Raithere
(but as a side point, not even competency based assessment makes for seamless discussion - there are still issues of contention, so it would be foolish to expect unanimously voiced discourse on all subjects on all levels)
to get back to the OP, claiming that there is no proof for god because there is no empirical evidence for it is absurd. My point about knowledge is that it crosses a certain threshold and it becomes distinct (like for instance knowing that something is a human is quite a step up from knowing the sum parts of a human) - and I use the example of an ant trying to surmise that a forearm belongs to a human to suggest the impossibility of that ever being bridged within the limited horizons of empiricismOriginally Posted by lightgigantic
or you are being seriously obtuse – I mean even straight and simple empiricism runs into a few pitfalls if it is incomplete of a few essentials ....
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Okay, I'll make the point again. Complete knowledge is not necessary. In fact, complete knowledge seems to be an actual impossibility. I never said "an ant could know just as much about human affairs", an ant does not need to know anything about human affairs to understand that humans exist and have an effect upon its world.
Actually, I find your statements quite strange, are you actually asserting that we can ever know everything about God using any method? That's quite a boast.
what is the first step in becoming devotional to god?“
then perhaps you won’t mind if we test your experience, yes?
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Sure.
actually its the opposite - the more rigidly one insists on impersonal definitions of god, the less capable such definitions are able to house issues of omni-benevolence etc“
For some reason however you feel that there is no issue of normative descriptions in theistic comprehension
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Quite the contrary actually. Of course, there is the problem that definition limits the subject. So the more we define god, the smaller he gets.
I agree with you in one sense - and I think that is due to a lot of misinformation being bandied about - kind of like what you could imagine discourses in medicine were like before medical practice became subject to competency based assessmentBut the problem, from my perspective anyway, is that theists can't seem to agree upon anything. Each group claims the other is wrong, even within groups there is significant dissent.
(but as a side point, not even competency based assessment makes for seamless discussion - there are still issues of contention, so it would be foolish to expect unanimously voiced discourse on all subjects on all levels)