Fanman wrote: ↑October 7th, 2023, 12:19 pm
Pattern-chaser,
In this case, the argument justifies (or not) the act of rejection. So the lack of evidence results in the lack of a premise. To reject the idea, we need sufficient reason, but we have none.
I think the lack of evidence provides sufficient reason to reject the idea. And can be premise.
The 'argument' that leads to the rejection of <an idea for which there is no evidence> has no premises; it has nothing but a conclusion. This is not a logically-valid argument. It is more commonly known as an 'unfounded assertion'.
I’m not sure about that. Let’s look at the argument as a syllogism.
Premise 1. God’s existence is a maybe - because His existence cannot be proved or disproved.
You don't know what "God" is, so it is not unreasonable for you to state that his existence can not be proved or disproved. The most valid explanation for "God" is that he is an interpretation of an interpretation of a dream, which would be difficult to prove. On the other hand, that "dream" has been dreamt by people in all cultures around the world since before recorded history, which lends credence to it's validity.
Fanman wrote: ↑October 7th, 2023, 12:19 pm
Premise 2. There is no objective evidence for God’s existence - The evidence purporting His existence is anecdotal.
This is a crock. According to this, consciousness is not real because the evidence for it is "anecdotal". You are confusing anecdotal evidence with scientific evidence.
Fanman wrote: ↑October 7th, 2023, 12:19 pm
Conclusion. Since there is no objective evidence for God’s existence. And I do not believe the anecdotal evidence is strong enough. I reject the claim that God exists.
Your conclusion is invalid because your premises are invalid.
Fanman wrote: ↑October 7th, 2023, 12:19 pm
On the face of it, this syllogism doesn’t strike me as not logically valid. What are your thoughts?
My thoughts are that, since the "God" idea originates in the unconscious aspect of mind, you would have to have some idea of the logic in the unconscious in order to make any kind of valid statement. Is the logic in the unconscious that much different than the logic in the rational mind? Yep. For one thing, time is irrelevant to the unconscious, which throws a lot of rational logic out the window. If you throw out time, then if Ruth is Mary's mother, then Mary is Ruth's mother, because without time, the unconscious would only recognize the relationship of mother and daughter without direction. Weird.
The unusual logic in the unconscious that applies to the "God" idea is that "the part represents the whole". If you eat an apple (the part) and like it, you will assume that all apples (the whole) are good. If your mother was kind and protective (the part), you will be shocked to learn that another mother (part of the whole) murdered her baby. This "part representing the whole" idea is instinctive and originates in the unconscious -- probably of all species. Since each of us is conscious (the parts), then we represent the whole of consciousness, "God". So "God" would look like us, talk in our language, dress like us, and be part of our culture. This is why the various "Gods" around the world reflect the cultures that they represent. My Great-Aunt painted an oil of the Open Heart of Jesus in her late teens or early twenties, which would be around 1910, and she painted him as a Caucasian blue-eyed blond. I have seen portraits of Jesus in Mexico where he looks darkly Spanish; everywhere he is painted, he picks up the hair styles, clothing, and features of the culture that made the representation of him. I would not be surprised to find paintings of him in the Orient that have slanted eyes, and we
know what his heritage is.
So when people argue, which "God" are you referring to, I state that they are all the same God. The differences between them are cultural and superficial, but the core of each is the same. You can not base any logical conclusions on the superficial, only the core ideas can give us any truth.
Lucky wrote:A perfectly reasonable conclusion concerning an unprovable situation.
Reasonable yes; logical no.
PC wrote:My first thought is that your two 'premises' follow from one another, as though they comprise one declaration separated into two parts, perhaps artificially. It seems to me that "God's existence is a maybe" because "There is no objective evidence for God’s existence". If this is the case, then your argument offers only one premise, and I don't think (?) a conclusion can be correctly and logically deduced from a single premise.
Note the bolded text above. (My bolding) This is an example of the "logic" that I have found throughout this thread. It accepts evidence that is accepted by science and denies all other evidence. This is why I stated earlier that PC sees science as being the beginning and end of knowledge, because nothing can really be known unless validated by science -- in his opinion. I do not agree. We have
three disciplines that search for knowledge, science, philosophy, and religion.
Gee