So appealing to the Bible is now fallacious? After all, an appeal to Scripture is an appeal to authority.
In the context of our discussion you were referring to scientists. Appealing to authority is fallacious ONLY if the authority is not infallible. The word of God is perfect and infallible, and for that reason is a proper authority. I never said that appeal to authority is ALWAYS fallacious, but in the context of what you were saying, it was (because you were certainly not referring to scripture).
And if I lived back then I would have to prove it. The things that you have to prove differ from generation to generation---is that so terrible or unreasonable?
Not at all. But it just goes to show that common-sense isn't really so common, and it certainly doesn't always fit with reality. Perhaps your necessary principles are common and fit with reality, but they only do so on account of God. He is their foundation, and in fact HE is the necessary one, for the principles would not be what they are without him.
Because that's the point in question.
It just proves my point. The unbeliever also believes in a court of inquiry, which is generally a conglomeration of society and himself. Ultimately though he makes himself out to be judge of what is true or false, right or wrong. Yet we can see that this worldview logically degenerates into inconsistency, chaos, and arbitrariness. God, as a necessary being, is the only true court of inquiry, and he must necessarily exist.
Sure I can: I point out that "uncaused effect" is a contradiction in terms. The other reason why it is lunacy is that fact that I take cause and effect as givens and have no reason to think that drawing this connection is not a dictate of reason. The trouble with Hume is that he has elevated certain faculties above others for no compelling reason.
That's fine, I will just use the term 'event' rather than 'effect'. Perhaps there was an uncaused event such as the big bang. You take cause and effect as givens only because it is convenient to do so, and because God has designed the universe to work that way. Of course, you don't recognize that God is necessary behind all of it, and to argue otherwise is to degenerate into chaos, and arbitrariness. By the way, from studying Hume it does not seem that he has elevated certain faculties above others. I could be wrong, but he certainly allowed for the importance of feeling and emotion. Obviously since he wasn't a Christian he would not truly allow for spiritual faculties (at least not as the Bible describes them). All of these faculties have been affected by sin, there is no doubt. And each of these faculties rebels against God. It is certainly true that presuppositional apologetics primarily focuses on sin's affects on the mind and rationality. This does not mean it is useless in the realm of dealing with sin's affect on the emotions and affections. A person, in exercising their will, is always using a combination of reasoning and affection. No one is PURELY logical, and no one is PURELY emotional.
I think it's hard to talk about the subconscious without falling into bare assertion.
Seems to be common sense to me. Everyone does things by muscle memory, and it seems the vast majority of mankind assert in some time of learned habit that could be viewed as subconscious. Seems like there is plenty of evidence to suggest that the subconscious 'just is'. You yourself cannot deny that you have often done things without really thinking about them. Or do you consciously make an effort with every thought and action that you take every second of your life?
Because there may be more than the two options you listed available.
Such as? And one what basis can he say that there may be more than two options? Is this a bare assertion that he is making?
Eric, you and I agree on the authority of Scripture, yet somehow we've come to differing conclusions regarding basic belief-formation and whether coherence is an indicator of truth.
Well I do not doubt that a person might BELIEVE that something is coherent. Yet the sinner looks at the universe and makes it fit his own assumtions about himself and his relationship to God. I do not think that simply because something is coherent means that it is true. Nor do I think that truth is always coherence. Man's coherance of the universe is very much fixed upon his will and his status before God. As a rebel he will continually try to make the universe coherent to him based upon what he assumes is his standing/relationship to the universe (he refuses to admit that he is God's creature, made in His image). He attempts to avoid inconsistency and contradiction in his understanding and interpretation of the universe, but he cannot because he has separated himself from God. Though believers constantly point out the inconsistencies of his worldview, and the error of his ways, he refuses to see them, and will only see the truth after God removes his heart of stone and gives him a heart of flesh. I hope perhaps now you better understand my position.
Where have I said this? When did I make this categorical statement? I oppose reductionism of all kinds, whether it's Hume, Locke, Descartes, Marx, or Freud.
That is good.
In this case, we look at the kinds of claims that in ordinary parlance would be considered rational knowledge-claims and proceed from there. If we want to answer this question, we have to proceed descriptively by looking at ordinary usage, not a top-down approach.
Ordinary parlance? So you mean what the majority decides/how the majority functions? That is to be considered 'ordinary', right? Seems to be an Ad Populum argument.
The term "universe" implies that this is only one.
Well, simply call it something else. You certainly can't deny that there are very well-learned men who advocated the existence of either an infinite/eternal universe or multiple-universes.
First, the laws of logic et al don't exist. They must be true, but they don't exist---we're not Platonists here. However, Platonism is a live option for the unbeliever.
And you know as well as I do that in our discussions we always used the term 'existence' with regard to laws in a sense different from material things. Obviously I know that they don't exist in the sense that this table exists. You are trying to bring up issues between the words that you and I have used that have not been issues in all of our previous discussions. Why the change now? As for the laws of logic, they are still only true because God decreed them to be true, and formed the universe in that way. He is still necessary, and they are not.
However, you seem to be missing the move I'm making: can God create a spherical cube in three dimensions? Why not?
Because you have misunderstood omnipotence (I am assuming that you are referring to this characteristic of God). Omnipotence is defined as 'all-powerful'. The problem is that people try to separate this from God's will. Jonathan Edwards speaks on this in his book Freedom of the Will. To be all powerful means that you are always able to accomplish your will. Nothing hinders God's will. What he wills, he accomplishes. In this sense he is all-powerful. So when you ask a silly question such as: "can God create a spherical cube in three dimensions?", this ignores the question of God's will. When we ask if a person 'can' do something, we assume already that they would be willing to do. In other words, we are saying: "given that this person was willing to do X, could they do it?". If we ignore God's will, we can ask other silly questions such as: "can God destroy himself?", "can God lie?", "can God sin?". So we see, one cannot separate a person's 'ability' to do something from their 'will' to either do it or not do it. God is not 'all-willing'. He has a specific will, and his will is ALWAYS accomplished. In that sense he is all-powerful.
Which would mean that the laws of logic aren't just dependent on Him: they are part of His nature.
In a sense, but then again we cannot speculate on how God 'thinks'. Is his thinking linear in the way that we think? Our logic is linear. I cannot imagine how an eternal, omnipotent, and omniscient being 'reasons' or 'thinks', and how that would relate to the 'laws of logic'. And for that reason I will not speculate. I wholeheartedly agree that God is logical, and the source of logic, but I do not think a person can simply assert that the laws of logic are necessary truths while refusing to assert that God is necessary. You yourself have just said that the 'laws of logic are part of his nature'. So to talk of the laws of logic without reference to God is to separate his nature from himself. For that reason, any discussion of the necessity of the laws of logic must include the necessity of God at the back of everything, which is what I have been trying to do.
Please, then, show me a good reason to believe such. If you can get me outside of the matrix, then I have good reason. Remember how Morpheus proves to Neo that he's in the matrix: he shows him. Please, show me.
Please show me good reason NOT to believe such? Can you truly SHOW a non-believer that they are in sin? Or does it not require a divine act by God to cause that unbeliever to see the truth? What I am trying to show here is that all assertions must be justified, or everything becomes arbitrary. If you refuse to justify your belief that we live in the real world, while I refuse to justify the belief that we live in the matrix, then we will just sit and stare at each other all day.
Here again, Eric, you're using a term that is purely subjective. To make sense of something is not to rightly interpret something. Unbelievers do make sense of the world---they just do it wrongly.
I completely agree with you. To them it 'makes sense'. But even so, since their interpretation does not line up with God's (and God is logical), then therefore they (in some way) have deviated from logic. Their interpretation results in contradiction, inconsistency, chaose, and arbitrariness. This is not always easy to show, but it is demonstrable. Please keep in mind that even though I say the word 'demonstrable', I do not mean it to say that it is guaranteed to change their mind. Their mind is a tool of their will, and their will is enslaved to sin. Nothing, no matter how 'demonstrable', will ever change a person's mind so long as they are unwilling to change it.
Let's take an example: let's say that language A and language B have the exact same words such that all nouns in A are nouns in B, verbs in A are verbs in B, etc. However, no word in A means the same thing as in B. So "rabbit" means one thing in A while it means something entirely different in B. Now, an A-speaker and a B-speaker read the same passage and each makes sense of it differently. Further, the passage was written by an A-speaker. Now how is the A-speaker supposed to convince the B-speaker that he is right (assuming that they are communicating in language B)?
By appealing to what the words refer to, creation. It is true that the A-speaker knows how the passage relates to the world, and the B-speaker thinks that it refers to something else. Of course, as soon as a 'noun' (such as an animal) comes into view, the stalemate is broken, and a bridge is made. A-speaker sees an object (whether an animal or not), points to it, and speaks a word. This word means something completely different to B-speaker, but he then comes to realize that they use different nouns to refer to the same thing. And from there they translate. In fact, they don't even need an external object. They can point to their own body parts if they wish, and begin from there.
I am not sure what exactly you are trying to get at here. If you are suggesting that unbelievers are A-speakers and believers are B-speakers, I would raise contention against that. Both unbelievers and believers speak the same language because they are all made in the image of God, live in God's universe, and act under God's laws. They see the same words, and each knows what they mean (deep down, in a spiritual sense), but the unbeliever refuses to acknowledge the author. To him those words are not God's language, nor did they originate with him. They are products of chance, in a universe that runs on chance and randomness. The believer knows otherwise.