CCC comments on Is Spirituality Irrational? - Less Wrong

5 Post author: lisper 09 February 2016 01:42AM

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Comment author: CCC 19 February 2016 07:10:48AM 0 points [-]

It was supposed to be ambiguous, that's the whole point.

Quite, yes. The thought experiment was that I saw what looked like a tree on the other side of the canyon. It could be a tree, it could be a mirage - my sight is telling me it's a tree, but there are a lot of blind people around who are telling me there's no such thing as trees, and I have no evidence beyond that of my sight.

It's a really good analogy, and I like it very much.

Yes, if God wanted to prove Her existence She certainly could. But the theory is that She chooses to remain hidden because She wants us to make up our own minds about whether or not to believe.

Well - we know that She (male pronouns are often used, but I'm pretty sure God is genderless) chooses to remain hidden - currently, at least. (Interestingly, if one looks at certain parts of the Old Testament - particularly much of Exodus - it seems that God wasn't always so cagey. Parting the Red Sea and dropping it on Pharoah's army was hardly a subtle miracle. And then there was the manna in the desert...)

But whether that's because She wants us to make up our own minds about whether or not to believe or for some other reason, I can't really offer an opinion on. It's possible that She'd be willing to cooperate in an experiment if we could find the right experiment, for whatever reason - but it's also possible, given current behaviour, that God will simply refuse to cooperate with any experiment intended to prove Her existence beyond doubt...

Comment author: lisper 19 February 2016 05:38:19PM 2 points [-]

It's a really good analogy, and I like it very much.

Thank you! You just made my day.

Parting the Red Sea and dropping it on Pharoah's army was hardly a subtle miracle.

Yeah, but those good old days are apparently behind us. It's a shame that God didn't think to make a video. Now that would have been cool!

it's also possible, given current behaviour, that God will simply refuse to cooperate with any experiment intended to prove Her existence beyond doubt...

One of the things that I've often heard Christians say is, "God could do X and Y and Z (because He (they never refer to God as She) is omnipotent) but He chooses not to." The idea of an omnipotent deity whose behavior is reliably predictable by mere mortals has always struck me as logically incoherent. But what do I know? ;-)

Comment author: CCC 22 February 2016 08:36:14AM 0 points [-]

Yeah, but those good old days are apparently behind us. It's a shame that God didn't think to make a video. Now that would have been cool!

It would have, yes!

...probably wouldn't have survived long enough to be usable in modern video players, though. I don't think there's many physical media that can manage a few thousand years in the desert, short of a miracle.

One of the things that I've often heard Christians say is, "God could do X and Y and Z (because He (they never refer to God as She) is omnipotent) but He chooses not to." The idea of an omnipotent deity whose behavior is reliably predictable by mere mortals has always struck me as logically incoherent. But what do I know? ;-)

Well, the argument goes that "God could do X and Y and Z, and no other force could prevent God from doing X and Y and Z, because omnipotence. Yet I observe that X and Y and Z are not, in fact, done. Assuming that my observations are not in error, this means that X and Y and Z were not done; I know that the only reason why God might not do X and Y and Z is by choosing not to, since no force can stop God. Therefore, God must have chosen not to do X and Y and Z."

So it's not really prediction as much as it is observation (and fitting those observations into existing ideas about reality).

Comment author: lisper 22 February 2016 03:51:23PM 3 points [-]

I don't think there's many physical media that can manage a few thousand years in the desert, short of a miracle.

The desert is actually quite good at preserving all manner of things. But this is neither here nor there. If God had wanted a video of the parting of the Red Sea so survive to modern times He could surely have arranged it because, well, that's kind of what it means to be omnipotent.

So it's not really prediction

No, it really is prediction: God will never again reveal Himself unambiguously the way he once did. He will forever be the god of the gaps, hiding in the fringes of statistical distributions and the private subjective experiences of believers.

Comment author: Lumifer 22 February 2016 03:56:44PM 2 points [-]

God will never again reveal Himself unambiguously the way he once did. He will forever be the god of the gaps

For a mere mortal you seem to be very sure of what God will or will not ever do.

Comment author: lisper 22 February 2016 10:48:31PM 0 points [-]

I am indeed quite confident in my prediction that God will never again make the sun stand still. I'm a little surprised that anyone here on LW would find this remarkable.

Comment author: Lumifer 23 February 2016 02:37:42AM 2 points [-]

I am indeed quite confident in my prediction that God will never again make the sun stand still.

On the basis of what? (no, I'm not asking you to quote me the appropriate chapter and verse)

There is an old theological debate about constraints on God. Is He really omnipotent, literally, or there are things He is unable to do? I don't think this debate has a satisfactory resolution.

Why are you surprised about finding this attitude on LW?

Comment author: lisper 23 February 2016 02:59:13AM 1 point [-]

On the basis of what?

Um... physics?

I don't think this debate has a satisfactory resolution.

Really? If you are willing to seriously entertain the possibility that the answer could be "no", why is that not a satisfactory resolution? It seems to me to be consistent with all the data.

Why are you surprised about finding this attitude on LW?

I guess I'm surprised to find religious people here. Pleasantly surprised, but surprised nonetheless. I've never understood how anyone can maintain faith in the face of rational scrutiny. Maybe someone here will be able explain it to me.

Comment author: Lumifer 23 February 2016 03:12:15AM *  0 points [-]

Um... physics?

God is not constrained by physics, is He?

consistent with all the data

Which data?

I guess I'm surprised to find religious people here.

I am not religious.

how anyone can maintain faith in the face of rational scrutiny.

One obvious answer is reliance on personal experience.

Comment author: lisper 23 February 2016 06:44:53AM 2 points [-]

God is not constrained by physics, is He?

I'm pretty sure He is.

Which data?

Oh my goodness, where to begin? How about here.

I am not religious.

I didn't say you were.

One obvious answer is reliance on personal experience.

That's usually a mistake.