is it possible to find God by reason?

Discussion in 'Religion Archives' started by longlostlady, Feb 2, 2006.

  1. Lerxst I love Natalie Portman Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    314
    Why is it untenable? Not trying to be thickheaded here, just trying to understand just why you say this. If it is just the issue of it being one of essentially infinite explanations, then I see your point, although I'm not sure I agree with how you interpret this. Is there anything more?
     
  2. Google AdSense Guest Advertisement



    to hide all adverts.
  3. Raithere plagued by infinities Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    3,348
  4. Google AdSense Guest Advertisement



    to hide all adverts.
  5. Raithere plagued by infinities Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    3,348
    Excellent. I agree. In fact I think it's more than analogous.

    Sticking with the analogy, we've asked a question that cannot be answered within the system. Now my question (since I've been breaking my brain against Godel and Hofstadter for the last couple of years making slow progress) is what are the implications?

    For instance, if we might consider the Universe itself a formal system does this necessarily imply a Meta-Universe? Or might we escape that conundrum through quantum indeterminacy? Or is it merely that the language of formal logic is inherently incomplete and thus it is our question that is flawed and that we need some form of meta-logic? I tend towards the latter but it boggles the mind.

    Luckily pragmatism saves me from insanity.

    Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!



    ~Raithere
     
  6. Google AdSense Guest Advertisement



    to hide all adverts.
  7. Godless Objectivist Mind Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    4,197
    If it exist, we will soon knonw of it. However a subjective concept such as a god, is unknowable, cause it's basically subjective. There's no credible, objective, emperical evidence yet provided that a god exist or need exist. Well some may make prospesterous, outrageous, (assumptions) that an entity exist outside the universe, and interacts with this universe, is nothing more than wishfull thinking. In other words it's illogical to stipulate the existence of an entity outside the realm of existence period!.

    Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!



    Godless
     
  8. Lerxst I love Natalie Portman Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    314
    There is no reason to think that everything that exists can be in principle be knowable to *us*. We have imperfect, fallible, finite minds and finite resources and possibly other physical limitations. There may be physical realms that require such high eneries to probe that they are just not technologically feasible to probe, to give you an example.

    And given the simulation argument, which is sound, there is always a chance we are just a simulation, in which case there is much that exists that we cannot know about. Nothing illogical about it.

    I'm not stipulating an entity outside the realm of existence. I am stipulating that there may be entities outside the realm of what we can *know*. To categorically assert that this cannot be possible is hubris.

    Moreover, to suggest it is all either strictly knowable or all strictly unknowable is a fallacy. Like just about everything else, there are shades of grey. There are things we can be certain of. There are things we can be reasonably sure of. And then there are undecidable propositions where we just have to say "I don't know."
     
  9. Lerxst I love Natalie Portman Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    314
    I've been thinking about this.

    The BIAJ observes two moons. The evidence for two moons was detected, analyzed, and a conclusion reasonably drawn.

    It is true that two moons were observed. The BIAJ really experienced this.

    The representation of two moons was actually a part of reality, just as much as the current flowing through my PC's processor is a part of reality.

    What the BIAJ observed is part of the truth of the world. But the set of all truths is necessarily much larger than truths he knows. And in this larger set is the truth of the one moon.

    I don't see a problem.

    Here is another train of thought that just came along:

    Consider the set of all truths = A.

    Consider the set of all known truths = B.

    Clearly A includes B. But can B ever = A?
     
  10. stretched a junkie's broken promise Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    1,244
    Hi Lerxst,

    “Speaking of QM, are you familiar with idea of quantum immortality?”

    * I have read bits and pieces on this subject in various books, but not a book solely on the concept itself. I must admit to being quite intrigued and intuitively feeling comfortable with the rationale. If you can point me to specific books or websites I would appreciate that.
     
  11. qwerty mob Deicidal Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    786
    That's almost a syllogism; the answer can never be found (rather, the answer is unknowable, therefore rigging the truth table). I've used something similar in the past to disprove omniscience before finding better arguments (such as "knowledge must have a vessel"). The earlier point that infinity is a concept, rather than a numeral, applies. I forget the exact name of the "set theorem" which proves it, perhaps another will fill in the blank.

    Edit: It's Cantor's Theorem.

     
    Last edited: Feb 10, 2006
  12. Godless Objectivist Mind Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    4,197
    Speak for yourself, you may be as ingnorant as you are today, for the rest of your life, however if you were to live for the next 10k years, you just may know a bit more, than you know today.

    Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!



    However the rest of humanity is unfathamble how much knowledge the human race will gather in the next few hundreds years, let alone the next 10k years. Thus what I say holds water; IF IT EXISTS WE WILL KNOW OF IT.

    Just a few thousands years ago, Greeks stipulated of atoms, today we know it to be fact, atoms exist.

    This is gibberish, if entities exist with in the realm of our existence is only a matter of time we will know of it. However I doubt that we will find any intellegent entity with the atributes of a subjective god.

    Surely, there are things "We don't know YET!!" But in time all things will be known if they exist, that's our nature, to discover it. In the little time that humans have existed we have barely scratched the surface of knowledge, if for example mysticism were irradicated in the times of Plato & Aristotle our knowledge perhaps would have been further advanced than it's today. If we happen to irradicate mysticism i.e. gods, goblins, demons, etc.. within the next decade, our knowledge would quadruple within the next five years after abolishment of silly notions of gods, and demons.

    Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!



    What I'm trying to say here is that mysticism has had a stagnant effect in human epistemology for the past few milleniums.

    Godless
     
  13. cole grey Hi Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    1,999
    The greeks who suggested this possiblity could have been considered mystics by those who would have said, "but you have no proof that atoms exist".
    There have been quite a few ideas that presaged their provability.

    EDIT - speaking of Cantor, doesn't the "aleph" (his numerical representation of infinty) count as a number - just as much as a negative number is a number and not a concept? Or is a negative number a concept too? I'm not a mathematician but I thought that his representation of infinity was one of the reasons Cantor is considered one of the big time guys in the field.
     
    Last edited: Feb 10, 2006
  14. Lerxst I love Natalie Portman Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    314
    Surely I would know significantly more in 10k years. That isn't the point the point is, there may be things I cannot know.

    A simulated mind running on a computer could say the same thing for the same reasons. But he couldn't ever know the color of the cat sitting next to the computer.

    It's not gibberish, there is no reason why we can be *certain* of such a thing. Truth is a higher concept than provability.

    I share your doubt.

    "All things will be known if they exist"... wow, that is quite a positive claim. How do you support it?

    Cannot argue with the fact that mysticism can have bad consequences. I'm not arguing for mysticism. I'm arguing for agnosticism and for at least some degree of philosophical skepticism, that is all.
     
  15. Lerxst I love Natalie Portman Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    314
    Let's spell out the various options regarding truth and knowledge so we can discuss them better.

    I'd suggest that one of the following statements must be correct:

    1. It is not possible to ever know any truths.

    2. It is possible to know all truths.

    3. It may not be physically possible for a finite mind to know all truths, but if x is a truth, then x is knowable, for any particular finite set of x's you choose to investigate.

    4. It is possible to know some truths but other truths might be inherently unknowable to humans.

    ----------------------------

    Discussion:

    1. Is clearly a moronic thing to say, it contradicts itself by asserting itself to be a truth. I don't think any sane person can embrace this perspective. So we shall reject it.

    2. I think simply the finite nature of our minds should cause us to be hesistant to make such a bold claim. Also the finite nature of what we can *do*.... No matter how many eVs of energy our latest collider can generate, there will always be one eV more that we cannot physically provide, and hence there may be truths about behaviors at those higher energes that we don't know. Also from a mathematical perspective, we can also build more complex axiomatic systems that will have more and more unreachable truths. It seems to me that there are possibly an infinite number of truths.

    3. If you are going to assert the primary efficacy of the human mind, this is probably the stance you want to take. At least it sounds somewhat reasonable, as opposed to (2).

    4. This does not posit that there are unknowable truths, simply that there may be unknowable truths. To me, this is the most reasonable statement because it carries the least amount of baggage - I don't have to buy what I consider to be a very controversial premise - namely, that the human mind and it's sensory input are so powerful that they comprise a machine capable of unraveling any particular mystery. I see nothing in human history to suggest making such a bold claim as that.

    I believe one should err on the side of caution, that one shouldn't claim to know things he doesn't know, that if unsure, one should admit it. Hence (4).
     
  16. Raithere plagued by infinities Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    3,348
    This is where I find one of the primary errors in anthropic and "from design" arguments. The nature of existence itself appears to distill into organizing principles. Forces and laws of nature generate organized and predictable movement, such that chaos and disorder are merely illusory projections out of ignorance. Even the apparently truly chaotic activity on a quantum level is ordered into statistically predictable activity. That we find order in the Universe should pose no mystery when the principle of the Universe is order. In fact, under some cosmological models we might state define the Universe as order.

    ~Raithere
     
  17. duendy Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    6,585
    itis patriarhcal mysticism religion and philosophy which has separatred reason from the body. they assumed/assume 'reason=mind' and 'emotions=body'

    hence not diggin this the question of tis thread wll hide a hidden Unexamined premise. the dualism between mind nd body!

    when THIS is explored we will see that 'reason' as it's been indoctrinated to mean over many centuries and still is is a very LIMITED version of the REAL. for the realis tat reason and body are in unison. and Intelligence is ORGANIC, not 'talkin head'--ie., cerebral

    i wouod also change 'God' to Goddess. the very concept of Go is prt of the misconception as brielfy described above. 'God' = 'mind of man in the sky/reaaon/rationality' vs woman/Nature/body

    do you feeeel me?
     
  18. Raithere plagued by infinities Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    3,348
    The problem is that we then have to consider all sensory experience as true. The question is not, "What was experienced?" but "What is real?" Whether or not the BIAJ perceives two moons are there, in fact, two moons?


    Quantum indeterminacy indicates that this is untrue. All things cannot be known.


    I don't see where any argument thus far has presumed such duality. Can show us where you think we have erred?

    Thus far no one has defined God as male or female. To suggest it seems purely anthropocentric. What need have gods for gender?

    ~Raithere
     
  19. duendy Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    6,585
    )()()()()()()()())
     
  20. mustafhakofi I sa'id so Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    599
    if there things we can never know, then in effect they dont exist to us.
    well you answered it your self above, if it's not known, it does'nt exist.
    until it becomes known, it must alway remain in the realms of fantasy.
    cloud cuckoo land, the twilight zone.
     
  21. Lerxst I love Natalie Portman Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    314
    Godless (and everyone):

    Here is yet another way in which the statement "If it exists we will (or can) know it" would be certainly false:

    It is not uncommon for cosmologists to discuss the possibility of a multiverse. This multiverse could consist of a number of different, mutually closed universes, each of which are just as "real" as the others. If that is indeed the case, there are all manner of questions about other universes that we simply cannot know because we are confined to our own closed universe.

    Also, to suggest a multiverse isn't necessarily pure conjecture, there may be strong theoretical reasons to support the idea.

    Analogy:
    It is a bit like having two hollow toruses floating in space, and you are confined to exist inside one of them. The question "is the color of the interior of the other torus red" is an undecidable proposition. There are simply truths you cannot know.
     
  22. Lerxst I love Natalie Portman Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    314
    Therefore, x-rays didn't exist until 1895.

    Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!

     
  23. Lerxst I love Natalie Portman Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    314
    The more I think about this, the funnier it gets.

    I guess the universe didn't exist about seven billion years ago, because there wasn't anyone around to "know" it. There wasn't even an earth yet.

    (Actually I think such a silly statement has been used before to arrive at the "necessity" of a God - "someone" had to exist and "know" about the universe before we came around in order to make it "real". LOL.)
     

Share This Page