epistemological
Quote from: Meta Cognition on February 08, 2015, 05:56:57 AM epistemological Meta's word of the week.OT: I dunno, there doesn't seem to be a significant difference except in certainty of the belief.
Quote from: HurtfulTurkey on February 08, 2015, 07:54:10 AMQuote from: Meta Cognition on February 08, 2015, 05:56:57 AM epistemological Meta's word of the week.OT: I dunno, there doesn't seem to be a significant difference except in certainty of the belief.This really is an issue for me because I hear atheists say it all the time (see: Armoured Skeptic on Youtube). Whether or not you assert the falsehood of an entity or assert a lack of belief of an entity. . . It seems the same to me. It's fucking with my head.
There's definitely a difference in intent between the two statements.
Quote from: HurtfulTurkey on February 08, 2015, 08:27:28 AMThere's definitely a difference in intent between the two statements.Sure, but I want to know if it qualifies different burdens of proof in any way.
I think you already made a thread about this."I do not believe in X" is passive disbelief, whereas "I believe X is false" implies active disbelief.Saying is passively is the equivalent of tacking on "in my opinion" when you make a subjective statement. It's just a way to placate sensitive people, which... Fuck that.
So it's actually just a null semantic issue, as opposed to a real epistemic one?
you know you're in for a wild ride already.
As long as it can be agreed that one cannot "prove a negative", yeah.
It can't. Of course you can. So long as prove = evidence to a suitable degree. Since nothing is absolutely provable.
Though technically, one could say that the first statement implies "I do not have any decent reason to think X is True"
Nothing's absolutely suitable, either.
I'm having trouble seeing how one can "prove" a negative, anyway.
You're going to be hard-pressed to find proof that I don't have an invisible velociraptor in my garage, for example, but...
It's literally just a linguistic trick; "God exists" is the same as "God doesn't not exist". Negative assertions still have propositional content, and can be shown through absence of evidence despite attempted observation. "There is no milk in the bowl".
Now, you can redefine this velociraptor to the point where it has no empirical characteristics, and it becomes literally meaningless anyway.
I might also claim to be the only one who can see it.
If there is, we put you in an asylum.
I'm not sure you're entirely seeing my point here.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on February 08, 2015, 04:17:00 PMIf there is, we put you in an asylum. And that's the argument? I'm not sure you're entirely seeing my point here.
The negation of a positive assertion necessarily entails some sort of negative evidence.
what would the negative evidence be for a deist god, if one denies the existence of any deist gods?