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- Newsgroups: alt.atheism
- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!warwick!dcs.warwick.ac.uk!simon
- From: simon@dcs.warwick.ac.uk (Simon Clippingdale)
- Subject: Re: Monitored by islam (repost)
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.151705.17699@dcs.warwick.ac.uk>
- Sender: news@dcs.warwick.ac.uk (Network News)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: nin
- Organization: Department of Computer Science, Warwick University, England
- References: <1992Dec9.080120.28144@monu6.cc.monash.edu.au> <1992Dec11.050237.25167@jcnpc.cmhnet.org> <1992Dec21.041507.8630@monu6.cc.monash.edu.au>
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 15:17:05 GMT
- Lines: 105
-
- In article <1992Dec21.041507.8630@monu6.cc.monash.edu.au> darice@yoyo.cc.monash.edu.au (Fred Rice) writes:
- >In <1992Dec11.050237.25167@jcnpc.cmhnet.org> mam@jcnpc.cmhnet.org (Mike A. McAngus) writes:
- >> To paraphrase a certain prince regent, you must think I'm as thick as a whale
- >> omelette. To be an atheist I require that god continue to not reveal hirself
- >> to me. My atheism stems from a total lack of empirical evidence for the
- >> existence of god. This is no more a "_belief_" than is the ever popular
- >> aipuism that so many on this newsgroup espouse.
-
- > Just because you have no evidence that God exists does not mean that God
- > then necessarily *does not* exist. Of course, this is the argument
- > agaist strong atheism rather than weak atheism (against which I have no
- > argument).
- >
- > If any sort of theism is an unjustified belief, then so is strong
- > atheism. That was what my point was originally, though expressed
- > perhaps in a less clear way.
-
-
- I've tried to condense the words and add some pictures, since much of this
- will be familiar to those who waded through the Agnosticism Response thread
- recently.
-
- The strong atheist position *is* supported by objective evidence, unlike the
- theistic position/s. That evidence is the continuing objective non-appearance
- of gods. So how come this is evidence *for* atheism rather than just a lack of
- evidence for any theism? Because a specific prediction of the atheist
- hypothesis is that events will continue to fall only within a delineated
- region of `event space', namely no gods will appear. Continued non-appearance
- `events' fall in the region specifically predicted by atheism, and Bayesian
- statistics indicate that this must cause estimates of the correctness of
- atheism to increase relative to those hypotheses which less tightly constrain
- the event space, including those theisms which do not constrain it at all
- and are thus unfalsifiable (every point in event space, divine non-appearance
- included, is consistent with such theisms).
-
- Rather than take a thousand words:
-
- ...-----------------------------------------------------------... C
-
- |-----------------------------------------------| B
-
- |---------------| A
-
- Here are the regions of a 1-D event space consistent respectively with each
- of three hypotheses A, B and C. C is unfalsifiable (but see `Aside' below)
- because an event anywhere on the space is consistent with it. Now here come
- the observations:
-
- ... .... ... ..
- . .. ... . ..
- ... .. . ....
- ... ... ... .
- ... .... ... ..
- .. . .. .. ..
- ..... .. . ..
- ... .. . ....
- . .. .. ... ...
- ... .... . .. .
- . ... .... ....
- .. ..... ..
- ... .... ... ..
- . .. .. ... ...
- ... .. . ....
- ... .... ... ..
- . ... ... .. .
- .. ... ... ....
- . .. .. ... ...
- ... .. . ....
-
- etcetera
-
- While these observations are consistent with all three hypotheses, and thus
- do not falsify any of them, nevertheless they better support hypothesis B than
- C, and in turn they better support hypothesis A than B. After a large number
- of observations in the same region and none outside, the probability that
- hypothesis A in this example is correct approaches unity. [Aside: B and C
- are thus falsified in the limit, even though C is unfalsifiable in a finite
- number of observations.]
-
- But it's up to the individual to make such estimates (although perhaps not
- in quite the mechanistic numerical fashion of Bayesian analysis) and to draw
- conclusions. If s/he decides that it's close enough to label as an empirical
- certainty, much as the existence of gravitational attraction is an empirical
- certainty for most of us, and if hypothesis A represents atheism, then the
- individual is a strong atheist as opposed to weak. I fall into this category
- and for those reasons.
-
- The *evidence* for atheism is just that, and is evidence for neither the
- strong nor the weak version per se, these being merely descriptions of the
- individual's level of confidence in empirical conclusions.
-
- > Fred Rice
- > darice@yoyo.cc.monash.edu.au
-
- Cheers
-
- Simon
-
- The Truth is still the Truth even if you choose to ignore it. Discuss.
-
- --
- Simon Clippingdale simon@dcs.warwick.ac.uk
- Department of Computer Science Tel (+44) 203 523296
- University of Warwick FAX (+44) 203 525714
- Coventry CV4 7AL, U.K.
-