What I am saying is that the definition is incorrect. I am a philosophy major, I have studied this. God is something that is almost impossible to define (I doubt it will ever be correctly defined)
Again, this was the definition:
1 capitalized : the supreme or ultimate reality: as a : the Being perfect in power, wisdom, and goodness who is worshiped as creator and ruler of the universe b
I insist on changing the language because the definition of god does not fit everything. This takes the very meaning out of the definition. I will draw an analogy for you. In science you want a theory that works with all existing phenomena, if it starts to disagree with what we know to be true, we either correct the theory using minor adjustments or we throw it away. That is what we need to do with the definition. Since the definition of god that was given does not really fit all conceptions of god, we should work on it or throw it away. I do not have any replacements for it, so do not ask me for advice. Scholars have been debating this recently, with the definition of religion. Many scholars feel that the word religion should just be thrown away, because it was a western bias that cannot fit around many eastern religions.
So, if you look at the definition you see that it is flawed because it specifically looks past eastern conceptions of god. This is why we cannot use this definition. This forum is "The belief in God is unreasonable" not "the belief in a western god is unreasonable."
Also,
You misinterpreted my use of the word conceptions.
Yes, concept is defined as:
1 : something conceived in the mind : THOUGHT, NOTION
I was talking about the different notions of god (conceptions).
I am sorry if I was not clear enough.
Now let us get to the threat statement.
The belief in God is unreasonable. Now, what I am saying that while certain gods are unreasonable, certain types (or people`s conceptions) of gods are not.
I use my earlier example of Gawd. I cannot find any logical refutation to show that it does not exist. This forum started of with "The belief in God is unreasonable," then I challenged this claim. I should not be the one with the burden of proof. However, I still offered up an example for people to pick at with logic. This has not been done, but if it was shown to be invalid, then I would have to think twice.
Now, to your point.
______________________________________________
The existence of a god (or "Gawd" if you prefer) cannot be proven or disproven. Therefore it is unreasonable (illogical) to believe in god. Address that point specifically if you can.
______________________________________________
Now, I will define logic.
1 a (1) : a science that deals with the principles and criteria of validity of inference and demonstration : the science of the formal principles of reasoning
There is nothing in logic that says if something has not been proven, you cannot believe in it. Logic does not say that if it cannot be proven or disproven, it is illogical. To be illogical it means that it does not observe the rules of logic (again m-w.com), or devoid of logic. If you can find a rule of logic that says this, I will admit defeat freely, but I have found none.
- Phaedrus
Again, this was the definition:
1 capitalized : the supreme or ultimate reality: as a : the Being perfect in power, wisdom, and goodness who is worshiped as creator and ruler of the universe b
I insist on changing the language because the definition of god does not fit everything. This takes the very meaning out of the definition. I will draw an analogy for you. In science you want a theory that works with all existing phenomena, if it starts to disagree with what we know to be true, we either correct the theory using minor adjustments or we throw it away. That is what we need to do with the definition. Since the definition of god that was given does not really fit all conceptions of god, we should work on it or throw it away. I do not have any replacements for it, so do not ask me for advice. Scholars have been debating this recently, with the definition of religion. Many scholars feel that the word religion should just be thrown away, because it was a western bias that cannot fit around many eastern religions.
So, if you look at the definition you see that it is flawed because it specifically looks past eastern conceptions of god. This is why we cannot use this definition. This forum is "The belief in God is unreasonable" not "the belief in a western god is unreasonable."
Also,
You misinterpreted my use of the word conceptions.
Yes, concept is defined as:
1 : something conceived in the mind : THOUGHT, NOTION
I was talking about the different notions of god (conceptions).
I am sorry if I was not clear enough.
Now let us get to the threat statement.
The belief in God is unreasonable. Now, what I am saying that while certain gods are unreasonable, certain types (or people`s conceptions) of gods are not.
I use my earlier example of Gawd. I cannot find any logical refutation to show that it does not exist. This forum started of with "The belief in God is unreasonable," then I challenged this claim. I should not be the one with the burden of proof. However, I still offered up an example for people to pick at with logic. This has not been done, but if it was shown to be invalid, then I would have to think twice.
Now, to your point.
______________________________________________
The existence of a god (or "Gawd" if you prefer) cannot be proven or disproven. Therefore it is unreasonable (illogical) to believe in god. Address that point specifically if you can.
______________________________________________
Now, I will define logic.
1 a (1) : a science that deals with the principles and criteria of validity of inference and demonstration : the science of the formal principles of reasoning
There is nothing in logic that says if something has not been proven, you cannot believe in it. Logic does not say that if it cannot be proven or disproven, it is illogical. To be illogical it means that it does not observe the rules of logic (again m-w.com), or devoid of logic. If you can find a rule of logic that says this, I will admit defeat freely, but I have found none.
- Phaedrus