reports of miracles, religious experience, strength of
> faith in followers etc. is convincing, then pretty well every religion is equally convincing.
> --Logical flaw: different religions accept different 'holy' books (their own, that is) you are in the joke when two people meet at the railroad station and one sais: I am making a trip to a distant foreign country and the other sais: me too, so why are we not traveling together? --
> That is not the case if you compare the evidence for a flat Earth versus a spherical Earth, for example.
> (Watch out: Einstein reopened the scientific allowance for not only a heliocentric, but a geocentric world with his NO preference in a relative world (math would be complicated)
> As for the Problem of Evil, that's easy: there is no evidence that there is a God; if there is a God, there is no
> evidence that he cares what happens to us; if he does care what happens to us there is no evidence that he intervenes in our lives; if he does intervene there is no evidence that things are any better than they would be if he didn't intervene.
> --Again, you consider YOUR evidence in YOUR logic. You have the right to do so, but so has a religious person to his own ways.
> I am not an atheist, because an a-theist needs a god (theos) to deny and in my belief system (based on those natural sciences I was brainwashed into at college) I do not condone IN NATURE any SUPERNATURAL ideas. I just wondered why the 'god-designers' made their idol(s) with all those human fallibilities (vain, seek adoration, pick favorites, no criticism allowed, are vengeful, irate, not impartial, influenceable, cruel, punishing even unjustly (punishing for things by creational flaws etc.) and assigning this world to a creator with such flaws... And yes, I am an agnostic, because I am not convinced about the superiority of MY ideas over the ideas of others.
> --------
> Stathis Papaioannou
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Received on Mon Jan 08 2007 - 18:01:56 PST