Animavore wrote:Seth wrote:
And you know that this is what God does how, exactly? You are once again falling into the Atheist's Fallacy line of reasoning.
Oh my god! I just realised something! Do you think that when I talk about God, I'm talking about the actual
real, living God, and not God, the character in a book God? Is that what you actually think?
Nope.
Oh you silly ninny

Ninny is as ninny does, as you aptly demonstrate below.
The only gods I know are the ones in the books and tales.
Do you know? My point is that you don't know, you only think you know and you base your assumption that you know on false premises, therefore your conclusions are also false.
The gods from various cultures throughout history. I don't believe in or know of any actual gods to talk about in any real way. When I speak of any gods I'm not speaking about them like real enitities, I'm talking about the characters from the novels. When you say to me, "And you know that this is what God does how, exactly?", you might as well say, "And you know that this is what Dumbledorf does how, exactly?" I know because JK Rowling told me that's what he does. Other than that asking me anything about what Dumbledorf does is absolutely meaningless to me. I don't know of any real-life Dumbledorf to be speaking of. When you say, "Christians could be wrong about the nature of God," you might as well say, "JK Rowling could be wrong about the nature of Dumbledorf." I know of no Dumbledorf for JK Rowling to be wrong about. I only know the character as depicted in the book, portrayed on screen, and there may be some fan-fiction out there. I don't know.
And therein lies your irrationality. You incorrectly think that all gods mentioned in literature (or also presumably through oral history) are fictional in nature and are products of the imaginations of the authors. The Atheist Fallacy you commit is that your lack of knowledge and understanding about a real, actual, living, non-fictional god cannot be the basis of a rational conclusion. In the fallacy you take at face value what some person says about God/gods, without recognizing that their description or claim may itself be mistaken or fictional, and use it to construct an argument against the existence of God/gods.
That's exactly like concluding that the sun revolves around the earth because some pre-Copernican scientist says so. Absent independent scientific analysis using valid and critically robust evidence of the pre-Copernican claim, you cannot draw a rational conclusion about the orbit of the sun, and a claim by a pre-Copernican scientist simply does not qualify as valid, critically robust evidence. Copernicus, however, formed a hypothesis about the earth orbiting the sun and proceeded to prove his hypothesis using critically robust scientific evidence. But he could only do that
because he had critically robust scientific evidence available and known to him. Therefore his conclusion about the earth orbiting the sun was a rational conclusion.
But if Copernicus had not had access to or knowledge of the critically robust scientific evidence proving that earth orbits the sun and not vice-versa, even if he happened to be correct in his hypothesis it cannot be claimed that his conclusion is rational because he has nothing to support that conclusion with.
Likewise, if I hypothesize that God exists in the absence of critically robust scientific evidence that I know of, I am making an irrational conclusion,
but so is the Atheist who makes the claim that God does NOT exist because he has no critically robust scientific evidence to support his claim.
In the case of the Atheist's Fallacy, the evidence relied upon both to formulate the hypothesis and analyze it in order to draw a conclusion is not critically scientifically robust, it is merely a claim by others about the existence or nature of God by others. One cannot draw a rational conclusion about the root hypothesis (the existence or non-existence of God) based on an unsubstantiated claim of any kind by others unsupported by critically robust scientific evidence.
Therefore, drawing any sort of conclusion about the existence
or non-existence of God/gods based only on the assertions of various authors, including Rowling, is an irrational act.
On the other hand, concluding that the assertions of an author of a claim about God/gods is without critically robust scientific evidence to support it in the absence of critically robust scientific evidence showing that there is in fact no such critically robust scientific evidence is also an irrational conclusion.
In other words, saying, "I conclude God does not exist because no critically robust scientific evidence exists" is irrational because you cannot and do not know what you do not know, and there may in fact be critically robust scientific evidence of God's existence of which you (and the rest of humanity...or some portion of them) are simply unaware.
Thus, when the Atheist says "the miracle at Fatima was not a miracle at all, it was an artifact of staring at the sun for too long" this is an irrational claim because while there is critically robust scientific evidence that staring at the sun can, potentially, result in perceptions as described, there is no critically robust scientific evidence
that this is what happened to the witnesses at Fatima. Such observations might have been caused by optical illusions based in human perception,
or they may have been accurate observations of actions by a superior intelligent entity.
In both cases, drawing any conclusion about the cause of the reported phenomena at Fatima (or indeed any other reported miraculous event) without critically robust scientific evidence upon which to base that conclusion, one way or the other, is an irrational act.
In short, you cannot rationally deny the existence of a "miracle" that defies scientific analysis in the absence of scientific evidence that the event was caused by something other than an intelligent agency with abilities beyond our ability to examine and explain.
You can of course choose not to believe that the "miracle" occurred based on your personal bias towards "naturalism," which rejects
a priori all possibility of "supernatural" forces, but that is merely a belief, or in other words confidence in the proposition that all things can ultimately be explained by the scientific method and therefore anything "supernatural" cannot by definition exist.
But this too is fallacy because it presumes that "supernatural" is in fact supernatural whereas it may actually be entirely natural and fully explainable by science, just not the science of today. If we look at history we see that science has often labeled things it does not understand and cannot explain as "supernatural," right up until some scientist explains it using the scientific method, whereupon it becomes non-supernatural. But in reality it was always non-supernatural and it was humanity's ignorance of the truths of the universe that made it seem to be supernatural.
Therefore, God may exist, and God may be entirely natural and an explainable part of the universe, but we are simply not advanced or intelligent enough at the moment to do so. As a result it is irrational to conclude that God does not exist merely because we are (or may be) as yet unaware of the critically robust scientific evidence proving his existence.
And so the only rational answer to the question of God's existence for the Atheist (or the atheist) is "I don't know."
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
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