by jimwalton » Wed Apr 27, 2016 12:59 pm
Wrong again, my friend. To describe God with attributes is nowhere near self-refuting. A personality is describable, by definition (a personality without a description is not a personality), and it's illegitimate and false to declare that all descriptions are circular and self-refuting, at least any more than is inevitable. All questions of existence—or, more accurately, knowledge of existence—are fundamentally circular. In order to know a thing, we have to know what it is, and we also have to know HOW we know what it is. To know whether things really are as they seem to be, we must have a procedure for distinguishing appearances that are true from appearances that are false, which is what I have been saying. But to know whether our procedure is a good procedure, we have to know whether it really succeeds in distinguishing appearances that are true from appearances that are false. And we cannot know know whether it really does succeed unless we already know which appearances are true and which ones are false. And so we are caught in a circle.
You can't verify your procedure without first having knowledge, but you can't get any knowledge without first verifying your procedure. Kant would say the only option is to pick one or the other and run with it (choose a procedure that you assume but cannot prove will yield true knowledge, like positivism does with science; or choose some tenets of knowledge that you assume are true even though you can't verify them, which is called foundationalism and is the process used in nearly all of philosophy). The way to verify (or contest) truth in a Kantian system isn't to verify (or contest) the first principles, but to test for coherence: a system based on faulty assumptions (or an inaccurate procedure) will eventually either contradict reality, or contradict itself.
My definition starts with an assumption (the concept of God, a philosophical and theological ideal). We have to start with an assumption to have a discussion: God exists. Secondly, we can proceed to how God is defined: "an omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent, eternal, incorporeal, spiritual being who is also holy, just, love, imminent, transcendent, and personal, the creator and sustainer of the entire material universe. He exists outside of space and time, and yet can function within them. He is consistent within himself and cannot be or act in self-contradiction."
Let's talk about this. I can't talk about love without establishing God first. This is not circular or self-refuting because I have begun with assumptions (God exists, he has certain immutable attributes) that are not the conclusions (therefore God exists, therefore God is God), but they do presuppose certain properties of God. The Christian portrayal of God is love, when other notions of God do not portray him as such (competing presuppositions of first principles).
In other words, you want both the knowledge AND the means by which it is obtained. You're ASKING for a circular argument, and that's what is self-refuting. You're putting me in an artificial box of your own making, and then refusing to let me tell you I'm in a false box.
You want to know how I exemplify the label. It's as if you asked me to define a triangle for you, but refuse to let me tell you that it's a close geometric figure with three-sides, and may have similar angles, but not necessarily. If I said to you, "A triangle is a triangle. A triangle just is," that would be meaningless. But when I define it for you, you claim I'm being self-refuting. You can't have your cake and eat it too.
The first premise of any ontological argument is that existence predicates idea. The theological premise is that God exists. That premise stands alone as an ontological reality. In addition to his existence (like the ideal concept of triangle), I can add to that reality by defining the characteristics of that reality (closed figure, 3 sides) by saying God is love, meaning his actions are moral, good, and just, making willful choices to selflessly and sacrificially serve others for their benefit and welfare. This is how I would explain this character trait to an outsider to Christianity. God has these properties because these can be observed from the way he interacts in history with people with whom he has established a relationship, as recorded by the prophets. You call this self-refuting, presumably because you've rejected the metaphysical premise of ontological knowledge, and have a priori already rejected any possible answer. My argument isn't circular or self-refuting, at least any more than is inevitable. At worst, my first principles are not coherent with your, but that's no surprise. The burden of proof is on the coherence of the system, not on the truth of the first principles; these are arbitrary and untestable, by definition, for all systems. The expression "God is love" is coherent with the ontological claim that God exists, and that he exists not in a nebulous form but with immutable attributes. It's no different than claiming there is an ideal figure we call a triangle, and that this figure can be understood by explicating its definitional attributes. When you say "God isn't love," it's as if you are saying "A triangle isn't three sides. A triangle just is." Nonsense, by reasoning. We understand its ontological reality because of the definition, not without it.
Wrong again, my friend. To describe God with attributes is nowhere near self-refuting. A personality is describable, by definition (a personality without a description is not a personality), and it's illegitimate and false to declare that all descriptions are circular and self-refuting, at least any more than is inevitable. All questions of existence—or, more accurately, knowledge of existence—are fundamentally circular. In order to know a thing, we have to know what it is, and we also have to know HOW we know what it is. To know whether things really are as they seem to be, we must have a procedure for distinguishing appearances that are true from appearances that are false, which is what I have been saying. But to know whether our procedure is a good procedure, we have to know whether it really succeeds in distinguishing appearances that are true from appearances that are false. And we cannot know know whether it really does succeed unless we already know which appearances are true and which ones are false. And so we are caught in a circle.
You can't verify your procedure without first having knowledge, but you can't get any knowledge without first verifying your procedure. Kant would say the only option is to pick one or the other and run with it (choose a procedure that you assume but cannot prove will yield true knowledge, like positivism does with science; or choose some tenets of knowledge that you assume are true even though you can't verify them, which is called foundationalism and is the process used in nearly all of philosophy). The way to verify (or contest) truth in a Kantian system isn't to verify (or contest) the first principles, but to test for coherence: a system based on faulty assumptions (or an inaccurate procedure) will eventually either contradict reality, or contradict itself.
My definition starts with an assumption (the concept of God, a philosophical and theological ideal). We have to start with an assumption to have a discussion: God exists. Secondly, we can proceed to how God is defined: "an omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent, eternal, incorporeal, spiritual being who is also holy, just, love, imminent, transcendent, and personal, the creator and sustainer of the entire material universe. He exists outside of space and time, and yet can function within them. He is consistent within himself and cannot be or act in self-contradiction."
Let's talk about this. I can't talk about love without establishing God first. This is not circular or self-refuting because I have begun with assumptions (God exists, he has certain immutable attributes) that are not the conclusions (therefore God exists, therefore God is God), but they do presuppose certain properties of God. The Christian portrayal of God is love, when other notions of God do not portray him as such (competing presuppositions of first principles).
In other words, you want both the knowledge AND the means by which it is obtained. You're ASKING for a circular argument, and that's what is self-refuting. You're putting me in an artificial box of your own making, and then refusing to let me tell you I'm in a false box.
You want to know how I exemplify the label. It's as if you asked me to define a triangle for you, but refuse to let me tell you that it's a close geometric figure with three-sides, and may have similar angles, but not necessarily. If I said to you, "A triangle is a triangle. A triangle just is," that would be meaningless. But when I define it for you, you claim I'm being self-refuting. You can't have your cake and eat it too.
The first premise of any ontological argument is that existence predicates idea. The theological premise is that God exists. That premise stands alone as an ontological reality. In addition to his existence (like the ideal concept of triangle), I can add to that reality by defining the characteristics of that reality (closed figure, 3 sides) by saying God is love, meaning his actions are moral, good, and just, making willful choices to selflessly and sacrificially serve others for their benefit and welfare. This is how I would explain this character trait to an outsider to Christianity. God has these properties because these can be observed from the way he interacts in history with people with whom he has established a relationship, as recorded by the prophets. You call this self-refuting, presumably because you've rejected the metaphysical premise of ontological knowledge, and have a priori already rejected any possible answer. My argument isn't circular or self-refuting, at least any more than is inevitable. At worst, my first principles are not coherent with your, but that's no surprise. The burden of proof is on the coherence of the system, not on the truth of the first principles; these are arbitrary and untestable, by definition, for all systems. The expression "God is love" is coherent with the ontological claim that God exists, and that he exists not in a nebulous form but with immutable attributes. It's no different than claiming there is an ideal figure we call a triangle, and that this figure can be understood by explicating its definitional attributes. When you say "God isn't love," it's as if you are saying "A triangle isn't three sides. A triangle just is." Nonsense, by reasoning. We understand its ontological reality because of the definition, not without it.