Can there be Omniscence?

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JBeukema

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Can the Mods move the appropriate posts here from 'Do Atheists believe in Logic', please?

I contend that omniscience at first appears impossible because the 'knower' could always have an infinite regress of the epistemological nature- basically, always asking the self 'How do I know that I am omniscient? How do i know that there is nothing more to know?' and so on...

However, it also seem that would you must have absolute knowledge to know absolutely that something is absolutely impossible. Thus, to 'know' that omniscience is impossible if self-contradictory, since such gnosticism would require omniscience.

Thus, while it appears impossible, a gnostic claim of such seems fallacious.
 
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Dude, I looked up the word "omniscence" in a brand new oxford dictionary and.... it wasn't there!! :D
 
Yeah, JB, I had picked up on your principled agnosticism... I understand the motive of wanting to have "an above the fray" stance, calling out the excesses and incoherencies of both the theist and militant atheist parties; In the end, though, the ideological agnostic position strikes me as one that takes neither faith nor reason seriously enough.

Now, in a certain sense, "agnosticism" is not just a legitimate viewpoint, but is really the only legitimate viewpoint, when we are confronted with the one single most fundamental question of all: "Why is there Cosmos, instead of Nothing/the purum nihil?" This is the one question for which there in principle exists no answer; it is a right and true Mystery. A formal attitude of "we don't know; we can't know" the answer to this one, is I think the only intellectually honest response...

But it is a mistake, and one ideological agnostics frequently make, to derive from this most existential kind of unknowingness, other sorts of essential uncertainty in the face of other, fundamental, nonempirical questions (chief among which of course being: Is there a God?/what are God's attributes?).

There are a number of different logical critiques that can be made about the possibility of God's existence. Now, JB, you are missing the point of such critiques, and in general misunderstanding the standard canons of proof, when you insist that, in order to definitively rule out the possibility of a thing's existence, we have to provide positive evidence that it doesn't exist. This is known as "proving a negative" - and it cannot be done.

Logical critiques, on the other hand, proceed straightforwardly by premise and inference; and simply ask if what is inferred, follows from the premises (or ask, indeed, if what is inferred, contradicts the premises...) The argument you have been repeatedly making, viz.,

However, it also seem that would you must have absolute knowledge to know absolutely that something is absolutely impossible. Thus, to 'know' that omniscience is impossible if self-contradictory, since such gnosticism would require omniscience.

Thus, while it appears impossible, a gnostic claim of such seems fallacious.

- demands of empirical evidence what empirical evidence can never provide - the demonstration, the proof of absence. A logical critique, however, can show that the proposed phenomenon is so ill-defined, that its existence can be ruled out on account of its lack of intelligibility; "round squares," "furiously sleeping green ideas," as well as an "all-knowing" "mind" all fall into this category.

So, when it comes to "disproving" the existence of something, the closest you can come to doing this is through a reductio ad absurdum argument. There are a variety of these arguments that can be deployed against monotheism. Even if taken individually none of these arguments is knock-down, taken together they have a cumulative force which ineluctably points to the falsity of theism.

Just the logical evidence, alone, against belief is too great to remain on the fence about it, JB. Maybe you think by your agnosticism you're hedging your bets; but you should know that if you accept Pascal's wager you need to embrace faith, not merely withold assent from atheism.
 
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; In the end, though, the ideological agnostic position strikes me as one that takes neither faith nor reason seriously enough.

How do you figure?

Now, in a certain sense, "agnosticism" is not just a legitimate viewpoint, but is really the only legitimate viewpoint, when we are confronted with the one single most fundamental question of all: "Why is there Cosmos, instead of Nothing/the purum nihil?"

I'm not sure that's even a valid question, as it assumes (A) that there is an 'option' as to whether or not there should be anything and (B) that there is a 'purpose' (purpose is clearly implied in the question, rather as 'cause' would simply regress the question one step)


But it is a mistake, and one ideological agnostics frequently make, to derive from this most existential kind of unknowingness, other sorts of essential uncertainty in the face of other, fundamental, nonempirical questions (chief among which of course being: Is there a God?/what are God's attributes?).

How so? As positivist thought makes clear, we can never know what is actually rel- we can only know whether a given model aptly describes the observable universe as we (subjectively) experience it, and determine for ourselves which model seems most probable. That is why all knowledge (save, perhaps, for one's own for existence in some form) must be tempered with a certain amount of agnosticism and a realization of the limits of one's knowledge

There are a number of different logical critiques that can be made about the possibility of God's existence. Now, JB, you are missing the point of such critiques, and in general misunderstanding the standard canons of proof, when you insist that, in order to definitively rule out the possibility of a thing's existence, we have to provide positive evidence that it doesn't exist. This is known as "proving a negative" - and it cannot be done.

Save by proving a mutually exclusive positive- but there is no positive that is inherently mutually exclusive with the existence of deity (mutually exclusive with the teachings of a particular faith or dogma yes, but not with deity itself)



However, it also seem that would you must have absolute knowledge to know absolutely that something is absolutely impossible. Thus, to 'know' that omniscience is impossible if self-contradictory, since such gnosticism would require omniscience.

Thus, while it appears impossible, a gnostic claim of such seems fallacious.
- demands of empirical evidence what empirical evidence can never provide - the demonstration, the proof of absence.
Hence a certain level of agnosticism

A logical critique, however, can show that the proposed phenomenon is so ill-defined, that its existence can be ruled out on account of its lack of intelligibility; "round squares," "furiously sleeping green ideas," as well as an "all-knowing" "mind" all fall into this category.
'round squares' is impossible by definition because of what we say the words mean- and they might be possible under some bizarre mathematical conditions like parabolic geometry or something. However, those are things 'within' the physical universe, and we ourselves have defined them. Deity, if existent, would inherently fall 'outside' of the physical universe itself, and our attempts to describe such a thing would be expected to be hazy at best, because we have nothing to compare it to.
So, when it comes to "disproving" the existence of something, the closest you can come to doing this is through a reductio ad absurdum argument. There are a variety of these arguments that can be deployed against monotheism. Even if taken individually none of these arguments is knock-down, taken together they have a cumulative force which ineluctably points to the falsity of theism.

Again, disproving any one religion is simple. Demonstrating absence of any deity (for instance, of the sort deists believe in) is impossible. You can state that it is highly unlikely or even that a deity with certain traits (omniscience) appears impossible (assuming that the same reasoning is also valid 'outside' of the universe as we know it
Just the logical evidence, alone, against belief is too great to remain on the fence about it, JB.
Who is 'on the fence'? theism/atheism and gnosticism/agnosticism don't even address the same question

Maybe you think by your agnosticism you're hedging your bets; but you should know that if you accept Pascal's wager you need to embrace faith not merely withold assent from atheism.
Pascal was an idiot who failed- He forgot that if he bet on the wrong god, he's fucked :lol:

I'm disappointed in you- atheism and agnosticism don't even address the same question
 
How do I figure, that agnosticism takes neither faith nor reason seriously enough? Well, faith (as actually you've implied with some of the remarks you've made here) ultimately involves an arational, purely voluntaristic sort of assent. "I believe it because it is absurd!" as the Church Father Tertullian said. Ideological agnosticism doesn't need to lend faith the legitimacy of reason; ultimately, true faith doesn't care about reason - it only cares about obedience. And ideological agnosticism seems always more willing to retreat to god-of-the-gaps type arguments ("How do we know, there's really no god, until we search out every last nook and cranny of the universe, until we run down any and every notionally imaginable scenario?"), rather than just give over and acknowledge what is beyond a reasonable doubt - that there is no personal god there to be found.


I'm not sure that's even a valid question, as it assumes (A) that there is an 'option' as to whether or not there should be anything and (B) that there is a 'purpose' (purpose is clearly implied in the question, rather as 'cause' would simply regress the question one step)

You think that's a meaningless question? You don't understand what the question is asking for? Well, we'll just have to disagree on that one. I will say this - the 'Why' of Why is there Something (a Cosmos) rather than Nothing" is not a purposive-why; it is a why of origins.


How so? As positivist thought makes clear, we can never know what is actually rel- we can only know whether a given model aptly describes the observable universe as we (subjectively) experience it, and determine for ourselves which model seems most probable. That is why all knowledge (save, perhaps, for one's own for existence in some form) must be tempered with a certain amount of agnosticism and a realization of the limits of one's knowledge



Well, okay. That's a standard bit of epistemic humility, and I get that. But the personal gods of theism aren't concerned much with 'epistemic humility' - in the model in which they appear, and the model which their followers ascribe to, they demand unconditional commitment. When our choice, so far as we can tell, is between that model, and one of straightforward logical reflection, logical reflection prevails. It prevails because it can exhibit the very premises of the existence of an omniscient being, to be incoherent. Again, the faithful don't care about this - logic is no concern of theirs (God created logic, after all, so for them he's not bound by it). But for someone who wants to think it through to a reasoned judgement, a stance of perpetually witheld assent either to God's existence or to God's non-existence, is not the most reasonable one. The logical, ethical, metaphysical, and aesthetic arguments are too compelling, leading us to the conclusion that, at the least, it is beyond a reasonable doubt that there are no gods. That is the main point, in the end: not whether a god can be absolutely "demonstrated" to exist or not, but whether it is reasonable to say that a rational approach cannot find evidence in favor of one or another side of the question.

'round squares' is impossible by definition because of what we say the words mean- and they might be possible under some bizarre ematical conditions like parabolic geometry or something. However, those are things 'within' the physical universe, and we ourselves have defined them. Deity, if existent, would inherently fall 'outside' of the physical universe itself, and our attempts to describe such a thing would be expected to be hazy at best, because we have nothing to compare it to.

Again, we are in basic disagreement here. The non-existence of an alleged phenomenon can be demonstrated, logically (as opposed to some absolute positive proof), by a reductio argument. To escape the force of such arguments, you have to resort to god-of-the-gaps style argument, positing some model, some domain which is somehow more fundamental than the one in which you and I are conversing, where the model of logic doesn't apply. I guess you can do that, if you want to (certainly theists, when they're in a discussion like this, often will); but it cannot count as a reasoned argument against my position. I mean, sure, it's open to you to say, "well, how do you know, absolutely, that omniscience isn't a coherent, uncontradictory notion somewhere in a realm beyond our imagining?" But it's simply not reasonable to withold assent on the question of theism, merely on the basis of such pure speculative fancy.
 
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Given that faith is itself a gift of God then taking faith seriously if you haven't been so gifted is all but impossible because you spend all your time looking in the wrong place for an explanation of it.

On the other hand if one takes logic as it is done by we humans too seriously, one is almost certain to more than occasionally make an ass of oneself.

Oh and it is fairly easy to figure out when you have become omniscient. You have answers to all the questions.
 
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You realize, of course, that I am about as agnostic on the existence of personal deity as I am about pixies sitting on my head at this moment. However, it would be fallacious to deny a certain level (no matter how immmeasuraby small) of agnosticism/positivism as to whether I am even in this room.
 
You realize, of course, that I am about as agnostic on the existence of personal deity as I am about pixies sitting on my head at this moment. However, it would be fallacious to deny a certain level (no matter how immmeasuraby small) of agnosticism/positivism as to whether I am even in this room.

JB,

Yes, a solid dose of epistemic humility is a good thing - it's essential, really, if your outlook on the world is to be open enough to admit of new discoveries, and changes in your point of view, and new truths. But in our culture, open-mindedness has become something exalted for its own sake, a virtue unto itself; and this has had the unintended effect of stripping from reason its very power to critique - and particularly, to morally critique. Again and again you here the mantra from the college students - "Who's to say?" "Isn't it all relative?" "It's just my opinion, anyway. What do I know?" This kind of soft, simplistic relativism is a disease, leaving reason bereft of its very power to question and inquire. It leads to a situation in the culture where "the best lack all conviction, and the worst are filled with a burning intensity." I know, JB, that on this message board you've had to deal with a number of representatives of the latter.

If you are convinced, as I am, that atheism is true, why genuflect in the direction of others' baseless pieties - ? Why give people on this site like Terral, any oxygen? Do you really think that by dropping the pose of principled uncertainty, you're going to lose your "tolerant person" card? The same kind of notional uncertainties you've raised are also the sort that could be raised against the natural sciences - take Darwinism, say. Do you go around openly acknowledging to Creationists "yeah, well, this could be all wrong, and you would have been right all along" - ? Allow me the liberty of answering in your stead: hell no you don't! You don't because, though it's true, for all you know the Creationists could be 100% right, you don't believe it for a minute - and on very good grounds, I might add.

If we're at any point going to move into a forthright humanist future, we have to drop the pose, and be honest. If atheism is what we believe, then 'atheist' is what we should call ourselves. If all atheists did so, we might be surprised to find how much clout we would have, clout with which we could beat back the dogmatists and their political agenda.
 
Given that faith is itself a gift of God then taking faith seriously if you haven't been so gifted is all but impossible because you spend all your time looking in the wrong place for an explanation of it.

On the other hand if one takes logic as it is done by we humans too seriously, one is almost certain to more than occasionally make an ass of oneself.

Oh and it is fairly easy to figure out when you have become omniscient. You have answers to all the questions.

You know, Garyd, faith is the only "gift" I know of, which you can be held responsible for, for not having received it. By not taking logic seriously enough, we have allowed ourselves to buy into the greatest Lie ever sold: 1) that someone else can bear responsibility, for the wrong we have done; and 2) that we are incapable, on our own resources, for making any atonement for our faults. Neither of these pernicious beliefs, serve as any motive for us to live more righteously. Instead, their sole purpose is to set the terms of our enslavement to a capricious autocrat seated in the stars.
What is it with you Christians? Are you so afraid of death, that you'll believe anything that could spare you from that undiscovered country?
 
Again and again you here the mantra from the college students - "Who's to say?" "Isn't it all relative?"

operhaps from moronic and uneducated student interested in joining the liberal staff at many colleges. The answers are simple

Who's to say? Yourself: Our moral instinct developed because it was beneficial to us Society: All law and ethics arises from social contract. What you describe is weakness and cowardice- they lack the fortitude to defend their positions- or perhaps it is the mental acuity that they lack?


If you are convinced, as I am, that atheism is true, why genuflect in the direction of others' baseless pieties - ?

i do not. I maintain my stance fully and defend my position any time I am challenged. The difference is that I am simply more honest than they are

Why give people on this site like Terral, any oxygen? Do you really think that by dropping the pose of principled uncertainty, you're going to lose your "tolerant person" card?

You don't know me very well if you think I'm concerned with being viewed as 'tolerant' of their ilk
The same kind of notional uncertainties you've raised are also the sort that could be raised against the natural sciences - take Darwinism, say. Do you go around openly acknowledging to Creationists "yeah, well, this could be all wrong, and you would have been right all along" - ? Allow me the liberty of answering in your stead: hell no you don't! You don't because, though it's true, for all you know the Creationists could be 100% right, you don't believe it for a minute - and on very good grounds, I might add.

I say it simply: all available evidence supports the theories to which I subscribe. When they can take their delusions and scrambled hypotheses and form a meaningful model, they will be free to forward it for review.


Oh and it is fairly easy to figure out when you have become omniscient. You have answers to all the questions.

Thank you. You have just offered proof that omniscience is impossible, though you're probably too foolish to realize it.


You know, Garyd, faith is the only "gift" I know of, which you can be held responsible for, for not having received it. By not taking logic seriously enough, we have allowed ourselves to buy into the greatest Lie ever sold: 1) that someone else can bear responsibility, for the wrong we have done; and 2) that we are incapable, on our own resources, for making any atonement for our faults. Neither of these pernicious beliefs, serve as any motive for us to live more righteously. Instead, their sole purpose is to set the terms of our enslavement to a capricious autocrat seated in the stars.
What is it with you Christians? Are you so afraid of death, that you'll believe anything that could spare you from that undiscovered country?

Yes, they are. hence the concept of a 'second death' which can be avoided ;)
 
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