You can google GodBlackdoom said:Google it, if you get no results it doesn't exist.
ZING
OT: Personally if it doesn't apply to my senses and isn't provably by science then it doesn't exist
You can google GodBlackdoom said:Google it, if you get no results it doesn't exist.
You just disagreed with me by agreeing with me?icaritos said:That is a ridiculous assumption, the burden of proof always falls to the one making a substantiated claim regarding a existence or phenomenon. Regardless if something has always been accepted or not, it falls upon those who actively believe it to provide evidence of their claims.
This argument almost always comes up for one reason, God. The concept of a unseen reality and a creator image has been with humanity for arguably 50k years. God and the spiritual realm have been an accepted part of human existence for almost as long as humanity has existed in its current form.Alex Michalos said:When debating any issue, there is an implicit burden of proof on the person asserting a claim
I disagree.blakfayt said:The absence of evidence is not the evidence of absence. Basically, you can't prove something isn't there, just because there is no evidence, which means you can't disprove something, EVER.
Pretty sure we have disproved a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spontaneous_generation] few [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamarckism] things. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_supremacism]blakfayt said:The absence of evidence is not the evidence of absence. Basically, you can't prove something isn't there, just because there is no evidence, which means you can't disprove something, EVER.
What I meant is that no matter how long the gag has been running, if no solid argument has been made in favor of it, the burden still falls on the believers. Even though religion is the longest running gag in human history what it boils down to is someone saying "this invisible entity exists", don't expect others to take you for your word, prove it does.viranimus said:You just disagreed with me by agreeing with me?icaritos said:That is a ridiculous assumption, the burden of proof always falls to the one making a substantiated claim regarding a existence or phenomenon. Regardless if something has always been accepted or not, it falls upon those who actively believe it to provide evidence of their claims.
This argument almost always comes up for one reason, God. The concept of a unseen reality and a creator image has been with humanity for arguably 50k years. God and the spiritual realm have been an accepted part of human existence for almost as long as humanity has existed in its current form.Alex Michalos said:When debating any issue, there is an implicit burden of proof on the person asserting a claim
If Scientific man makes the claim God does not exist, so does the burden of proof fall to scientific man to prove God does not exist because it is the scientific man who is making the claim that goes against the accepted notion of the general consensus. It absolutely does NOT fall to the religious man to prove God exists, because he was not making the claim as what he believes in has long been widely accepted, even before the claim against it was made.
No the ridiculous assumption is that because those who hold faith in science are blocked by the fact that the notion cannot be disproven, it was justifiable to craft a defense mechanism to validate dismissing a factor that stood inconveniently in the way.
The funny thing about this is if you change the word God with Aliens how much more accepting and tolerant to this notion the scientific community becomes even in the absence of any sort of tangible evidence..
Now how is that? Its not the believers who are making the claim It doesnt exist. They are not the ones who need or are begging to be convinced. So why should the burden of proof fall to those who didnt make the claim? That is arbitrarily interpreting the condition of "there is an implicit burden of proof on the person asserting a claim" to your own will so that the argument doesnt fall against your favor. It is twisting the intention around because the same scientific principle used to rail on religion fails to give you ironclad ammunition to continue that assault.icaritos said:What I meant is that no matter how long the gag has been running, if no solid argument has been made in favor of it, the burden still falls on the believers. Even though religion is the longest running gag in human history what it boils down to is someone saying "this invisible entity exists", don't expect others to take you for your word, prove it does.
It is asking for proof. There is no established truth in religion to be challenged, nothing even remotely close to that. Science exists to understand the world and the universe, it is not out of its grounds to question a belief that actively claims how said universe came to be.viranimus said:Now how is that? Its not the believers who are making the claim It doesnt exist. They are not the ones who need or are begging to be convinced. So why should the burden of proof fall to those who didnt make the claim? That is arbitrarily interpreting the condition of "there is an implicit burden of proof on the person asserting a claim" to your own will so that the argument doesnt fall against your favor. It is twisting the intention around because the same scientific principle used to rail on religion fails to give you ironclad ammunition to continue that assault.icaritos said:What I meant is that no matter how long the gag has been running, if no solid argument has been made in favor of it, the burden still falls on the believers. Even though religion is the longest running gag in human history what it boils down to is someone saying "this invisible entity exists", don't expect others to take you for your word, prove it does.
The principle of " there is an implicit burden of proof on the person asserting a claim" Its no different than challenging an established scientific theory. The scientific community has agreed upon a conclusion resulting in an established theory. Some guy comes along and says "No, that cant be" its not up to the scientific community to prove their theory for what ever reason the theory was established and accepted it. They have established reasons why their accepted theory is accepted. It is up to the guy who claims it must be wrong to prove its wrong. That is the very nature of science. It not only is commonplace, but it is expected. So how is it you get to ignore that because it extends beyond the reach of what science entails? Is it because that same logical scientific nature inadvertently defends something you may not want to consider?
Its not even asking for proof. Its more like telling someone they are wrong and expecting them to give you the reasons they are wrong. You dont get to cry foul when science validates the possibility of God and the existence of unseen levels of existence just because it does not fit the set of assumptions you may have subscribed to. How good is scientific inquiry that ignores its own terms and conditions in order to fit the ideal one may desire it to be?
icaritos said:Snip
Hi thanks for playing. You are now no longer part of any rational discussion so long as you hold this axiom because if I assume you are right then I have absolutely no reason to believe any of your arguments. The proof that there are no proofs is self-contradictory on its face.Nothing is provable.
As long as we base our knowledge on epistemological evidence and allow society's prejudices to cloud our judgement, truth is nonexistant. However, we have no other realistic, objective way of seeing the world. Therefore, this argument is meaningless. In fact, all arguments are meaningless. Nothing can ever be proven for sure.
Actually what you fail to realize is that his point is that at one point the existence of God was the established belief. The general falling away from that belief was not one of scientific inquiry at all and now you have two camps with firmly established beliefs and the fact is that whichever one you march into, if you make the claim that they are wrong (i.e. walking into a church and claiming God doesn't exist or walking into a skeptics conference and claiming that He does) then the onus IS in fact on you to support your claim.What you fail to realize (or refuse to) is that the claim your imaginary person is refuting has already been proven. Look at a high school physics book and you will see how the scientific community has laid down explanations for all the concepts they hold. The reason why the scientific community wouldn't need to refute your hypothetical person is because a convincing case for their theories already exists, and is readily available for anyone interested in learning about such concepts, so it falls on hims to prove his theory.
Please stop being ridiculous, you are trying to claim that because religion has existed for so long it does not need explanation. To this day there is no convincing evidence for the existence of god, nothing that can be easily analyzed or reproduced. The burden of proof always falls to those who make an exceptional claim, saying there is a supernatural being who created everything and sees everything all the time is far more outlandish them saying "but there is no evidence of such".
In a lot of ways this is pure and utter nonsense, but its an attitude that I see on this thread a lot. From the probability argument all of human history, having only happened once, is immensely improbable. Probability itself cannot be upheld by any type of scientific experimentation, and the entire idea of a Universe which conforms to some sort of uniformity, under which alone probability has any meaning, is itself accepted on pure faith by the entire scientific community.Personally if it doesn't apply to my senses and isn't provably by science then it doesn't exist
Bad example... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imaginary_numberRedingold said:Using maths?
E.g. I know that there does not exist a real value of x for which x[sup]2[/sup] = -1
Pretty sure that's also reductio ad absurdum...Hagi said:Assume it in fact does exist.
Logically derive what would happen.
If it leads to impossibilities then you've proven that it does not exist.
You've got event A which you wish to argue does not exist.
You assume event A does in fact exist. Logically event A would cause event B to happen.
Yet in reality event B does not occur, as such event A does not exist.
Or maybe event A would prevent event B from happening yet in reality event B does occur.
Again you've proven that event A does not exist.
Or in formal language:
A -> B
~B
-------
~A
or
A -> ~B
B
-------
~A
Or in Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modus_tollens