yes... another one of my blogs, hope you enjoy it.
Perhaps as a child you remember playing some kind of game where one
kid would say something to the effect of "Well I have a magic shield
and none of your bullets can hurt me" after this statement all chaos
breaks loose as the other child replies "well I have an even more magic
gun that can shoot through your shield" as the friend snaps back "No!
nothing can shoot through my magic shield" and they go back and forth
until something else catches their short attention span. I think most
of us have observed this or participated in something similar in our
lives. Perhaps we enjoy looking back and having a chuckle due to our
childhood ignorance.
Sadly many of us haven't gotten over
this childhood phase and use this same argument in our adult lives. It
is not just used from time to time but probably by the majority of
mankind! "Nonsense!" you may claim "I have yet to see it!". Well it is
not all that hard to find, all that it takes is a serious talk about
religion and god and you will see how childish grown men really are.
In
any strenuous debate over religion the theist is always forced to make
a separation between logic and reality. Most theists are quite
comfortable with this. If you ask them "do you believe that logic and
empirical evidence do not apply to god?" most of them will agree with
little concern. I have heard may theists state flatly that the
scientific method does not apply to god. But usually to get to this
point in the arguments contention is already high and the response
comes out quite aggressively "god is beyond logic! he created it!" or
perhaps "the things of man cannot be applied to god". Most of us
atheists may roll our eyes and shake our heads to this and maybe leave
it at "lets agree to disagree", but I am not so sure we truly
understand what this Argument means.
When a person says that
"logic does not apply to god" what they are really saying is
"rationality does not apply to my arguments" In other words the only
way we have of determining truth and falsehood doesn't apply to
anything they believe. Well that is quite convenient how isn't it? I
will have to remember that trick next time I am in a debate "oh yeah by
the way logic doesn't apply to what I believe, oh yeah and the neither
does the scientific method, or empirical facts" or in other words: I
win because I feel like it. Sounds a lot like the child with the
magical shield now doesn't it?
The clear meaning of this
"argument" is simply a desperate attempt to believe in something
despite reason and evidence. The last resort of some one who is
cornered by logic is to claim that it doesn't apply to his beliefs.
The
most basic principle of logic is truth vs falsehood. To say that logic
does not apply to god but in the same breath say that he exists (or
that it is true that god exists) is both endorsing and denouncing logic
all at once. If I were to tell you that 2+2=5 is true, but truth
doesn't apply to my argument all at once, you would call me crazy.
Perhaps you should use your definition of insanity consistently.
Perhaps the time a great man becomes an average man, is when he apologizes for his honesty
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Reflections of a Radical