Burden of proof
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Burden of proof
Post #1Atheists/Agnostics generally claim that the burden of proof is upon the religious, particularly the Christian religious. If you ask them to disprove the Resurrection of Christ, the flood, etc., they remind you that you have the burden of proof, not them, so it's up to you to prove it, not them to disprove it. But to me, the burden of proof is generally on those who provide new ideas/theories that are against the establishment. Christianity was the establishment for round abouts 1700 years, and then all of a sudden the Atheists show up during the enlightenment with their wild new ideas and theories, and have the audacity to say Christians have the burden of proof. Please explain to me how this is possible. It is the atheistic ideas that are much more recent. You must provide ample evidence for your claims.
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Post #131
The extreme paucity of evidence would be a very good reason to postpone such consideration, as would the impossibility of reaching a conclusion.EduChris wrote:There is no need to postpone consideration of personal agency at the root of all human existence.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...There is no analogous need to consider the existence of God. If you don't contemplate it, you go about living your life as normal. If you do contemplate it, you will never come to a definitive conclusion...
What do you mean by "a more enlightened framework for human existence"? Would Christianity be an example of such a framework? What frameworks do you have in mind that are more "enlightened" than agnostic atheism? I wonder whether you can show your ideas of what counts as "enlightened" or what counts as "lesser concerns" are anything more than personal taste.EduChris wrote:If you do not contemplate it, you will remain mired in a state of passive apathy toward ultimate concerns (or you will fill your life with lesser concerns) and you will never arrive at a more enlightened working framework for human existence.
If I do not take the time to contemplate the imminent invasion of earth by hostile space aliens, I am also filling my life with "lesser concerns." But while an alien invasion might be characterized as an extremely important event far outweighing any of my daily concerns, we rationally need some reason to consider it in the first place. It is fallacious to appeal to the consequences of God's existence as a reason for jumping to conclusions in lieu of evidence.
We are also pleasure-seeking, pleasure-finding, pleasure-making creatures. By your reasoning, should we also pursue the highest possible pleasures by any means available? That we are biologically motivated to find meaning is not a rational reason to pursue it beyond where the evidence takes us. If anything it should caution us - we are so good at finding meaning that we often find it where it does not exist (pareidolia).EduChris wrote:We are meaning-seeking, meaning-finding, meaning-making creatures. That is our common lot, though some people are more drawn to this pursuit than others. Given that God is the highest possible source of ultimate meaning, it is reasonable for people to pursue God via whatever means available, even if we cannot ever find certainty in this life.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...The detective must solve the mystery, the hungry person must eat. These examples are not analogous to the existence of God, because these examples have outside pressures exerted upon the situation forcing action to be taken on insufficient evidence...
We humans are able to recognize and resist our various urges if we so choose. The detective must do her job, the hungry man must eat - thus these are false analogies.
This is false. The burden of proof is only held by the person making a positive assertion. "God may or may not exist" is not a positive assertion and bears no burden of proof - it is simply an acknowledgement of the full spectrum of possible answers to a particular question. Agnostic atheism is the default position, makes no positive assertions, and as a result holds no burden of proof.EduChris wrote:And anyone who claims that theism need not be true also has the burden of proof.Star wrote:...Anyone claiming that god exists or doesn't exist has the burden of proof...
It seems to me that the position of complete, abject, apathetic ignorance is the one which entails no burden of proof. But only the comatose can qualify for such a condition, and the comatose don't generally participate on Internet forums such as this.
That means that those of us who participate on this forum do have an obligation to defend their positions.
Post #132
There is an abundance of evidence--viz, our universe and our selves. And I (not to mention theists generally) believe that one conclusion is more rational than any other candidate yet proposed. If you feel differently--so what? You have nothing better to offer, and so I need not be bothered that you choose to bow out of the debate.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...The extreme paucity of evidence would be a very good reason to postpone such consideration, as would the impossibility of reaching a conclusion...
I used "enlightened" in the sense of more educated, more critically aware of the available options.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...What do you mean by "a more enlightened framework...wonder whether you can show your ideas of what counts as "enlightened" or what counts as "lesser concerns" are anything more than personal taste...
"God may or may not exist" is simply a roundabout way of making the positive assertion that "Theism need not be the case." As such, and whichever way you phrase the statement, this positive claim must be defended (in debate) via rational argument.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...The burden of proof is only held by the person making a positive assertion. "God may or may not exist" is not a positive assertion and bears no burden of proof...
I am a work in process; I do not claim absolute knowledge or absolute certainty; I simply present the best working hypothesis I have at the moment, always pending new information and further insight.
α β γ δ ε ζ η θ ι κ λ μ ν ξ ο π � σ ς τ υ φ χ ψ ω - Α Β Γ Δ Ε Ζ Η Θ Ι Κ Λ Μ � Ξ Ο ΠΡ Σ Τ Υ Φ Χ Ψ Ω
α β γ δ ε ζ η θ ι κ λ μ ν ξ ο π � σ ς τ υ φ χ ψ ω - Α Β Γ Δ Ε Ζ Η Θ Ι Κ Λ Μ � Ξ Ο ΠΡ Σ Τ Υ Φ Χ Ψ Ω
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Post #133
The issue, again, is that even if one conclusion appears more rational than any other, this does not mean it is rational to jump to it. The burden of proof must still be met for us to prefer one conclusion or the other over the default position of agnostic atheism.EduChris wrote:There is an abundance of evidence--viz, our universe and our selves. And I (not to mention theists generally) believe that one conclusion is more rational than any other candidate yet proposed. If you feel differently--so what? You have nothing better to offer, and so I need not be bothered that you choose to bow out of the debate.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...The extreme paucity of evidence would be a very good reason to postpone such consideration, as would the impossibility of reaching a conclusion...
In what way do you believe theism to be more educated and critically aware of the available options than agnostic atheism?EduChris wrote:I used "enlightened" in the sense of more educated, more critically aware of the available options.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...What do you mean by "a more enlightened framework...wonder whether you can show your ideas of what counts as "enlightened" or what counts as "lesser concerns" are anything more than personal taste...
I asked you for an example of a "more enlightened framework" than agnostic atheism - do you have one in mind or not?
"Theism need not be the case" is not a positive assertion, as it is the equivalent of saying "God may or may not exist." It is not a positive assertion to acknowledge all the possible answers to a particular question. For example, take this question: is it going to rain tomorrow? "It is going to rain tomorrow" is a positive assertion that bears the burden of proof. "It is not going to rain tomorrow" is a positive assertion that bears the burden of proof. "It might rain tomorrow and it might not rain tomorrow" is not a positive assertion, it is an acknowledgement of all possible answers to the question. Likewise with "God might or might not exist."EduChris wrote:"God may or may not exist" is simply a roundabout way of making the positive assertion that "Theism need not be the case." As such, and whichever way you phrase the statement, this positive claim must be defended (in debate) via rational argument.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...The burden of proof is only held by the person making a positive assertion. "God may or may not exist" is not a positive assertion and bears no burden of proof...
Post #134
It is fairly easy to support the positive assertion that "hostile space aliens need not be invading." Space aliens are by definition contingent entities, and that is all you need say to rationally justify deferring consideration of them.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...If I do not take the time to contemplate the imminent invasion of earth by hostile space aliens, I am also filling my life with "lesser concerns." But while an alien invasion might be characterized as an extremely important event far outweighing any of my daily concerns, we rationally need some reason to consider it in the first place...
I make no such appeal. The pursuit of truth regarding the ultimate origin of our universe and our selves is all the reason we need.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...It is fallacious to appeal to the consequences of God's existence as a reason for jumping to conclusions in lieu of evidence...
I am a work in process; I do not claim absolute knowledge or absolute certainty; I simply present the best working hypothesis I have at the moment, always pending new information and further insight.
α β γ δ ε ζ η θ ι κ λ μ ν ξ ο π � σ ς τ υ φ χ ψ ω - Α Β Γ Δ Ε Ζ Η Θ Ι Κ Λ Μ � Ξ Ο ΠΡ Σ Τ Υ Φ Χ Ψ Ω
α β γ δ ε ζ η θ ι κ λ μ ν ξ ο π � σ ς τ υ φ χ ψ ω - Α Β Γ Δ Ε Ζ Η Θ Ι Κ Λ Μ � Ξ Ο ΠΡ Σ Τ Υ Φ Χ Ψ Ω
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Post #135
"Hostile space aliens need not be invading" is not a positive assertion. It is simply an acknowledgement of the possibility of space aliens invading or not invading. An acknowledgement that either x or not-x must be the case.EduChris wrote:It is fairly easy to support the positive assertion that "hostile space aliens need not be invading." Space aliens are by definition contingent entities, and that is all you need say to rationally justify deferring consideration of them.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...If I do not take the time to contemplate the imminent invasion of earth by hostile space aliens, I am also filling my life with "lesser concerns." But while an alien invasion might be characterized as an extremely important event far outweighing any of my daily concerns, we rationally need some reason to consider it in the first place...
"The pursuit of truth" does not give us license to jump to conclusions that are not supported by the evidence, even if the evidence is unobtainable. Such behaviour would impede our pursuit of truth by allowing us to build our worldviews on unstable foundations.EduChris wrote:I make no such appeal. The pursuit of truth regarding the ultimate origin of our universe and our selves is all the reason we need.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...It is fallacious to appeal to the consequences of God's existence as a reason for jumping to conclusions in lieu of evidence...
Post #136
Given that there are no negative consequences for tentatively adopting various frameworks, so as to test the cogency consistency and explanatory scope of that framework, there is no need to passively sit on the fence. And in any event, none of us can really sit on the fence: we implicitly adopt one framework or another as we live out our daily lives.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...even if one conclusion appears more rational than any other, this does not mean it is rational to jump to it...
Certainly I and other theists believe the burden of argument has already been adequately met. If you believe differently--so what? The "burden of argument" criteria is necessarily a subjective and personal decision.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...The burden of proof must still be met for us to prefer one conclusion or the other over the default position of agnostic atheism...
Educated theism is more critically aware than uneducated theism (or uneducated non-theism). Educated non-theism is more critically aware than uneducated non-theism (or uneducated theism). The point is, if the non-theist just sits on the fence all day, waiting for an argument to bowl him over, he's not going to learn very much--he's not going to become more critically aware of all the options.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...In what way do you believe theism to be more educated and critically aware of the available options than agnostic atheism?...
The claim that non-theism is possible is a positive assertion. How do you know it is possible? What evidence do you have?Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:..."Theism need not be the case" is not a positive assertion...It is not a positive assertion to acknowledge all the possible answers to a particular question...
We know from experience that it doesn't rain every day, and we lack the technology to predict tomorrow's weather. Therefore, "it might or might not rain tomorrow" is an accurate assessment of what we know to be true based on current technology and past experience.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...For example, take this question: is it going to rain tomorrow? "It is going to rain tomorrow" is a positive assertion that bears the burden of proof. "It is not going to rain tomorrow" is a positive assertion that bears the burden of proof. "It might rain tomorrow and it might not rain tomorrow" is not a positive assertion, it is an acknowledgement of all possible answers to the question...
We have experience in comparing days "with and without rain." We have no experience in comparing universes "with and without God." Therefore, your analogy fails.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...Likewise with "God might or might not exist."
I am a work in process; I do not claim absolute knowledge or absolute certainty; I simply present the best working hypothesis I have at the moment, always pending new information and further insight.
α β γ δ ε ζ η θ ι κ λ μ ν ξ ο π � σ ς τ υ φ χ ψ ω - Α Β Γ Δ Ε Ζ Η Θ Ι Κ Λ Μ � Ξ Ο ΠΡ Σ Τ Υ Φ Χ Ψ Ω
α β γ δ ε ζ η θ ι κ λ μ ν ξ ο π � σ ς τ υ φ χ ψ ω - Α Β Γ Δ Ε Ζ Η Θ Ι Κ Λ Μ � Ξ Ο ΠΡ Σ Τ Υ Φ Χ Ψ Ω
Post #137
The evidence is all around us. The evidence is our universe and our selves.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:..."The pursuit of truth" does not give us license to jump to conclusions that are not supported by the evidence, even if the evidence is unobtainable...
All our worldviews are necessarily tentative and unstable. Yet, we cannot do without some worldview or another. Such is the human condition.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...Such behaviour would impede our pursuit of truth by allowing us to build our worldviews on unstable foundations.
I should note that non-theism is a particularly unstable foundation, given that it undercuts the very notion of rationality itself. But that I suppose is another argument altogether.
I am a work in process; I do not claim absolute knowledge or absolute certainty; I simply present the best working hypothesis I have at the moment, always pending new information and further insight.
α β γ δ ε ζ η θ ι κ λ μ ν ξ ο π � σ ς τ υ φ χ ψ ω - Α Β Γ Δ Ε Ζ Η Θ Ι Κ Λ Μ � Ξ Ο ΠΡ Σ Τ Υ Φ Χ Ψ Ω
α β γ δ ε ζ η θ ι κ λ μ ν ξ ο π � σ ς τ υ φ χ ψ ω - Α Β Γ Δ Ε Ζ Η Θ Ι Κ Λ Μ � Ξ Ο ΠΡ Σ Τ Υ Φ Χ Ψ Ω
Post #138
No, I'll explain this one last time. The person making the claim is the person with the burden of proof. Any claims asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence. This is logic 101 which can be learned at any university.EduChris wrote:And anyone who claims that theism need not be true also has the burden of proof.Star wrote:...Anyone claiming that god exists or doesn't exist has the burden of proof...
It seems to me that the position of complete, abject, apathetic ignorance is the one which entails no burden of proof. But only the comatose can qualify for such a condition, and the comatose don't generally participate on Internet forums such as this.
That means that those of us who participate on this forum do have an obligation to defend their positions.
Post #139
What evidence do you have that theism need not be true? Non-theism is a complete non-starter unless there is some valid reason to suppose that theism need not be true. If you cannot provide evidence that theism need not be true, then (by your own admission) I can just dismiss your claim, leaving theism as the only option remaining.Star wrote:...The person making the claim is the person with the burden of proof. Any claims asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence...
I should add here that science cannot provide evidence for the assertion that theism need not be true, since science deals only with the physical, whereas theism and non-theism deal with the metaphysical.
I am a work in process; I do not claim absolute knowledge or absolute certainty; I simply present the best working hypothesis I have at the moment, always pending new information and further insight.
α β γ δ ε ζ η θ ι κ λ μ ν ξ ο π � σ ς τ υ φ χ ψ ω - Α Β Γ Δ Ε Ζ Η Θ Ι Κ Λ Μ � Ξ Ο ΠΡ Σ Τ Υ Φ Χ Ψ Ω
α β γ δ ε ζ η θ ι κ λ μ ν ξ ο π � σ ς τ υ φ χ ψ ω - Α Β Γ Δ Ε Ζ Η Θ Ι Κ Λ Μ � Ξ Ο ΠΡ Σ Τ Υ Φ Χ Ψ Ω
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Post #140
Would you not consider the potential adoption of false religious beliefs to be a negative consequence?EduChris wrote:Given that there are no negative consequences for tentatively adopting various frameworks, so as to test the cogency consistency and explanatory scope of that framework, there is no need to passively sit on the fence. And in any event, none of us can really sit on the fence: we implicitly adopt one framework or another as we live out our daily lives.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...even if one conclusion appears more rational than any other, this does not mean it is rational to jump to it...
If you believe the burden of proof for God has been met, then you will believe in God, yes.EduChris wrote:Certainly I and other theists believe the burden of argument has already been adequately met. If you believe differently--so what? The "burden of argument" criteria is necessarily a subjective and personal decision.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...The burden of proof must still be met for us to prefer one conclusion or the other over the default position of agnostic atheism...
Sure, but there is nothing about remaining at the default position of agnostic atheism that implies a lack of education or critical awareness. I would also disagree that you don't learn very much by "sitting on the fence" and listening to various arguments. To the contrary, I think disinterested observation is the ideal way to learn.EduChris wrote:Educated theism is more critically aware than uneducated theism (or uneducated non-theism). Educated non-theism is more critically aware than uneducated non-theism (or uneducated theism). The point is, if the non-theist just sits on the fence all day, waiting for an argument to bowl him over, he's not going to learn very much--he's not going to become more critically aware of all the options.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...In what way do you believe theism to be more educated and critically aware of the available options than agnostic atheism?...
It is not a positive assertion. "It could be x or it could be not-x" is not a positive assertion. Besides, since agnostic atheism is the default position, the burden of proof is on those who would argue for God's existence. To ask for evidence that "theism need not be true" is to commit the fallacy of shifting the burden of proof.EduChris wrote:The claim that non-theism is possible is a positive assertion. How do you know it is possible? What evidence do you have?Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:..."Theism need not be the case" is not a positive assertion...It is not a positive assertion to acknowledge all the possible answers to a particular question...
It is also not a positive assertion with regard to the question whether or not it is going to rain tomorrow. Right? You don't need to bring in past experience of rain in order to answer that it might or might not rain; the question already contains the assumption that we know what rain is.EduChris wrote:We know from experience that it doesn't rain every day, and we lack the technology to predict tomorrow's weather. Therefore, "it might or might not rain tomorrow" is an accurate assessment of what we know to be true based on current technology and past experience.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...For example, take this question: is it going to rain tomorrow? "It is going to rain tomorrow" is a positive assertion that bears the burden of proof. "It is not going to rain tomorrow" is a positive assertion that bears the burden of proof. "It might rain tomorrow and it might not rain tomorrow" is not a positive assertion, it is an acknowledgement of all possible answers to the question...
That's not relevant, we have no experience of whether or not it will rain tomorrow. Tomorrow hasn't happened yet. We don't know whether it will rain tomorrow, we just know that it will either rain or not rain. We likewise don't know whether or not God exists, we just know that either God exists or God doesn't exist.EduChris wrote:We have experience in comparing days "with and without rain." We have no experience in comparing universes "with and without God." Therefore, your analogy fails.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...Likewise with "God might or might not exist."
Correct. I will rephrase: even if proof is not available.EduChris wrote:The evidence is all around us. The evidence is our universe and our selves.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:..."The pursuit of truth" does not give us license to jump to conclusions that are not supported by the evidence, even if the evidence is unobtainable...
This is true. But as we build more unproven assumptions into the foundations of our worldviews, they become more problematic (Occam's razor).EduChris wrote:All our worldviews are necessarily tentative and unstable. Yet, we cannot do without some worldview or another. Such is the human condition.Fuzzy Dunlop wrote:...Such behaviour would impede our pursuit of truth by allowing us to build our worldviews on unstable foundations.
It is, and you will have to make that argument if you wish to use it as a supporting point in this discussion.EduChris wrote:I should note that non-theism is a particularly unstable foundation, given that it undercuts the very notion of rationality itself. But that I suppose is another argument altogether.