Mae von H wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 12:48 am
fredonly wrote: ↑Thu Mar 07, 2024 7:37 pm
Mae von H wrote: ↑Thu Mar 07, 2024 11:48 am
Its difficult when you purposely ignore explanations and accept a “we have no idea how” as an explanation.
"We have no idea how" is true for both hypotheses. You don't seem to understand the difference between metaphysical analysis and scientific analysis.
Shall I, too, attack you personally as atheists do? I repeatedly said we DO know how God created life. Why is this so difficult for you to read and remember?
You’re claim that “we” know how God created life is your personal belief. That’s false if “we” is meant to include
me. My personal belief is that there is no God.
I listed 2 objective facts that both of us should be able to accept:
1. earth was devoid of life for millions of years.
2. Subsequently, life existed on earth.
Then I proposed two metaphysical hypotheses that account for both facts:
1. nature did it, but we don’t know how
2. God did it, but we don’t know how
Hypothesis 1 follows from the premise God does not exist; Hypothesis 2 follows from the premise that God exists. You claim "we know how" - but that depends on an additional premise: that God revealed truths about the natural history of the world to some author, a few thousand years ago. I’ll revise the hypotheses to accommodate your belief:
1) nature did it, but we don’t know how
2) God did it
• a. But we don’t know how
• b. And the Bible tells us how
And you obviously embrace 2b. Yes, 2b isn’t parallel to Hypothesis 1, but this is only because you’ve added that 2nd premise.
We only know how life began if it is assumed a God exists and that he revealed truths about the natural history of the world to some author, a few thousand years ago. Try to understand that I don’t believe a God exists. Adding that second premise (which still depends on the premise God exists) doesn't undercut Hypothesis 1, nor does it imply God's existence is any more likely.
You can, of course, choose nature but it’s a faith choice. There is no science behind you.
My belief in metaphysical naturalism is an Inference to Best Explanation. Everything in the world is natural; there's no direct evidence of a supernatural; science has been wildly successful. It's not "faith" to believe something that is rationally justified.
My belief in abiogenesis is, indeed, not based on scientific proof. But it IS entailed by metaphysical naturalism.