Brian Peacock wrote:Seth wrote:Brian Peacock wrote:The whole post is an exercise in equivocation and evasion.
Well, thanks for admitting that about your post anyway...
I'm sorry to say that this just reads as childishness. As I said before, you seem "...overly committed and enthusiastic about trying to pull the emotional strings of others."
Childishness in response to childishness is perfectly appropriate, particularly when your statement is based on a complete strawman argument, as I've explained time and time again. Just because you refuse to accept the fact that "dismissal" and "refutation" are two different things doesn't mean they aren't.
Seth wrote:Brian Peacock wrote:When an objective claim for the existence of [thing] is dismisses on reasonable and rational grounds (such as the absence of evidence, which you accept and admit), then the claim has simply failed to support itself; [thing] cannot be said to exist - that is implicit in the dismissal, and there's no special distinction or conditions to apply to a claimed-for God[thing] over any other [thing].
This argument relies on the unsupported proposition that "absence of evidence" happens to be the true state of affairs, and that absence of evidence equates to evidence of absence. And no, I do not accept that absence of evidence is evidence of absence, nor does any rational person. Again, "dismissal" is an entirely different kettle of fish from refutation or rebuttal. You may dismiss what you like, but that does not mean that your dismissal is a rational decision. It may be the product of your own biases and beliefs, much like radical Islamists "dismiss" the value of free speech and titties. This is not about "dismissal", which is merely a statement of opinion, it's about specific claims that God does not exist made as a refutation of or rebuttal to the theistic claim.
Your goading aside (which is tiresome and patently obvious by now), this is exactly where we began.
Well, you're trying to get my goad, so I'm doing the same. Tit for tat and all that.
I even admitted it in my previous post when I allowed that nobody can really say if some intentioning and creative entity is responsible for the existence of the Universe (even while I'm pretty sure that the mythical national deity of the ancient Israelites does not exist).
So, absence of evidence for the existence of [thing] does not mean that [thing] does not exist, but it is reasonable and rational to assume it does not unless actual supporting evidence is brought to light.
Yes, it is. And the response that indicates this disbelief in the god-claim is either "I don't know" or "I don't believe it," not "God does not exist" prefaced by circular fallacies.
Otherwise there is, quite literally, no reason to believe [thing] exists. BUT, what distinguishes such a claim (that is, an unsupported, unevidenced objective claim for truth) from an imagining, or a fiction, or a lie(?) Nothing. Are we to say that all unsupported claims are somehow hanging in the balance of the possibility of future evidence and must therefore be put aside for now, or only that some unsupported claims are hanging in that kind of balance while others are clearly nonsense- and if so how to we tell them apart? I mean, what is so special about an objective God-claim that we can't dismiss in the same way we would dismiss a claim that Obama has a two-foot dong?
Nothing is special about god-claims. They are in fact entirely irrelevant to the illogic and unreason I'm addressing, which, once again and most tiresomely is that it is irrational to make a claim that God does not exist based on zero evidence that God does not exist using an argument formulated on the premise that the nature of God, as reported by theists, somehow proves that God does not exist.
Unless you are simply incapable of comprehending the distinction between "dismissing" a claim and "rebutting" a claim, I can only conclude that you are being deliberately obtuse and you're trying to pettifog your way out of the rational consequences of your belief system.
Perhaps a discussion of the distinction between "dismissing a claim" and "refuting or rebutting a claim" would help, although I don't see how I can be any more clear than I'm being now.
Seth wrote:Brian Peacock wrote:You must account otherwise, by some reasonable and rational means, if you wish to support your assertion that there necessarily exists an additional logical, rational, ethical, and/or moral burden of proof which lies with the dismissal. That support has not been forthcoming, and your assertion remains simply that, an assertion.
I have made no claim or assertion with respect to the existence or non existence of God other than "I don't know."
As I said, equivocation and evasion.
No, it's not, it's an important fact of the discussion which you are refusing to accept.
It is a matter of record that you want to hold atheists and atheism to 'the same standards' which they hold theist and theism to, and your have clearly asserted that there is a burden of proof upon atheists by which they must justify their disbelief of theists and theism if-and-when they want to talk about it - which you also think they shouldn't do unless they couch their remarks in terms you personally approve of.
Not true. You either misunderstand or choose not to accept my actual position. It's not about belief or disbelief, it's about rational argumentation and the fact that when most Atheists argue against theistic claims they do so in an entirely irrational manner while at the same time demanding rational proofs from their debatorial opponents that meet the Atheist standard of scientific objectivity. This is both hypocrisy and irrationality. The essence of the classic Atheist rebuttal of theistic claims consists of the basic form "God does not exist because..."
That is the logical failure I'm discussing, not "I don't believe your assertions about God."
If they don't meet your conditions then, well, you say you're free give them whatever rough-riding and shoddy-treatment your think they deserve, and they only have themselves to blame for it too.
The conditions are not mine, they are those of the Atheists themselves as applied to theistic claims. I'm merely demanding the same intellectual rigor be applied to their arguments as they demand be applied to theistic arguments as a matter of fundamental fairness, sound reasoning and logic, and simple courtesy. If Atheists demand of theists that they use sound reasoning and logic supported by objective scientific evidence when making their god-claims, then it is perfectly reasonable that I demand that Atheists use sound reasoning and logic supported by objective scientific evidence when making their god-counter-claims. Note that a counter-claim is different from a dismissal. This is key to the whole argument.
One only has to look at the remarks in the last two days of this discussion to see those assertions of yours dancing up and down the page in black and white.
And why should I not ride roughshod over Atheist religious propaganda just as Atheists run roughshod over theist religious propaganda? Turnabout is fair play after all. If you don't want to be accused of irrationality and bad manners, then don't be irrational and bad mannered...and by "you" I mean Atheists in general, not you specifically.
Seth wrote:I am analyzing the typical Atheist attempt to support an assertion that God does not exist based on the Atheist's analysis of the evidence, or lack thereof, he or she decides to use to support the ultimate conclusion.
There we have the fallacious burden-shift high-lighted and bolded for the interests and amusement of those lurkers you say you're really talking to. There's no special "Atheist's evidence", there's only "evidence for or in support of the claim". If that evidence doesn't stack up the claim fails to support itself. Those who think the claims and assertions of theism etc are unsupported, unjustified, and therefore unbelievable are called atheists. That's it. Now if you have any evidence that would throw doubt on any atheist's 'ultimate conclusion' (as you call it) about the claims and assertions of theism and its chums please present it here for discussion.
And it's perfectly rational to say "Objective evidence supporting your god-claim does not, in my opinion, support your claim and therefore
I don't believe it's true."
What's irrational is to say "Objective evidence supporting your god-claim does not, in my opinion, support your claim and therefore
God does not exist."
Do you see the distinction at all? You should, because that is the basis of my entire argument.
In the first case you are stating an opinion based on the level and quality of your personal knowledge and understanding of the god-claim and your disbelief may be entirely rational. In the second case you are making an assertion about the (non)existence of God based on your
lack of personal knowledge and understanding. You are concluding that God does not exist because you have evaluated the god-claims of theists and do not find them to be credible. This is an irrational conclusion because the credibility or truth of a god-claim by a theist is not determinative of the existence or nonexistence of God
because it is an opinion, not necessarily a statement of objective fact. Then again, it may be an opinion that
does represent a correct and true understanding of the existence of God.
The whole point is, that as an Atheist, the best you can rationally say about a theistic god-claim is "I don't know" or "I don't believe." You cannot rationally say "I don't believe your god-claim because it is unsupported by objective rational evidence and therefore God does not exist" because this is not logically or rationally true.
"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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