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Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
Yes, I do. That's what is meant by calling a claim "extraordinary": that no amount of evidence for it will be considered sufficient. It's an excuse for dismissal.
Originally posted by Bob LaoTse
Absolutely-- I am agnostic. So, for that matter, is everyone else-- I simply admit to my lack of knowledge.
Originally posted by Bob LaoTse
Your assertion seems to be that anyone who is not at the position "Yes" is atheist. That the only choices are to believe (Yes) and to "not believe" (everything other than "Yes," including but not limited to "No.")
Originally posted by spamandham
If gods are irrelevent to the way you live your life, you're an atheist my friend regardless of what your intellect claims. On the other hand, if you modify your behavior to fit some conception of gods you may have, then you're a believer.
Originally posted by spamandham
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
Yes, I do. That's what is meant by calling a claim "extraordinary": that no amount of evidence for it will be considered sufficient. It's an excuse for dismissal.
Not true. Calling a claim extraordinary only means that extraordinary evidence will be required to overcome the default position of "false".
For those who might claim such visitations are impossible, well, then I would agree with your conclusion. I'm certainly not making a claim like that.
Further, if you listen to those who promote your position
you will find that "the experts" claim it is within your power to prevent yourself from being abducted. By fighting back? Shooting them? Persuading them? No, the answer lies in psychological conditioning. If people are being abducted, they are not being abducted physically, but rather, their minds are being hijacked
which then makes the sex experiments that much more bizarre
Originally posted by spamandham
If gods are irrelevent to the way you live your life, you're an atheist my friend regardless of what your intellect claims. On the other hand, if you modify your behavior to fit some conception of gods you may have, then you're a believer.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
What you're not considering here is WHY "false" is the default position,
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
and also WHY the evidence in favor of "true" must, in some people's evaluation, be "extraordinary." It has nothing to do with the evidence itself, but rather with how deeply the phenomenon in consideration challenges the person's entrenched world view.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
It's the same with investigations of UFOs, psychic powers, ghosts, or anything else that is incompatible with the classical materialist worldview, by skeptics entrenched in that worldview.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
Which, of course, it is -- but that also means that classical materialism is false, and that philosophical bridge has not been crossed by many.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
Actually, I think you do believe them impossible.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
The only dog I have in that hunt is that I would like to see classical materialism die the death it should have in the last century.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
One rather off-the-wall idea I've had about that involves the collection of genetic material for use in genetic engineering. An advanced species might (actually, almost certainly would) be one that manages its own evolution, and genes from other intelligent species might be valuable for that purpose.
Originally posted by Bob LaoTse
There's no requirement, despite the teachings of some of the more familiar religions, that "god(s)" would have the least interest in how I live my life,
Originally posted by Bob LaoTse
Despite your (and Obscure's) apparently increasingly desperate need to paint this as a monochromatic issue, it simply is not one. That's been at the heart of my point all along.
Originally posted by spamandham
What you call "worldview", I call experience. The claims are considered extraordinary because skeptics don't witness these things.
Numerous attempts to measure them have been made, and they invariably turn up to have ordinary explanations.
The areas of psychic phenomenon as well as alien visitation are rampant with fraud and charletans.
Instead of trying to explain why no-one else can find any evidence, you should be looking for a way to provide it!
80%+ of people in the West believe in some form of supernatural.
Whether you agree philosophically with naturalism or not, you must at least acknowledge the benefits you have reaped from it.
Is it realistic to presume life on other planets would evolve in exactly the same way as on earth so that they not only have DNA (which seems far fetched), but even compatible DNA?
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
No. They are considered extraordinary because they violate the skeptics' worldview. For that reason and no other.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
No, the research into these areas is rejected on grounds that would not be used to reject research into other areas.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
It's as I said, these are subjects no classical materialist is capable of investigating objectively.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
True, but irrelevant. You have already acknowledged that the alien visitation phenomenon cannot all be charlatanry and fraud. That is also true of the other.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
Skeptical investigation also has its share of fraud and charlatanry. As Exhibit A, I give you James Randi.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
First of all, that's backwards. As long as a claim is regarded as "extraordinary," it is pointless to try to prove it; no proof will be considered sufficient.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
Secondly, that is not my job, and others have already done it.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
I am talking about classical materialism, not "naturalism." Classical materialism is the belief, not only that reality is material, but that the nature of material reality is what common sense, ordinary perception, and Newtonian physics would suggest.
Originally posted by Two Steps Forward
I think so. A completely different chemical schema for life is imaginable, but we know this one works, and it's not unreasonable to suppose similar conditions to give rise to a similar means of transmitting reproductive information.
Originally posted by spamandham
Originally posted by Bob LaoTse
There's no requirement, despite the teachings of some of the more familiar religions, that "god(s)" would have the least interest in how I live my life,
If you believe that, then why do you concern yourself with the topic at all?
Originally posted by Bob LaoTse
Despite your (and Obscure's) apparently increasingly desperate need to paint this as a monochromatic issue, it simply is not one. That's been at the heart of my point all along.
This is a real dichotemy, not a trumped up one if you believe what research tells us about the way the mind works. I agree that it is possible to be agnostic from an intellectual perspective, but not from a practical one.
Originally posted by Bob LaoTse
I do however concern myself with the specific subject of the attacks by atheists on all who don't believe as they do for the same reason that others might concern themselves with attacks from Muslims or Catholics or any of a number of belief systems-- because I believe that their antagonism is ultimately harmful.
Originally posted by Bob LaoTse
I would say that that simply reinforces my point and begs the question, why do you (and Obscure) concern yourselves with the topic, even to the point of insulting a stranger on a message board?
Originally posted by Bob LaoTse
How in the world can it be "impossible" to simply accept that one does not know that which one does not know?