> my composure is waning.
Yeah, mine too. It's frustrating. I say something like "Unless you have some kind of personal consciousness, you can't communicate," and you ask me, "How do you know that?" It's frustrating.
> It feels like a very one sided conversation because some how we don't have access to the same sources.
I'm not using any sources, I'm just reasoning it out. If all is one, there is no differentiation. If there is no differentiation, there is no subject/object relationship. If there is no s/o relationship, there can't be distinct personalities.
On another hand, if there is no personality in the source material, and no potential for personality, then personality is impossible. It's just reasoning. I don't have a source to which to refer you. It's just 2+2=4.
> You say it's not voices in your head but then say "supposing that God appeared to you in your room. He talked with you." Personal revelation of that kind is exactly what I mean by voices in your head.
Well, see, these are different things. "Voices in your head" is psychosis; personal revelation is metaphysics.
> Privately making my desk float wouldn't pass my test
It was just an example. Sigh.
> unequivocal unanimous public demonstration is the standard we use to evaluate almost every other subject in existence.
When it comes right down to it, despite the communal aspect of truth, philosophers of science tell us that scientific verification is largely a misnomer. In the end, science seems to be little more than opinion, expert opinion granted, but still just an opinion. There is, in the words of Thomas Kuhn, “no standard higher than the consent of the relevant community”: a situation that has been colorfully characterized as scientific mob rule. Paul Feyerabend argues that there is no scientific method, that science is, and should be, anarchic. W.V. Quine argued that, "“the totality of our so-called knowledge or beliefs is a man-made fabric that impinges on experience only along the edges.” Later sociological studies have claimed that scientific knowledge is no more certain than any other type of knowledge, that its knowledge is culturally determined.
Ian Hutchinson, in "Monopolizing Knowledge," writes a lot about the limitations of science and how false it is for people to assume that science, scientific evidence, and the scientific method can circumscribe all knowledge. On p. 129 he writes, "In reality, both religious thought and philosophical thought depend upon and have recourse to evidence. Where they differ from science, and from each other, is in what they regard as evidence and in the different weight they accord to different types of evidence. Science insists that evidence must be in the form of clear repeatable experiments. Other types of discourse (religious, philosophical, literary, historical, jurisprudential, and artistic scholarship) place more emphasis on testimony, narrative, human nature, personal experience, etc."
Accordingly, you seem to be establishing a false bar over which theologians must jump.
> We don't know what personality is made of, we don't know what the mix contains. You're talking about things that are outside the realm of human knowledge.
Not totally. Personality is identity-oriented individualized consciousness. It is necessarily self-aware, self-directed, volitional, and individually unique. We also know that physical processes don’t lead us to meaning, judgments, values, and logic (entities that do not exist in the subatomic, chemical, biological, or molecular phenomena). This reductionist-materialist objection is self-defeating. Personality is what we might call an emergent aspect of humanity—a high-level causal property in the complexity of the human organism. Because it's ultimately non-biological, we look for explanations outside of the realm of reductive physicalism.
> Not the same thing at all. You're comparing known factors to try to establish completely unknown concepts. "disjuncted power" is nowhere close to the same level of understanding as a cat.
You missed the point. The point is that you can only end up with what was in the system to begin with. If all you have it cat DNA, you end up with cat result. If all you have are metal pieces, you can't end up with something rubber. If all you have are chemicals, you're going to end up with something chemical.
> Unsubstantiated. We don't know what a singularity would look like because we don't have access to a singularity to study
Well, then, your objection shows the substantiation. If we don't have access to a singularity to study, then that supports the point that it may not be reasonable (due to lack of substantiation) that god is just a singularity (as Hindus claim) or that, as you said, "We don't really know if the universe is other than god or if they are intertwined." The lack of evidence leads us away from the idea of a singularity.
>> Even creation itself requires subject/object relationship.
> Why
If God, who is uncreated, creates something that has a beginning (the universe), then He is not identical with the universe, as they have different attributes. Therefore the act of creation itself requires a subject (God) and an object (that which is created).
>> If God is just "power that exists" (no personality), then creation was impossible
> Why
Because power has no volition. The act of creation requires the ability to desire, the ability to reason, the distinguishing of potential courses, and the exercise of autonomy, and the application of power. Volition is an outworking of intelligent self-direction.
>> If God is self-aware, then He must also have volition (self-awareness necessitates self-direction, which requires volition)
> How do you know God is self-aware??
If God is volitional, he is self-directed. If he is self-directed, he is also self-aware. There's no other choice. "Volitional" means that an organism is able to weigh alternatives to determine a direction. Therefore if an organism is volitional, it is also self-directed—capable of applying intent and power to a situation.
But the only way an organism can be self-directed is if it is self-aware. Otherwise it has no reasoning ability to consider data, stimuli, or alternatives. Descartes's "I think, therefore I am."
> None of these premises are substantiated.
Oh my. Sigh. We've covered this ground repeatedly. I'll try once more.
* If we are going to perceive God as creator, he must of necessity be personal and relational. A "power that exists" has no volition, intelligence, or purpose to engage power to create anything. Only a personal, intelligent source has volition and purposeful power.
* If creation is not distinct from the creator, but all is one, then there is no subject/object relationship, no diversity and no distinctions. Therefore knowledge itself doesn't exist either, since knowledge requires subject/objectivity. This lack of diversity, distinction, and knowledge is contrary to what we observe.
* Since creation is distinct from the creator, and subject/object relationships are therefore not only possible but necessary, then volition and knowledge are also possible. This is in accord with what we observe.
* Since God is therefore necessarily personal and relational, and He is a creator who is distinct from His creation, there is a straight line of understanding how humanity is also personal, relational, purposeful, and knowledgable. These traits of humanity are also in accord with what we observe.
Back to the original question, this is part of the reason why I believe in the Christian God rather than any other god, particularly the Hindu religion (back to what I said about there only really being two). Christian theology accords with reality, and is confirmed by what we see in science and know from logic.