What about deism? (Introduction)

by Cary Cook @, Sunday, June 15, 2008, 04:45 (5788 days ago)

I'm not a deist, but I just wonder if you guys have any rational (not illogical + non-dogmatic) objections to it. - I can fully understand why a person would be an atheist if he were told that the most reasonable God available threatens to torment him forever if he fails to believe(1) something that any rational mind would find improbable. Under such a God, Jesus could have been a hand puppet sent to sucker frightened fools into signing up for eternal servitude. - But what if that's not the most reasonable God available? Given what we've all seen of Earth history, plus our own personal experience, plus the fact that we have no reliable data to judge even the probability of an afterlife, is not deism a reasonable possibility? - I'm defining deism as the belief(1) that a personal non-omniscient Being created this universe mainly to see what happens when he does it. Further, that he created life supporting planets including Earth and humanity (possibly by evolution) again to see what happens when he does it. And then he sits back and observes. - Is such a scenario possible?
If so, is it likely?
Likely or not, would such a God be just?
Are there any circumstances under which such a God would be definitely just or unjust?

What about deism?

by George Jelliss ⌂ @, Crewe, Sunday, June 15, 2008, 15:05 (5787 days ago) @ Cary Cook

Deism was a reasonable position for enlightenment figures like Voltaire and Paine to take in the 18th century because the natural world of animals and plants and their complex ecology seemed to be designed and thus to need a designer, though even then there were some independent thinkers like D'Holbach, Laplace and Erasmus Darwin who were able to do without that hypothesis. However since the work of Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace who were able to provide a natural explanation for biological order, it is no longer needed for that purpose. Indeed, as Richard Dawkins argues, the evolutionary principle questions where such a necessarily complex being as a creator god could have come from, other than by some form of prior evolution from something simpler. - The cosmological discoveries of the 20th century now make even the idea that there was a coming into being of the universe from out of something previously existing a questionable proposition, although a lot of thinkers in the field still seem to find it difficult to get there minds around this concept. - So we now know that there is no need for the postulation of any god or creator of any kind. Trying to base ethics on the postulation of a good creator can therefore now be seen to be a pointless exercise. The evidence of physics and biology is that Nature (the way the universe works) is not guided by moral or ethical principles. The rain it rains equally upon the just as on the unjust, though the unjust steals the just's umbrella.

What about deism?

by dhw, Monday, June 16, 2008, 14:02 (5786 days ago) @ Cary Cook

Cary asks if "you guys have any rational objections" to deism. "Is such a scenario possible? If so, is it likely? Likely or not, would such a God be just? Are there any circumstances under which such a God would be definitely just or unjust?" - Although by your own definition George 'knows definitely and objectively that there is no God', I take it that you don't agree (which proves that this is a matter of belief and not knowledge). I'll therefore offer answers to your new questions rather than go over the old ones with George. - In the "brief guide" I speculate that if there is/was a designer, it may have set the whole process in motion and then sat back to see what would evolve, or it didn't know what it wanted, carried on experimenting (occasionally destroying whole swathes of its creation, having got fed up with those particular species), and eventually came up with us; it may have lost interest or disappeared, leaving the process to look after itself, or it may still be watching. - If there is/was a designer, the great advantage of these concepts (which I would regard as facets of deism) is that they do away with the need to explain certain anomalies: how could an all-good God create evil? Why does God allow natural disasters? Which is the true religion? Why the millions of years of mindless organisms and other forms of life before God produced us? The spectacle would be dull if it was predictable; hence the conflict, the unforeseeable, the impossibility of knowing ... all integral to the show. Cary asks if it's possible. Well, the designer must have had some purpose for creating life, and entertainment seems as likely as any. Would such a God be just? I'd say justice doesn't come into the equation. Part of the interest would lie in the endless round of generations, developments and events. No need for justice, an afterlife, punishment or reward, though it's feasible that he might step in occasionally if he feels like it. - One objection would be that this is an anthropomorphization of God ... but why should we suppose that designers create things totally alien to themselves? Another is that the concept goes against the teachings of most religions, but since these religions cannot give a convincing answer to the above questions, it has clear explicatory advantages. A third is that it does not hold out the hope of future happiness or just reward ... but our aim is to look for truth, not for comfort. On the other hand (agnostics have lots of other hands), the above questions can be covered by George's theory that life came about by chance. And on a third hand, do we have George's faith in the creative genius of chance (that will raise his hackles), and if not, can we dismiss completely every single testimony by every single witness down through thousands of years and in countless societies as to the existence of a personal and caring deity and a life beyond the grave?

What about deism?

by Cary Cook @, Tuesday, June 17, 2008, 02:40 (5786 days ago) @ dhw

>Although by your own definition George 'knows definitely and objectively that there is no God', - Stop. Wrong track. You ignored the first part of that statement: "If George is telling the truth". I assume the rest of your post is not based on the above assumption. If it is, we'll have to start over.
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>how could an all-good God create evil? - He couldn't. Who says we're dealing with an all-good God?
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>Why does God allow natural disasters? - After you create nature, it sorta comes with the territory ... unless you want to run all over the place with miracle band-aids.
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>Which is the true religion? - Mine.
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>Why the millions of years of mindless organisms and other forms of life before God produced us? - Slow learner. But seriously folks, The above objections are legitimate only against the patchwork concept of God handed down to us by millennia of priests & scribes & a few renegades trying to make semi-sense of the crap that was handed to them. Why waste our time bashing the stupidity of our ancestors? The creator of this world doesn't have to be omnipotent or omniscient or good or any of the crap they sing hymns about. We're FREE THINKERS for Christ sake! Let's FIGURE IT OUT!
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>Would such a God be just? I'd say justice doesn't come into the equation. Part of the interest would lie in the endless round of generations, developments and events. No need for justice, an afterlife, punishment or reward, though it's feasible that he might step in occasionally if he feels like it. - Much better! From God's perspective (in this scenario) justice doesn't come into the equation. If God just likes to watch dinosaurs or gladiators fight, then no need for justice, an afterlife, punishment or reward. If, however, God starts thinking in terms of good vs. evil, then whole new ball game.
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>One objection would be that this is an anthropomorphization of God ... but why should we suppose that designers create things totally alien to themselves? - Uh... Doesn't the second part of this statement answer the original objection?
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>Another is that the concept goes against the teachings of most religions, but since these religions cannot give a convincing answer to the above questions, it has clear explicatory advantages. - We're clicking. I like this "answering your own objections" thing.
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>A third is that it does not hold out the hope of future happiness or just reward ... but our aim is to look for truth, not for comfort. - YEAAAAAH!
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>On the other hand ... the above questions can be covered by George's theory that life came about by chance. - Agreed. That's one non-disprovable theory.
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>Can we dismiss completely every single testimony by every single witness down through thousands of years and in countless societies as to the existence of a personal and caring deity and a life beyond the grave? - I can neither dismiss them completely, nor put a bit of trust in them.
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So basically there are two relevant possibilities: afterlife or no afterlife. If afterlife, the next two relevant possibilities are: worth it or not worth it. So what I REALLY want to get to is under what circumstances is life better than non-existence, and under what circumstances is life worse than non-existence? - Consider this possibility: You die. You wake up in a sterile looking cubicle. A guy in a lab coat comes in and asks, "Want to do it again?" What questions would you ask before answering?

What about deism?

by dhw, Tuesday, June 17, 2008, 11:09 (5785 days ago) @ Cary Cook

I wrote: "If there is/was a designer, the great advantage of these concepts [of deism] is that they do away with the need to explain certain anomalies: how could an all-good God create evil?" etc. etc. - Cary: "Who says we're dealing with an all-good God?" Cary then goes on to describe my list as "the above objections". - They are not objections; they are a list of conventional religious questions which deism effectively gets rid of! I wasn't asking them, I was giving them as examples. The point is that the God of deism, who simply watches the show (or has disappeared), makes "goodness" and arguments about the "true religion" irrelevant, natural disasters are part of the entertainment, and the millions of years of mindless organisms etc. are ... as you jokingly say ... the result of the fact that he's a slow learner, or he sat back while the process ran its course. The questions were not objections to deism, but on the contrary illustrations of how deism does away with what you call "the crap they sing hymns about". In other words, my arguments in favour of deism are the same as yours! - Me: "One objection would be that this is an anthropomorphization of God ... but why should we suppose that designers create things totally alien to themselves?" - You: "Uh...Doesn't the second part of the statement answer the original objection?" - Exactly. In your next entry, you say you like this "answering your own objections" thing. Another slow learner here? - You finish up: "So basically there are two relevant possibilities: afterlife or no afterlife." And then: "So what I REALLY want to get to is under what circumstances is life better than non-existence, and under what circumstances is life worse than non-existence?" A great subject for discussion, but that's not what we were talking about. The subject was deism ... i.e. the nature of God, if there is/was one. Maybe my comments on deism were hard to follow, since you misunderstood half of them, but there are times when following your train of thought is like trying to pin down the principles of our political leaders!

What about deism?

by Cary Cook @, Wednesday, June 18, 2008, 04:06 (5785 days ago) @ dhw

You got me on the slow learner thing. I didn't read you right. - OK, you have no objections to deism as I've presented it. But all I've really accomplished is to give you one more thing to be agnostic about ... more likely just pointed out something that you were already agnostic about.

What about deism?

by dhw, Wednesday, June 18, 2008, 14:15 (5784 days ago) @ Cary Cook

On the subject of deism, Cary suspects that he's pointed out something I'm already agnostic about. - In the "brief guide", one section is devoted to speculation on "The nature of a 'Creator'", which includes the deist concept of the designer sitting back and watching what happens. Perhaps I might quote one sentence which I think you might approve of: "Once you are free from the scientific faith of atheism and the dogma of religion, you can pick any scenario you like, because they are all equally possible/impossible." - However, what I'm looking for on this website is responses to the different theories ... explanations from people about why they do or don't believe in them. For instance, you said that you were not a deist, but you didn't explain why, even though you and I have agreed on various arguments in its favour. George Jelliss has said precisely why he rejects the whole concept: Darwinism, Dawkinism and modern cosmology make the postulation of a designer "a pointless exercise". Although I think he has exaggerated the scope of science and has underestimated the size of the mysteries science has yet to solve, I can understand his arguments and find them helpful. But I'm looking for more. Why do Christians and other believers reject the concept of deism ... or any other concepts of God, for that matter? Embracing one theory means rejecting others, so what are the decisive factors? - Cary, please keep raising these different issues. It doesn't matter two hoots whether I've already covered them in the "guide" ... that's only meant as a starting point, and the purpose of the website is to exchange ideas and opinions. If nothing else, this may help all of us to clarify our own beliefs and non-beliefs.

What about deism?

by Cary Cook @, Thursday, June 19, 2008, 00:54 (5784 days ago) @ dhw

> "Once you are free from the scientific faith of atheism and the dogma of religion, you can pick any scenario you like, because they are all equally possible/impossible." - Equally possible: yes. Equally impossible: no.
Equally probable: You know what I think. What do you think?
Equally worth betting on: definitely not.
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>you said that you were not a deist, but you didn't explain why, even though you and I have agreed on various arguments in its favour. - I consider deism likely in the sense that If I created this universe, I wouldn't spend any more time than necessary messing with Earth. i.e. necessary to set it up so that it would be likely to produce whatever results I wanted from it. But I wouldn't leave it totally alone either, because dumb luck & human stupidity would likely ruin any plans I might have had. I'd put it under the care of either some government agency, or private kindergarten ... whichever is most likely to give me satisfactory results for the best price. (But that probably wouldn't be called deism.) The rules I'd set up would depend on the end results I wanted. Speculating on those results is beyond the scope of this post. - My personal experience is not inconsistent with the above scenario. It's also not inconsistent with a nihilistic(1) explanation. After the probabilities are recognized as hovering around 50%, the next question is what's most worth betting on, and we've pretty much been thru that.
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>Why do Christians and other believers reject the concept of deism ... or any other concepts of God, for that matter? Embracing one theory means rejecting others, so what are the decisive factors? - I think the biggest motivator for all religionists is fear. This is most effective on adults who figure they have probably done more bad stuff than good stuff, and therefore deserve punishment. The afterlife possibility becomes scary. Instead of figuring it out philosophically, they look to traditionally established answers, and fall into whatever Scripture-based religion appears to have the most to offer. The culture they live in is probably the next biggest influence. Intellect comes into play only on those who need rational consistency, and don't find it in their Scriptures & experience.

What about deism?

by dhw, Thursday, June 19, 2008, 15:11 (5783 days ago) @ Cary Cook

I wrote: "Once you are free from the scientific faith of atheism and the dogma of religion, you can pick any scenario you like, because they are all equally possible/impossible." Cary disagrees that they are equally impossible. - Either God exists/existed, or he doesn't/didn't. - 1) If he doesn't, the astonishingly complex mechanisms of the universe and of life must have come about by chance. The odds against this happening are astronomically high ... so high as to be out of sight. I can't believe it. And every religion and every account relating to an afterlife is based on lies or self-delusion. I can't believe it. - 2) If God exists, he is a supreme intelligence which has always been there or magically sprang from nothing and nowhere. I can't believe it. - But one of these unbelievables is true. If 2) is true, we can mess about with hundreds of different possibilities (as offered by the different religions, theories and philosophies), but since they are all based on an unbelievable premise, they are all equally unbelievable. Perhaps "unbelievable" is a better term than "impossible", although in both cases I'd have to add "for me". Of these impossible possibilities, which seems probable? You are betting on a just God. I'm not a gambling man. - As regards deism, you write that if you had created the universe, "the rules...would depend on the end results I wanted". This presupposes that God wants results, whereas one deist scenario that I have suggested is that the whole thing has to be unpredictable because it's for his entertainment (which I suppose does constitute a result), and this might leave us and our fellow creatures to make our own rules, apart from the practical ones of nature (gravity etc.). If we blow ourselves up with our cleverness, that will all be part of the show. As I said before, no need for justice, an afterlife, reward or punishment. - You think that the biggest motivator of all religionists is fear, with culture the second biggest influence. I hope we will get some feedback on this from some "religionists". - The Agnostic's Exit Strategy: please give me time to think about that.

What about deism?

by Cary Cook @, Friday, June 20, 2008, 00:54 (5783 days ago) @ dhw

If you can't believe that a particular thing exists, and you can't believe it doesn't exist, then I need a definition of what you mean by "believe".
If you mean your mind can't conceive of it, I agree; mine can't either. But either something is eternal, or something came from nothing. There's no third alternative. - You said, "But one of these unbelievables is true." 
If you know that one of two things is true, are you not forced to believe(1) one of them?
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>Perhaps "unbelievable" is a better term than "impossible", although in both cases I'd have to add "for me". - It's legitimate to add "for me" to "unbelievable".
It's not legitimate to add "for me" to "impossible".
Belief is subjective; possibility is objective. It's extremely important to make this distinction. Much philosophical confusion is due to failure to distinguish subjective from objective.
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>I'm not a gambling man. - We're all gambling men. You can refuse to bet on either X or not-X. But that just means you're betting that you can refuse to bet on either X or not-X. Every step you take is a bet that you won't fall thru the ground. The principles by which you conduct your life are proof that you bet on those principles. - If you mean you don't take unnecessary gambles, I have no objection.

What about deism?

by dhw, Friday, June 20, 2008, 19:43 (5782 days ago) @ Cary Cook

Cary: "If you know that one of two things is true, are you not forced to believe (1) one of them?" - Carey's definition of believe (1) is: to think something is true or probable. I'll go along with that. - The classic definition of agnosticism is: the belief that it is impossible to know whether God exists or not. I know that either God exists/existed or he doesn't/didn't, but I don't know which of the alternatives is true, and so I cannot believe either. According to you, no-one can be an agnostic. - ******** - Cary: "It's not legitimate to add 'for me' to 'impossible'...Belief is subjective; possibility is objective." - In saying something is impossible for me, I mean that I can't do/believe/accept it. The statement that something is impossible may be objective if we all agree on it (e.g. it's impossible to put the Atlantic in a teacup), but it may be subjective (this crossword puzzle is impossible). As always with language, it depends on context and references. If I say it's impossible to decide whether God exists or not, every believer and atheist in the world can turn round and tell me I'm daft, because they have all taken their decision. I therefore add "for me", and hey presto the addition is not only legitimate but also prevents any misunderstanding. - Cary: "Much philosophical confusion is due to failure to distinguish between subjective and objective." - Indeed. - ********* - Me: "I'm not a gambling man." - You: "We're all gambling men...If you mean you don't take unnecessary gambles, I have no objection." - OK, I don't take unnecessary gambles.

What about deism?

by Cary Cook @, Saturday, June 21, 2008, 04:23 (5782 days ago) @ dhw

>>Cary: "If you know that one of two things is true, are you not forced to believe (1) one of them?" - Okay, I didn't say that right. I know a coin flip will be either heads or tails, but I don't have to believe1 one of the options because the odds are exactly 50%. If I believed1 the odds were anything other than 50%, I would necessarily believe1 one of the options, because that's what probability is all about. E.g. If I believed1 a box contained 999,999,999,999 white marbles and 999,999,999,998 black marbles, then I would necessarily believe1 that a marble chosen randomly would be white. If the odds are not statistically calculable, then it's likely, but not necessary, that one option would appear more probable than the other. But if you insist that the God question appears to be so close to 50% as to be indiscernible, I can't say you're forced to believe1 one or the other. Is that what you're saying?
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Your classic definition of agnosticism is defective, because it cites only one of the two types. My definition is better:
theological agnostic: a person who doesn't know if God exists
a. A "hard" agnostic says no one knows if God exists, and it is impossible to know if God exists.
b. A "soft" agnostic says that he does not know if God exists, but someone may, and it might be possible to know if God exists.
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>I don't know which of the alternatives is true, and so I cannot believe either. - This is totally erroneous by either definition of belief. E.g. You don't know that you will pick an ace out of a deck of 52 cards, but you necessarily believe1 that you won't.
But possibly this is an overreaction to my erroneous statement above.
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>The statement that something is impossible may be objective if we all agree on it. - Actually objectivity is totally independent of anyone's agreement.
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>In saying something is impossible for me, I mean that I can't do/believe/accept it. - Okay, I understand what you mean, but that's an ambiguous way to say it.
A proposition may be unbelievable for you ... no problem.
A task may be impossible for you to do ... no problem.
A proposition may be impossible for you to believe ... no problem.
A proposition may be impossible for you ... problem because ambiguous.

What about deism?

by dhw, Sunday, June 22, 2008, 08:01 (5781 days ago) @ Cary Cook

Cary: "If I believed the odds were anything other than 50%, I would necessarily believe (1) one of the options, because that's what probability is all about." - I'm going to have to modify my acceptance of your definition of believe (1), which = to think something is true or probable. It's not strong enough. There has to be an inner conviction (which is missing from all your definitions of "believe"). If the weather forecast is a 51% chance of rain, I can't go round saying I believe ... i.e. am really, honestly, truly convinced in my heart of hearts ... that it's going to rain. You can ask me (as Curtis did) what is the minimum amount of probability I require in order to have an inner conviction that God exists/doesn't exist, but I can't answer. I will know if/when it happens. - ********
Cary: "Your classic definition of agnosticism is defective, because it cites only one of the two types." - The classic definition (as opposed to the more modern definition) is that of T.H. Huxley, who invented the term. The fact that it is one of two types does not make it defective, any more than your differentiation between types of belief makes each category defective. I quoted it only to illustrate the flaw in your argument. I am what you call a "soft" agnostic. - *********
Me: "I don't know which of the alternatives [God/No God] is true, and so I cannot believe either."
Cary: "This is totally erroneous by either definition of belief." - See first item. However, with respect, I think it's going a bit far for you to tell me that I'm wrong when I say I can't believe something. - *********
Me: "The statement that something is impossible may be objective if we all agree on it."
Cary: "Objectivity is totally independent of anyone's agreement." - True. However, your epistemological definition of "objective" is: "thought to remain the same regardless of diverse opinions." Question: thought by whom? I would say that "the earth rotates round the sun" is an objective statement. Once upon a time, people would have said "the sun rotates round the earth" was an objective statement. Question: how do we judge statements to be objective? - ********
Cary (20 June at 19.43): "It's not legitimate to add 'for me' to 'impossible'...possibility is objective." - You've now agreed that two categories of "impossible for me" are no problem. I'll settle for that.

What about deism?

by Cary Cook @, Monday, June 23, 2008, 00:58 (5780 days ago) @ dhw

>I'm going to have to modify my acceptance of your definition of believe (1), which = to think something is true or probable. It's not strong enough. There has to be an inner conviction (which is missing from all your definitions of "believe"). If the weather forecast is a 51% chance of rain, I can't go round saying I believe ... i.e. am really, honestly, truly convinced in my heart of hearts ... that it's going to rain. - "Inner conviction" and "heart of hearts" are vague terms which do nothing to clarify what we're talking about. To say I believe1 something by my definition is to correctly identify the concept (more than 50% and less than 100% likelihood). To say I believe1 something in my heart of hearts adds nothing but "really really really" to the concept, i.e. to put it close to 100%.
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>>Cary: "Your classic definition of agnosticism is defective, because it cites only one of the two types."
The classic definition (as opposed to the more modern definition) is that of T.H. Huxley, who invented the term. The fact that it is one of two types does not make it defective, any more than your differentiation between types of belief makes each category defective. I quoted it only to illustrate the flaw in your argument. - Any general definition of a concept which does not include all of the conventionally recognized types of that concept is a defective definition.
The definition is defective for the reason I stated. Your analogy of it being in any way analogous to my differentiation between types of belief is incorrect.
The reason you quoted the statement does not make it any more true than it would have been otherwise, and it didn't even illustrate a flaw in my argument.
I admitted that my statement, "If you know that one of two things is true, are you not forced to believe (1) one of them?" was defective for the other reasons I stated.
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>>>Me: "I don't know which of the alternatives [God/No God] is true, and so I cannot believe either."
>>Cary: "This is totally erroneous by either definition of belief."
>See first item. However, with respect, I think it's going a bit far for you to tell me that I'm wrong when I say I can't believe something. - "This is totally erroneous by either definition of belief." Is a perfectly correct statement, as my following example illustrated & proved.
E.g. You don't know that you will pick an ace out of a deck of 52 cards, but you necessarily believe1 that you won't.
*********
>>Cary: "Objectivity is totally independent of anyone's agreement."
>True. However, your epistemological definition of "objective" is: "thought to remain the same regardless of diverse opinions." Question: thought by whom? - Whoever is doing the thinking. - >I would say that "the earth rotates round the sun" is an objective statement. - Correct. It's ontologically objective, and epistemologically objective to you who said it. - >Once upon a time, people would have said "the sun rotates round the earth" was an objective statement. - Correct. It was ontologically wrong, but epistemologically objective to them. - >Question: how do we judge statements to be objective? - First we distinguish whether the statement is true only to the thinker or sayer of it, or if it is true independently of the mind of the person thinking/saying it. After that, it's a matter of true/false judgment. How we do that is a matter of how minds work, which I'm not qualified to speak on. - ********
>>Cary (20 June at 19.43): "It's not legitimate to add 'for me' to 'impossible'...possibility is objective."
>You've now agreed that two categories of "impossible for me" are no problem. I'll settle for that. - And I'll settle for you settling for it as long as you don't reinstitute the ambiguity I just spent my time unscrambling. I'm here to clarify for the benefit of people who want clarity, and who recognize it when they see it. If you don't want clarity, or don't recognize it when you see it, I'm done.

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