I've been watching a lot of debates online lately and I couldn't hope for a better match. And this is at state no less! If I was still a student, I'll be all up ins.3/30/11 7pm McKimmon Centerhttp://www.thegreatdebatencsu.com/
3/28/2011 6:35:06 PM
what a stupid waste of time. do you think any progress on the existence of god is going to take place at the fucking mckimmon center after thousands of years of debate and scholarship?
3/28/2011 6:36:18 PM
no.I EXPECT TO BE ENTERTAINED
3/28/2011 6:41:55 PM
3/28/2011 6:44:44 PM
paging FroshKiller
3/28/2011 10:08:28 PM
I wonder how much NCSU pays them.Professional trolls. My heroes.
3/28/2011 10:43:38 PM
I even believe in God and I don't see much point in going to this. Of course there's no evidence for the existence of God. At best, Craig can argue that there's no evidence against the existence of God. Even taking all of that into account, it seems a little lopsided to pit a physicist against a philosopher/theologian in any argument regarding "evidence."
3/28/2011 10:51:56 PM
not really. even the physicist, if he were honest, would be forced to say "we don't know why the big-bang happened" and "we don't know how shit went from organic molecules to fully replicating organisms." But, again, that, at best, means we don't evidence against a god.
3/28/2011 11:00:55 PM
I disagree on both counts. Craig isn't going to just say there's no evidence against God. He's going to argue that the universe can't exist without God. I imagine he'll pull out cosmological argument:
3/29/2011 8:20:11 AM
3/29/2011 8:52:10 AM
3/29/2011 9:14:16 AM
He would point to the Big Bang as the moment at which the universe "came into being," which makes it subject to the cosmological argument. He would argue that God never "came into being," and therefore falls outside the bounds of the argument. The argument relies on an overly literal interpretation of the commonly used expression that "before the universe, there was nothing," which is interpreted as meaning that the universe must have been created by something (or someone) that defies the rules of existence. It excludes the possibility that the universe came from something that is still bound by a set of natural laws, despite the fact that there are numerous theories about how this could be so, and that, significantly, do not rely on the credibility of ancient desert tribesmen.
3/29/2011 9:54:08 AM
You guys should seriously watch "A Universe from Nothing" posted above if you haven't already seen it.
3/29/2011 10:03:33 AM
Enjoyed it. Will be watching the stream (at least part of it since I have to put my kid to bed around 8).
3/29/2011 11:35:07 AM
3/29/2011 12:12:03 PM
Only if you're afraid of asking questions, collecting evidence, peer review, and the normal way we go about determining whether claims are true.[Edited on March 29, 2011 at 12:16 PM. Reason : specificity]
3/29/2011 12:13:00 PM
If my perception of reality is susceptible to delusion -- possibly to the level of hallucinations -- then none of that helps. My peers are the guys from "A Beautiful Mind" and who the fuck knows how I'm perceiving the evidence.
3/29/2011 12:17:20 PM
The key is we don't need to claim absolute knowledge about any given topic, so being 100% sure that this is objective reality and not the Matrix doesn't really matter.When I ask "how do you know your beliefs aren't a personal delusion" I ask this in terms of the reality that we share as conscious beings. We could be heads in a jar somewhere, but it doesn't matter. In this reality that we perceive, study, talk about, how do we go about determining whether a claim is true?
3/29/2011 12:21:38 PM
All of which appears to assume that there is a "we" and not just "me and all the annoying wolfwebbers I'm hallucinating."
3/29/2011 12:37:39 PM
So you're conceding that imagined gods are indistinguishable from gods with no evidence? Since imagined reality is indistinguishable from reality for which you have no external verification is actually reality?It doesn't matter, btw, whether the reality that "we" are observing is objectively reality. It is effectively reality, whether you're imagining me talking to you about it.[Edited on March 29, 2011 at 12:47 PM. Reason : .]
3/29/2011 12:45:45 PM
3/29/2011 1:15:40 PM
3/29/2011 1:45:04 PM
3/29/2011 1:45:54 PM
It seems Grumpy is determined to have us believe that God is on par with all other delusions. He doesn't need to sell me on that point.It's a disingenuous argument. He doesn't go leaping off 100 story buildings just because, hey, it's totally possible that he's actually in the Matrix. Despite whatever evasive hypotheticals he tries to pawn off on the Internet, he certainly does operate, just like the rest of us, on the assumption that reality is reality, or that in any event it is worthwhile to assume that to be the case. So he's still left to explain why he chooses to believe in one particular god but not in, say, two gods. Aren't two always better than one?[Edited on March 29, 2011 at 2:35 PM. Reason : ]
3/29/2011 2:34:14 PM
3/29/2011 7:55:35 PM
3/29/2011 8:22:15 PM
3/29/2011 10:39:40 PM
The problem is not solely that "you're the only one that perceived it and therefore you're wrong". The problem is "you're the only one that perceived it and there is no collaborating evidence and there are mountains of contradictory evidence."If it was anything except god, I believe you'd readily admit that it could have been a delusion. If you saw a pink elephant fly through the car in front of you as you were driving down the highway, but the car was unaffected, no one else saw it, and no direct or indirect evidence for the existence of the pink elephant was left behind, you'd readily admit that you imagined it.Why do religious claims get a pass? Not only do they lack evidentiary support, but we understand the mechanism for which people gain religion. You must admit that were you born in a Muslim family you'd believe in Allah rather than Yahweh. If you were born in Ancient Greece, you'd be worshiping Zeus or Artemis. If you were brought up believing in invisible pink elephants, reinforced by your parents, your friends, and your church, you'd be attacking my inability to disprove invisible pink elephants and talking about the personal revelation the Great Crimson Pachyderm revealed to you. Surely this calls into question the truth value of each of the thousands of practiced religions in the history of humanity. Because of this, any specific theism is worse off than neutral in terms of truth value. "You can't disprove it" is not a strong enough defense. It must be proven, and none of them have, admittedly by you because they cannot be proven. I am an atheist not because I know there is no god. I am an atheist because no theistic claims have yet been proven and the lack of a personal god that cares about humanity is consistent with reality as we observe it.
3/30/2011 12:02:39 AM
3/30/2011 2:15:50 AM
3/30/2011 9:02:01 AM
3/30/2011 9:11:37 AM
3/30/2011 1:35:38 PM
3/30/2011 2:13:18 PM
3/30/2011 2:35:54 PM
3/30/2011 2:50:04 PM
3/30/2011 2:55:31 PM
waiting for a specific theistic claim....
3/30/2011 3:13:05 PM
3/30/2011 3:20:12 PM
Ok, I concede that I don't have a video feed of the entirely of the history of the earth. What I do have are:-an unfathomable amount of human and animal suffering-no collaborating evidence for the resurrection of Jesus, nor the prophet status of Mohammed.-overwhelming evidence for the existence of humanity predating Jesus and Mohammed for 2M years.-strong evidence for claims of Jesus and Mohammed being adapted from previous religious traditions.-10000 other practiced religions which have no more or less evidence than either of these claims.I admit that this doesn't mean that I can say with 100% certainty that jesus was not resurrected, but what I can say is that the evidence strongly suggests that he wasn't to the point that believing that he was is not consistent with the evidence.
3/30/2011 3:39:12 PM
3/30/2011 3:55:47 PM
Who says arguments cannot be used as evidence against a claim? Even a statement of fact is ostensibly an argument (as evidenced by Grumpy's aside above).
3/30/2011 4:05:31 PM
This is dumb. No one can win this debate.
3/30/2011 5:06:19 PM
don't forget to actually watch the debate guyz I'll probably miss it, so I'm hoping they put up a video right quick
3/30/2011 5:09:07 PM
"Watch Live" looks like you're only going to see slides. Hopefully it turns into video.
3/30/2011 6:09:23 PM
1. Contingent beings existing is more probable in a Universe with a God than without. Nuh-uh.2. The Universe had a beginning. Ok, so what? Transcendent cause of the universe most plausibly defined as God? Why?3. Fine-tuning. Anthropic principle.4. Moral Objectivity if exists must come from God. Prove moral objectivity independent of human reason exists first.5. Resurrection of Jesus. Most biblical scholars believe that the story of Jesus was accurate. You don't say...[Edited on March 30, 2011 at 8:55 PM. Reason : .]
3/30/2011 8:40:52 PM
3/30/2011 8:54:28 PM
I'm sorry but you're wrong. Sound arguments are fine supporting evidence for a claim. Every single bit of Dr. Craig's "evidence" were logical arguments.
3/30/2011 9:03:46 PM
There is no evidence against the existence of unicorns. Should we bother considering that they might exist?
3/30/2011 9:05:18 PM
3/30/2011 9:10:59 PM
3/30/2011 9:11:46 PM