Sunday, December 09, 2012

Michael David Rawlings and the Primacy of a Bad Attitude

Christians are notorious for having hurt feelings when their god-belief claims are not accepted as the truths they affirm on their mere say so. Their feelings are hurt even more when their “arguments” are exposed as the silly collections of incoherence that they are. But in spite of their hurt feelings, some Christians keep coming back for more punishment, pushing the same nonsense like a dog coming back to its own vomit, apparently expecting that his next iteration of the same nonsense, perhaps in a new guise, will somehow slide under the radar of philosophical detection. I have bad news for the believer: it won’t.

Christian apologist Michael David Rawlings is no exception to this frequently encountered quagmire. He has come posting on my blog under the guise of wanting to learn about Objectivism and peddling a highfalutin perspective on Christianity backed up by “credentials” which he never specifies. His pockets are loaded to bear with reality-denying assumptions and ten-cent theological jargon to give the impression that he has the answer to the age-old question, “Where’s the beef?” In practice, Michael Rawlings doesn’t even really try to back up his assertions. On the contrary, he simply gets furiously angry when others don’t accept what he says on his mere say so. And this is a guy who says that Christianity does not affirm the primacy of consciousness when human consciousness is involved.

As the discussion has moved along, Michael has made less and less effort to contain his contempt and keep his bad attitude at bay. He has no qualms expressing his spite for atheists. On 7 Dec. he wrote:
Atheists really are notoriously bad thinkers, you know, and dishonest too boot. After all, atheism is a form of psychopathy.
I’m immediately reminded of several points Cohen makes in his expose of the Christian devotional program’s second device, “Discrediting ‘The World’”:
For the believer, there are three kinds of people, and the devotional program prescribes a clear-cut mode of conduct toward each. There are: (1) ordinary unbelievers, (2) believers, and (3) missionaries of a conflicting or competing “false” gospel. The Bible presupposes relatively little depth of contact between believers and ordinary unbelievers. The objects of evangelism, unbelievers are often referred to collectively as “crops” of various kinds to be “harvested,” or “fish” to be “netted.” Precious little is said on handling contacts with them. One very crucial specific instruction on evangelization is given by Jesus to the apostles: “And whosever will not receive you, when ye go out of that city, shake off the very dust from your feet for a testimony against them.” [Luke 9:5] The context of the instruction indicates peripatetic movement of the apostles from one place to another, spending little time in one place. Abundant numbers of evangelistic contacts, not depth, are being mandated. If one does not get an immediate positive response, one is not to persist. When the believer is in the presence of an unbeliever, it is to preach and “witness,” not to listen. (The Mind of the Bible-Believer, pp. 172-173)
Note this last statement: “When the believer is in the presence of an unbeliever, it is to preach and “witness,” not to listen.” This may go a long way in explaining why Michael never seems quite able to integrate the points I have presented into his understanding of what is being discussed.

On a related note, Cohen points out the following:
The substance of the nonbiblical view confronting the believer becomes completely irrelevant. Inasmuch as all merely human views are inherently defective, the argumentum ad hominem becomes a fair argument, and the blow is softened by that argument’s equal validity and “impartial” applicability against all, including the Christian if he weakens and lets his thinking stray outside biblical premises. Critical thinking about human affairs is simply despaired of as futile. While the Bible does not explicitly say that independent thinking is the cardinal sin – to do so would give away the game – … it is the crux of any biblically authentic definition of sin. (Ibid., p. 179)
So while Michael has made certain verbal gestures to the effect that he’s interested to learn more about certain aspects of Objectivism, a “nonbiblical view confronting” him, his actions speak louder than this. Throughout the following expose, we will see numerous instances where Michael rams his head against the unshakable principles of Objectivism while ever failing to come to grips with their implications in regard to Christian god-belief.


Christianity and Its Adherence to Metaphysical Subjectivism

Central to much of my discussion with Michael David Rawlings is the issue of metaphysical primacy, i.e., the relationship between the subject of consciousness and any objects it is said to be conscious of. While this is the most fundamental issue in philosophy (since philosophy is the attempt to provide a comprehensive view of life and reality, and necessarily involves consciousness, and therefore its objects; in his book Ayn Rand’s Theory of Knowledge, Porter writes: “I think the primacy of existence is the most important issue in philosophy” – p. 198), it is never addressed in any self-conscious manner anywhere in the Christian bible. And it is not something you’ll find commonly addressed in theological and apologetic texts. As I pointed out in a comment to the previous blog, “We don’t see Christians saying, ‘Hey, that’s got to be false since it contradicts the primacy of existence’.” And we certainly do not see this anywhere in the Christian bible.

So when the issue of metaphysical primacy is raised in objection to Christianity, we can expect a mixture of confusion and hostility on the part of the Christian attempting to defend his mystical worldview from this type of criticism. It cuts to the very foundation of any worldview, and it quickly exposes a number of fundamental inconsistencies lurking in the believer’s worldview. It gets even messier when another Christian steps in and makes pronouncements underscoring the presence of previously undetected inconsistencies inherent in the theistic view of the world.

Michael asks: “Where does the Objectivist get the idea that existence has primacy over consciousness?”

The answer is simple: We get it from reality, by observing reality, by identifying what we observe, by grasping the nature of the subject-object relationship. We certainly do not get it from the bible. The bible nowhere affirms the primacy of existence, even in the case of human consciousness (contrary to assertions made by Michael himself, as we will see below); on the contrary, the Christian bible repeatedly and emphatically affirms the primacy of consciousness. The primacy of consciousness affirms the metaphysical primacy of the subject of consciousness over its objects. This is known as metaphysical subjectivism, since it holds that the objects of consciousness conform in some way to the subject of consciousness. The alternative to this is metaphysical objectivism, i.e., the consistent and explicit recognition of the fundamental fact that the objects of consciousness exist and are what they are independent of the conscious activity by which the subject is conscious of them. Hence, Objectivism, the Philosophy of Reason.

Examples of metaphysical subjectivism in the bible are abundant, and include the doctrine of creation, the doctrine of divine sovereignty (everything in the universe conforms in terms of identity and action to the will of the supernatural ruling consciousness), the doctrine of miracles, the doctrine of salvation through faith (belief and confession, as opposed to “works,” lead to “spiritual cleansing”), the doctrine of prayer, the doctrines of angels and demons, and many, many more.

Michael has made statements to the effect that such “power over existence” is reserved only for Christianity’s god. He states “Nowhere in scripture is it asserted that a finite mind (subject) can have primacy over an existent (object),” where “finite mind” is supposed to denote human consciousness as well as the consciousnesses imagined by Christians to belong to demons and angels. Presumably it also denotes the conscious faculties possessed by non-human animals, like dogs, cats, elk, weasels, ladybugs, etc.

Unfortunately, Michael offers no biblical citations which make any explicitly statement about the orientation between consciousness and its objects, particularly with regard to human consciousness; its authors will only strike those informed on the matter as utterly oblivious to it. Indeed, one gets the impression that Michael has not examined the content of the Christian bible now that he has become at least somewhat familiar with the issue of metaphysical primacy. Meanwhile, certain passages in the New Testament attributing the cause of diseases to demons, for instance, are a clear-cut case of affirming metaphysical subjectivism on the part of consciousnesses other than the Christian god itself.

Then of course there’s Matthew 17:20, which puts the following statement into Jesus’ mouth:
And Jesus said unto them, Because of your unbelief: for verily I say unto you, If ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye shall say unto this mountain, Remove hence to yonder place; and it shall remove; and nothing shall be impossible unto you.
I have pointed this passage out to Michael at least twice now, but in spite of his volumes of contemptuous screed, he has not addressed it. Going by his statements alone, one might never suspect that I ever referenced it. And yet, it provides explicit evidence contrary to his own affirmation regarding the human mind, the primacy of consciousness, and what the bible states.

Other examples would include Peter walking on water by merely believing that he can (here the physics of relative density between the human body and a body of water conform to the contents of one’s beliefs, an obvious case of metaphysical subjectivism), merely thinking lustful thoughts resulting in guilt of adultery, the various “ask and ye shall receive” passages in the gospels, faith healings, etc.

If Michael doesn’t think that these qualify as examples of a “finite mind” having “primacy over an existent (object),” one can only wonder what he thinks would qualify as such. That he insists that the bible nowhere portrays a “finite mind” as enjoying metaphysical primacy over the objects of its consciousness, only suggests that he has not grasped the issue of metaphysical primacy very well.

But Michael seems to think that Objectivists have no justification in affirming the primacy of existence consistently. He listed two propositions:
1. Existence has primacy over our consciousness.  
2. Existence has primacy over consciousness.
He then writes: “These are not the same propositions at all. The latter is not contained in the inherent imperative of the original question. It’s a gratuitous insertion unwittingly perpetrated by a finite consciousness in spite of existence. It didn’t ‘hear’ that. It tells itself that. Once again, a univocal existence cannot tell us anything we don’t already know; we would necessarily have to be the tellers in that case. But that’s absurd as this would violate the imperative that is proposition one.”

Again, Michael is operating here on the question-begging basis of two false dichotomies: on the one hand, there is the dichotomous division of existence into “univocal” vs. “analogical” realms. Operating on the primacy of consciousness, Christianity divides reality into two opposing realms: the realm of concretes, flesh, blood, finite consciousness and reason; and the realm of “transcendence” which man can access, not by means of reason and objective input from reality, but by means of introspecting the contents of scripturally guided imagination. At no point in the bible do we find a philosophically charged concern for distinguishing between reality and imagination at the foundation of knowledge. Religious imagery, constructed from various allegorical tropes and selectively culled into the indoctrinated imagination of the believer, seems immediately real to the believer given the fact that it does reside in his imagination and his ability to distinguish between reality and fiction has been systematically crippled. Given Christianity’s assumption of the primacy of consciousness, the bible could offer no consistent guide on this fundamental distinction. To do so would be directly fatal to its religious impulse.

In fact, however, there is one reality, and that’s all. Existence exists. There is no objective justification for positing some supernatural or “transcendent” realm as something real when in fact it is merely imaginary. The assumption of the primacy of consciousness lying at the root of Christianity assures us of this fact. A belief system premised on the primacy of consciousness cannot contain its subjective influences to one aspect of that belief system; it corrodes the entire artifice. Many believers sense deep down the fact that there is no objective basis to their belief system, but they choose to suppress it, submerging it into the darker labyrinths of mystic delusion and pretending that the immediacy of imagination cancels out this concern. In the final analysis, however, the Christian’s belief in such a realm comes from a sacred storybook, not from facts he observes in the world around him; even on his own terms, his “religious truths” are not something that can be discovered by reason: according to Christianity, they need to be “revealed” from an agent imagined to exist in that “transcendent” realm. Blur the distinction between the real and the imaginary: that is the primary gimmick of religious inculcation.

On the other hand, there’s the false notion that there is such a thing as an “infinite consciousness,” which is implied by Michael’s continued references to “finite consciousness.” Michael knows that the notion of an “infinite consciousness” is not accepted among those he’s trying to persuade, and yet he’s offered no sustainable justification for continuing to affirm such a notion. It is a fantasy, an imagination which is as incoherent as “pure five.” We’ve already been through this. But Michael can’t make his points without making use of already discredited ideas. He apparently thinks the fact that well-known thinkers throughout history have endorsed this idea should be sufficient basis for anyone else to accept it. It’s not.

Also, the Objectivist affirmation of the primacy of existence as a general, absolute principle is in no way “gratuitous.” If Michael were truly concerned with avoiding worldviews premised on gratuitous notions, he would have rejected Christianity long ago. By contrast, the Objectivist view finds only confirmation of the primacy of existence in every species of consciousness objectively observable, whether it is human consciousness, canine consciousness, bovine consciousness, avian consciousness, reptilian consciousness, etc. All evidence supports the primacy of existence. The only alternative is something we must imagine, but the imaginary is not real.

Moreover, the consistent affirmation of the primacy of existence in no way violates any objectively knowable facts. I explained to Andrew Louis, who also piped into the discussion, that appealing to facts implicitly acknowledges the primacy of existence, and thereby the truth of Objectivism, since such an appeal implicitly recognizes that statements about reality need factual support to substantiate them, and also that such appeals imply awareness of the fact that wishing doesn’t make it so – i.e., implicitly denying the primacy of consciousness. Indeed, there is no objectively available evidence of a consciousness to whose contents reality conforms. Again, this is a fantasy, an imagination that has run away with itself.

So it should be clear that Objectivism’s affirmation of the primacy of existence is (a) supported by evidence, (b) internally consistent, and (c) unchallenged by any legitimate evidence to the contrary. Very simply, there is no evidence to the contrary. The very proposition that there is evidence for a position or against it, assumes the primacy of existence to begin with for the reasons indicated above. So even an attempt to cite evidence to the contrary would imply the truth of the primacy of existence. There is no escape for the theist here. Assuming the truth of a principle in an effort to deny or undermine it, does not lead to non-contradictory conclusions.

So no, it is not the case that human consciousness “tells itself that” as though this were some arbitrary position one simply prefers to be true. Here we can see that Michael’s would-be objection itself assumes the truth of the primacy of existence, the very view which he is seeking to undermine: what possible objection would one have to the view that a position is true because one prefers that it is true, if not the fact that it violates the primacy of existence? Blank out. On the contrary, the primacy of existence is not something we simply affirm as a result of preferences; rather, it is something we discover repeatedly without exception throughout nature, and subsequently identify on this basis. It is thus a fundamental recognition. It is not confined merely to human beings. It is the consistent testimony of the facts we discover in the case of any actual consciousness. Discovering facts and identifying them by means of consciousness are operations consistent entirely consistent with the primacy of existence. There is no inconsistency between object, method and identification on the part of Objectivism here.

Michael wrote: “God is talking to us all the time. God is talking to Dawson when He tells him that the only thing that may be extrapolated from the question’s inherent imperative is the first proposition. The second is an illusion.”

We can all imagine a supernatural being “talking” to us and telling us what Michael gratuitously asserts here. Jim Jones did this. David Koresh did this. Marshall Herff Applewhite did this. Michael can call the phantasm he imagines “God,” the Muslim can call the phantasm he imagines “Allah,” the Lahu tribesman can call the phantasm he imagines “Geusha,” and the Blarkist can call the phantasm he imagines “Blarko.” But either way you slice it, it all comes up imagination. Unlike Christianity, Objectivism recognizes explicitly the fundamental distinction between reality and imagination. “Revelation” in one form or another is the mode of “knowledge” affirmed by all expressions of mysticism, for mysticism assumes the impotence of human consciousness when it comes to knowledge: man is depraved, impotent, incompetent, soiled and besmirched; he cannot overcome the “noetic effects of sin” on his own. So any knowledge that he does possess must come from some supernatural, omniscient source; he must “think” his god’s thoughts “after him,” fancying his imagination as a means of reading a supernatural mind. On such a view, knowledge is not something man discovers through his own cognitive effort. Driven by the primacy of consciousness, believers are in fact just making it all up on the basis of storybook motifs which are accepted as non-negotiable, indispensable absolutes at the basis of his “system.” It all seems “logical” because a semblance of logic is applied to tie tangents, speculations and other cognitive wanderings to the bedrock of these storybook motifs. Logic is a formal concern which any worldview can adopt; but whence comes the content? For Objectivism, the content comes from reality. For religion, it comes from a reality-denying storybook. Appeals to logic, then, cannot immunize a position from scrutiny; a microwave will heat horse manure just as well as last night’s leftovers. On the religious view, man, given his fallibility and non-omniscience, can only wind up with error if he relies on his own mind. What is missing in all this is the very epistemology man needs in order to identify and integrate the reality in which he actually exists, namely reason.

Michael writes: “Passive entities don’t know or say anything. Persons do. Since I don’t have primacy over existence and a univocal existence cannot know or tell me anything about itself, what is this existence that has primacy?”

Metaphysical primacy as Objectivism informs it does not mean reality “saying anything” or “telling anything.” Saying and telling are actions of consciousness. Nor does the primacy of existence imply that consciousness is “passive.” As I’ve pointed out to Michael before, consciousness is a type of activity; the primacy of existence recognizes this outright and explicitly. Indeed, that consciousness is a type of activity speaks to the very point of affirming the primacy of existence: it tells us that, regardless of what action consciousness takes, the only right action with regard to truthful knowledge about reality must be constrained, volitionally – i.e., by means of self-regulation, by the recognition that the objects of consciousness exist and are what they are independent of whatever action one’s consciousness might perform. This is why the primacy of existence is found at the root of the recognition that “wishing doesn’t make it so.”

The existence that has primacy is every thing, existent, attribute, etc., that actually exists, including consciousness itself (as an actually existing attribute of some organisms and also as a secondary object). “Existence is Identity, Consciousness is Identification” (Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged). It’s not a matter of anything “say[ing] anything” or “telling me anything about itself,” as though existence were itself a conscious entity. That’s absurd. (And such absurdity is religion.) Rather, it is a matter of some entities in existence possessing a faculty of consciousness, particularly those capable of conceptual knowledge, and those entities being aware of things that exist, including themselves, and the cognitive actions they take to identify and integrate the things they perceive according to what they perceive by means of concepts. This is called reason. Notice that Michael’s analysis does not allow for reason. It systematically and gratuitously leaves reason out of the entire equation.

Michael summarily equates this existence with a supernatural consciousness, gratuitously asserting “It’s a Person.” He offers no factual substantiation in support of this assertion. Rather, he puts on display for us his own primacy-of-consciousness “epistemology”: Michael has appointed himself the “teller,” telling us what reality is, offering no explanation of “how” he “knows” this and presumably having no need to do so. He just pulls it “out of thin air,” as in the case of all mystical “revelations” before it. There’s no application of reason in all of this. It is not an issue of discovery on Michael’s part, for if it were, he would gladly point to the facts which informed his discovery. Rather, it is an exemplification of how his worldview infests its “epistemology” with the primacy of consciousness: it’s “true” because he believes it, and he believes it because he imagines it, and the worldview which he has accepted does not allow him to consistently distinguish between what he “knows” and what he imagines, for it does not allow him to consistently distinguish between what is real and what is imaginary. Without imagination, there would be no Christianity. And an epistemology which restrains one’s imagination to what is rational (i.e., an epistemology constrained by the primacy of existence) would never allow what Michael affirms as “truth” to be accepted as such. This is why authors and characters of the bible repeatedly appeal to faith instead of reason. Michael has been careful to ignore the role of faith throughout his asseverations since by doing so he thinks he avoids giving away the game. But we know better than this, and we won’t be suckered in by his apologetic suppression of faith, even though they lurk in the background all along. It’s all about maintaining a façade.

Michael says: “God is talking to us all the time. Dawson only listens to himself.”

Here’s an example of Michael’s faith spilling into his pretense of rationality and his personal resentment of me clouding his judgment. He can’t contain these because they cannot be constrained once Christianity’s mystical premises have been accepted. Michael is a victim of his own worldview’s self-immolation on the pyre of fideism. Indeed, contrary to what Michael states here, Dawson listens to many people, people who claim all kinds of things. Dawson considers what he hears others say according to the strictures of reason, and those who propose things that are contrary to reason resent this. Also, Dawson knows that there is a fundamental difference between reality and imagination, and he knows that many who think they are hearing the voice of a supernatural being are in fact merely imagining things and misidentifying what they think they’ve heard as a “voice” from some transcendent realm, just as some middle aged housewife on the outskirts of Albuquerque, New Mexico, will insist that the burn patterns on a tortilla are really the image of Jesus miraculously looking back at her in the heat of her religious hysteria. It’s imagination provoked by irrational fear, guided by religious suggestion and tailored to suit religious expectation, that leads to Michael’s “Twilight Zone abruptions of crazy” as well as to the middle-aged housewife’s “interpretation” of religion-confirming burn marks on a tortilla.

And Michael thinks what I say is embarrassing? Wow! Just wow!

Michael writes: “Until you show me otherwise, I have no reason to believe that you haven’t been disingenuous. All of your arguments against the existence of God, for example, amount to you obviating your own conclusions with the nonsense that God is B when in fact divine perfection is A!”

Since Michael first inserted himself into my blog’s comments, all he has presented are subjective assertions about this god he’s enshrined in his imagination. And now he’s expecting me to prove that I’m not being disingenuous? There is really only one “argument against the existence of God” that I have shared with Michael in my discussion with him, and that is the following (from this blog):
Premise 1: That which is imaginary is not real.  
Premise: 2: If something is not real, it does not actually exist.  
Premise 3: If the god of Christianity is imaginary, then it is not real and therefore does not actually exist.  
Premise 4: The god of Christianity is imaginary.  
Conclusion: Therefore, the god of Christianity is not real and therefore does not actually exist.
I do not see where Michael has interacted with this, even though I cited this very syllogism back on 9 Nov. in the comments of this blog. So if he’s been reading, he has no excuse but to be aware of it. And yet it is the only argument I’ve proposed which seeks to establish the conclusion that the Christian god does not exist.

If Michael thinks he can demonstrate that his god is real rather than imaginary, let him try. It is this very task that he would need to take up in order to sustain the charge that my argument with obviating its own conclusion “with the nonsense that God is B when in fact divine perfection is A!” And yet back on 7 Nov., in this blog’s comments, Michael already announced:
I have no interest in proving the Christian God's existence to anyone or proving that the Bible is a direct revelation from Him. That's silly. Each person will decide what he will or will not believe for himself.
So if he sticks with his previously stated policy, he’ll never be able to make the case for his accusation against me.

BTW, the conclusion of my argument from divine lonesomeness is that Christianity “begins with a starting point of divine solipsism, which is, according to a rational worldview, the ultimate expression of subjectivism” – this is not the same as a conclusion affirming that the Christian god does not exist. Even here, when I spell out the nature of my own argument’s conclusion, Michael seems to have confused himself. Even worse, Michael’s own explicit affirmation that “according to Judeo-Christianity, ultimately, consciousness does have primacy over existence,” can only mean that his “divine perfection” ultimately reduces to divine solipsism.

Michael recently stated: “Dawson is not merely failing to listen carefully in regard to his arguments against God’s existence. He is intentionally pretending not to understand. He is well past the point of mere errors of cognitional transitions.”

And yet, the only argument that I have proposed which seeks to argue “against God’s existence” is the argument I quoted in full above – namely the argument which concludes that the Christian god does not exist on the basis of the sub-conclusion that it is merely imaginary. I posted the above argument back on 9 Nov. in the comments of this blog where my discussion with Michael began. But Michael has not interacted with this argument. He has completely ignored it. Should this surprise us? I trow not.

Instead, he has focused on another argument of mine, one which he apparently believes can be answered by reciting nonsense phrases like “divine perfection” and “the eternally existing now!” which, when examined, are exposed as simply destroying the very concept of consciousness to begin with, namely by completely obliterating its objective context while retrofitting it with imaginary attributes that carry emotional weight in believer’s minds (like “omniscience,” “omnipotence,” “omnipresence” coupled arbitrarily with consciousness), all the while detaching the concept of consciousness from reality, denying its active nature in order to project it outside the “time-space continuum,” and making what Michael himself has called “Twilight Zone abruptions of crazy” such as “The American Revolution is occurring for God right now, as is the creation of the cosmos within which it was fought . . . not merely in His mind, but as actual existents apart from Him” as an attempt to provide his god with some mind-independent object prior to it creating anything independent of itself. And while such blathering is simply bewilderingly incoherent, it ignores the point, which I raised, that Michael’s own affirmation of the primacy of consciousness can only entail that, for the Christian god, there could be no mind-independent objects for it to have awareness of in the first place. As pointed out above, Michael’s “divine perfection” reduces to divine solipsism, and a mountain full of garbage comes along with it. All of this pours hot coals on Michael’s already fuming head as he erupts with another episode of fits and tantrums, name-calling and condescension.


Michael’s Confused Yammering about Infinity

In regard to our disputes over the notion of an “actual infinity,” I stated:
Indeed, I really have no idea what an “infinite consciousness” could be. It is literally and utterly nonsensical.
Apparently Michael thinks that I’m being dishonest by stating this, when in fact it is not a falsehood at all. This is an autobiographical statement, a statement about my own understanding. I do realize and understand that Christians affirm the notion of an “infinite consciousness.” But it does not follow from this that the notion of an “infinite consciousness” has conceptual integrity so far as I can tell, and I’ve presented good reasons for dismissing it. For instance, I indicated Objectivism’s primary reason for denying the notion that an actual infinity does or can exist. Here I quoted Dr. Peikoff:
”Infinite” does not mean large; it means larger than any specific quantity, i.e., of no specific quantity. An infinite quantity would be a quantity without identity. But A is A. Every entity, accordingly, is finite; it is limited in the number of its qualities and in their extent; this applies to the universe as well. As Aristotle was the first to observe, the concept of ‘infinity’ denotes merely a potentiality of indefinite addition or subtraction. For example, one can continually subdivide a line; but however many segments one has reached at a given point, there are only that many and no more. The actual is always finite.” (Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand, pp. 31-32).
Michael had replied to this by saying:
The always finite number of segments for a finite consciousness has no bearing on the issues of identity and actuality proper.
I responded with a needed correction:
Well, the notion of segments is only introduced in the sense of dividing something, an area where Objectivism holds that the concept ‘infinite’ has at least some legitimacy (the other being the ability to continue adding to something). It is not fundamental. Entities are fundamental. That is where Rand/Peikoff are working from. Entities have identity. (I’m guessing we both would agree on this?) Where we seem to part ways is over the implications that identity has for finitude. The Objectivist view makes complete sense to me: to be actual is to be specific, and the specific is always finite. The view you seem to be proposing – which seems to have in mind no definable identity that I can grasp at this point – defies rational comprehension.
Notice that the points I outline here are completely consistent with the statement I make above, just prior to the Peikoff quote.

Notice also that Objectivism is not denying the hypothetical potential, which is what mathematicians have in mind, to continue adding or dividing units without end. What needs to be emphasized is that this is a conceptual process, and therefore not a metaphysical fundamental; the potential to continue adding or dividing segments does not denote a concrete entity that exists in reality apart from the mental process of conceptual integration. What is metaphysically fundamental are entities – concretes that exist apart from and prior to conceptual activity. It is here where Objectivism affirms that “the actual is always finite.” And it is here where the theist needs more than his mere say-so to substantiate his assertion of the existence of an “actual infinite.” And indeed, it is here where Michael has not succeeded in substantiating his position or his objections against Objectivism on this matter. This should be clear to anyone who reads the quote from Peikoff carefully and considers the distinctions he makes in that quote against the reactions which Michael has offered in response to that quote. This will be important to keep in mind below.

Michael had also stated:
Simultaneously, the finite mind readily apprehends that any divisible entity may be divided without end. That is a perfectly rational, mathematical axiom. It follows, infinity is that which is indivisible, immutable and has no beginning or end. That’s its identity expressed philosophically.
To which I responded:
Even if we grant that “it follows” from the assumption that “the finite mind readily apprehends that any divisible entity may be divided without end” that “infinity is that which is indivisible, immutable and has no beginning or end” (and I’m not even sure I would grant that without more context to support it), it does not follow that the concept ‘infinity’ so-defined denotes something that is actual. And that’s the dispute we seem to be having.
Michael seems to have anticipated in some way the point I was making here, for he also stated:
As for infinity’s actuality, on the contrary, what we have here is a very strong reason to believe that some actual realm of origin exists beyond the divisible realm of the finite, something that can divide the divisible without end. Otherwise, we are aware of a mathematical axiom that is impeccably cogent if not inescapable, yet gratuitous?! That’s odd. That’s very, very odd. . . .
The “mathematical axiom that is impeccably cogent if not inescapable,” suggests correspondence to the hypothetical ability to continue adding and/or dividing entities which actually exist. This is a conceptual operation, just as all mathematics is. If this mathematical axiom has an objective basis, then it affirms the primacy of existence. If it is thought to denote some kind of conscious agent which only “exists” in one’s imagination, then it springs from the primacy of consciousness and has no bearing whatsoever on what actually exists. Michael needs to decide. Neither alternative poses a positive outcome for his god-belief, since the primacy of consciousness is its (his god-belief’s) fundamental premise.

In response to Michael’s overall statement, I wrote:
I’m not sure I follow. Again, suppose that I’m dense as a pile of bricks here. You seem to be saying that our ability (in this realm) to divide a divisible entity without end (and here Binswanger would disagree that this ability is itself actual or realizable; he considers it merely hypothetical) is “a very strong reason to believe that some actual realm of origin exists beyond the divisible realm of the finite.” Am I reading you correctly? If so, it’s not at all clear what you think this “very strong reason” is, unless it’s a disguised appeal to ignorance or incredulity.
Notice that I was asking Michael for clarification here, since in a previous statement he wrote “the finite mind readily apprehends that any divisible entity may be divided without end.” But in reaction to my request for clarification, he comes back with more nauseating fumes of contempt:
Our ability? Who said anything about our ability in this regard? The obvious meaning of the phrase “something that can divide the divisible without end” is that we, you and I, can’t! which makes all the difference in the world. Oh, you followed that alright as your misrepresentation is the very essence of your evasion. “Dense as a pile of bricks”? Did I say that? I misspoke. Let me revise that. Liar. Punk. Whore. Snake. Coward. Sociopath
Simply asking the guy for clarification will get you this. But this is typical of Michael’s proclivity for outbursts: he uses one little tiny thing – in this case my words “our ability” – as an occasion to let loose his already amply-exhibited contempt. But notice how Michael passes on the opportunity to provide more information regarding any argument he may have on the matter at hand. It should be clear that my question is concerned with how we can infer that there is what he has called “a very strong reason to believe that some actual realm of origin exists beyond the divisible realm of the finite.” If it’s not “our ability” to divide a divisible entity without end, is it our conception of such a potential that constitutes “a very strong reason to believe that some actual realm of origin exists beyond the divisible realm of the finite”? He says that “we” have this “very strong reason.” But what precisely is that “very strong reason”? It’s not clear from what Michael does write. Perhaps Michael means that the fact that “the finite mind readily apprehends that any divisible entity may be divided without end” is this “very strong reason” to suppose that there is an actual infinite which “can” do the dividing he has in mind. If so, it’s not at all clear how this apprehension on our part constitutes a “very strong reason to believe that some actual realm of origin exists beyond the divisible realm of the finite, something that can divide the divisible without end.” His following statement – that “Otherwise, we are aware of a mathematical axiom that is impeccably cogent if not inescapable, yet gratuitous?! That’s odd. That’s very, very odd” – does not, so far as I can tell, translate into support for his assertion that we have a “very strong reason to believe” what he says. That something strikes us as “odd,” is not justification for appealing to some invisible magic being as the “answer” to the supposedly problematic issue that’s being called “odd.” Perhaps it is in Michael’s mind, but it’s not on an objective orientation to reality.

Seriously, this guy Michael does not come across as a worthy spokesman for what he styles as both the creator of the universe and “Truth and Love.” If anything, it seems he should exhibit more patience, if not a thicker skin. But this is to be expected from Christians when their bluff is called. They have nothing else but emotion to go on, and when it spills out as it has in Michael’s case, it’s clear that this is all he really has to go on. All his theological jargon is merely part of the grandiose self-important façade he’s trying to maintain.

Picking up on my previous line of thought, I wrote:
As for our awareness of what you call “a mathematical axiom,” Objectivism would say that this is implicit in the very process of concept-formation. (This might explain why it seems appropriate to call it an axiom.) Rand notes:
”A concept is not formed by observing every concrete subsumed under it, and does not specify the number of such concretes. A concept is like an arithmetical sequence of specifically defined units, going off in both directions, open at both ends and including all units of that particular kind. For instance, the concept ‘man’ includes all men who live at the present, who have ever lived or who will ever live. An arithmetical sequence extends into infinity, without implying that infinity actually exists; such extension means only that whatever number of unit does exist, it is to be included in the same sequence. The same principle applies to concepts: the concept ‘man’ does not (and need not) specify what number of men will ultimately have existed – it specifies only the characteristics of man, and means that any number of entities possessing these characteristics is to be identified as ‘men’.” (Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology, pp. 17-18)
So far from suggesting that “infinity” really exists, or that an actual entity can in fact be “infinite,” the mathematical axiom which you have mentioned really points to our ability to conceptualize, not to something existing in some supernatural realm. Again, I can’t over-stress the importance of a good theory of concepts. I’ve found no theory of concepts in the bible, not even a bad one. But again, perhaps I’m just dense.
Far from interacting with any of this in an adult manner, Michael has shown no indication that he grasps the points that I’ve presented here, let alone showing them to be faulty in any way. And yet he continues to proceed as though the notion of an “infinite consciousness” is perfectly sensible, even going so far as suggesting that its axiomatic.

In fact, however, certain statements of Michael’s only indicate that he has not understood the Objectivist position at all very well. For he continued, stating:
What does appear to be an instance of circular reasoning is Peikoff’s notion that only the finite can exist. He seems to be arguing that because consciousness can only apprehend the potentiality of infinity, but not its realization, infinity doesn’t exist. More at, infinity allegedly has no identity that consciousness can pin down with anything but a referent and, therefore, cannot be said to have any discernable actuality. But that appears to suggest that some sort of consciousness is imposing a constraint on existence.
In response to this, I found it necessary to quote the passage from Peikoff again (see above) and point out the following:
Notice that [Peikoff] says that “an infinite quantity would be a quantity without identity.” He bases this observation directly on the definition he just gave, namely that ‘infinity’ “means larger than any specific quantity.” Since the actual always exists in some (i.e., specific) quantity, the actual is therefore always finite. He’s not saying that anything here which suggests or implies that consciousness puts some kind of constraint on what can or cannot exist. He cites the “potentiality of indefinite addition or subtraction,” not to prove his point (since it’s not based on this), but to demonstrate it in action: “however many segments one has reached at a given point, there are only that many and no more,” i.e., finite.
Clearly Peikoff is contrasting the actual with mere potentiality and notes that the actual is always finite by reference to the definition of ‘infinite’ and to the fact that any actual thing is specific, meaning its attributes exist in some specific quantity. In no way is Peikoff denying the potential to continue adding or dividing units, as the mathematical axiom holds. The mathematical axiom does not state or imply that an actual infinite exists, and mathematics does not require such to be the case. The mathematical concern is answered by the Objectivist theory of concepts, as I pointed out above. It’s a conceptual matter.

But it still appears that Michael has not understood the Objectivist position on the matter. This impression persists when we read the following belligerent comment by Michael:
For example, [Dawson’s] nonsense about the mathematical axiom of division! Are you friggin’ kidding me? That’s a basic, necessary, indispensable mathematic imperative. We cannot even begin to comprehend mathematics, let alone deal with calculi of algebra, geometry, trigonometry or calculus without accepting the obviously rational fact of a linear scale of numeric infinity on either side of the “0”. What do you think the implications of PI and the apparent impossibility, albeit, constructional necessity of squaring the circle are? Peikoff and Dawson are prattling lunacy! No wonder Objectivism is not respected by the academic community at large. Pseudo-mathematical blather! And you drooling idiots are giving him a pass on that?
Notice that nothing I wrote in the previous exchange seems to have sunk in for our friend Michael. Nothing in the passage that I quoted from Peikoff or what I have stated denies either the availability or the usefulness of the concept of infinity in mathematics. There is no indication in either my comments or the Peikoff quote that mathematics must dispense with the concept of infinity. So what is Michael fussing about here? What specifically is he calling “lunacy”? Michael has not been able to secure any rational case for the notion that an actual infinite can or does exist. And yet he still finds it necessary to lash out at me and others personally in spite of my efforts to clarify my position and correct some of his misunderstandings on the matter. Truly his behavior is inexplicable.


The Anti-Conceptual Implications of Christianity’s “God”


Michael writes: “1. First you argue that God cannot have an actually existent object by imagining Him to be an entity trapped inside the space-time continuum, obviating your conclusion. Rather, you began by arguing that he is not trapped inside the continuum and then shift your premise to the other without notice. When you’re shown that your god, your B, could not possibly be what is conceptually understood in the history of philosophical and theological proofs to be an entity of divine perfection existing outside the space-time continuum, you respond as if you don’t understand.”

I’ve explained all this repeatedly, and still Michael is flailing away at his own confusion. He cites “what is conceptually understood in the history of philosophical and theological proofs to be an entity of divine perfection existing outside the space-time continuum,” and yet even this characterization betrays a profound ignorance of the nature of concepts. Theology is riddled with stolen concepts, floating abstractions, and other anti-conceptual notions which ultimately reduce to the primacy of consciousness metaphysics which Michael has denied on the part of human consciousness. And yet it’s present throughout his theology, infecting every morsel of what he accepts as religious ‘knowledge’. And here we have a prime example of this.

He makes use of the concept ‘consciousness’; on an objective orientation to reality (i.e., on one which consistently adheres to the primacy of existence metaphysics), this concept has meaning, and its meaning cannot simply be wiped away in order to make room for the imaginary. But the context in which Michael projects consciousness completely strips it of meaningful content. He likely doesn’t grasp this point since he is so accustomed to misappropriating concepts on behalf of mystical notions which can have meaning only in the confines of religious imagination, and of course he wants to think this is perfectly legitimate. It’s not. The “consciousness” he imagines in the “transcendent” realm is loaded with gratuitous denials of what we know about consciousness by objective methodology. For instance, his god-consciousness is not active (it couldn’t be since it’s “outside” time); it is not dependent on biological structures (it’s magical, like Puff the Magic Dragon); it has no existential purpose (it doesn’t need to identify things that it needs to live – it’s indestructible, immortal, eternal, in need of nothing), etc. It’s “pure five.” It’s nonsense. My argument has only helped to expose these gratuitous departures from reality.

I explained this in an earlier comment where I stated:
To illustrate this, consider an analogous, though more benign example. On a rational view, the concept ‘five’ denotes a number following the number four and preceding the number six, and it assumes equal measure in its units. But suppose someone comes along and says there’s an ultimate “pure five,” and this “pure five” can do all kinds of things that the concept ‘five’ as we know it cannot do, but at the same time it’s clear that he does not think it follows four, it does not precede six, its units are not equal in measure, it is not half of ten, and it is not the square root of 25. It’s “pure five,” so we would be fools to expect it to be like “ordinary five.” On this basis he affirms such “Twilight Zone abruptions” as “five plus four are sixty-two” and “five times five times five are one.” Naturally you and I would find this completely absurd, given its blatant anti-conceptualism. But this is essentially what Objectivists see happening in the case of the Christian’s (mis)use of the concept ‘consciousness when he projects it into this “transcendent” realm he imagines: he takes a concept that is perfectly legitimate in “this” realm and applies it to a realm which is fundamentally different from (if not opposed to) ours, all the while denying its biological nature, it need for genuinely mind-independent objects, its biological purpose, its active nature, etc. It is clearly a case of anti-conceptualism, and given its fundamental (axiomatic) importance, it is far more devastating to one’s philosophy than the fellow who affirms the “pure five” described above.
Christianity’s affirmation of a time-transcending consciousness is directly analogous to the notion of “pure five” as described here. It is an attempt to have one’s cake, and eat it, too. It is expressly anti-conceptual, and theologians have been trying to get away with this kind of “Twilight Zone abruption of crazy” for centuries. Notice the results: theologians incessantly bickering among themselves on every little conceivable tidbit and implication that can be drawn from it. The fact of the matter is that theologians are simply going off in the direction that their imaginations, weighted as they are by their own biases, preferences, mental distortions and anti-conceptual extrapolations, might happen to take them. They departed from reality long ago and are simply running each other over on their own ‘wheels of confusion’.

Also, as I have pointed out, and Michael still seems not to grasp, the fact that his ascribing metaphysical primacy to his god-consciousness can only mean that ultimately there are no mind-independent objects for it to be aware of. He ends up simply chasing his own tail here, since these are problems of his worldview’s own anti-conceptual making, and in his frustration he seeks to lash out at me and others personally, as though this will somehow make the problem go away and/or make us come around and nod our heads in mindless agreement with his worldview. Indeed, none of this mess in Michael’s worldview is my doing. But still he gets sore at me. Observe:

Michael huffed: “Fine. You’re not a liar, you’re stupid.”

No, I am not a liar. As for being stupid on these matters, I’ve been listening to Christians all my life. It is not my fault that they cannot connect their mystical claims to reality. I simply point this out. There may be some stupidity here, but it’s not on my part. Also, I am not a mind-reader. If Michael has something in mind that I am failing to understand after repeated efforts on my part to get his story clear, concise and consistent, I am not the blame for this. It is Michael’s worldview which affirms the primacy of wishing over facts, anti-conceptual mishandlings of otherwise perfectly good concepts, floating abstractions, stolen concepts, unargued assertions about the nature of reality, and apparently condones his belligerent and increasingly foul-mouthed fits of condescension.

And while he states explicitly here that I am not a liar, he later came back and repeatedly called me a liar. He cannot seem to get his own ad hominems straight. As we saw above, he found it necessary to label me as follows:
Liar. Punk. Whore. Snake. Coward. Sociopath.
Why is it that the Christian worldview must always be represented by folks who apparently cannot resist the urge to resort to schoolyard bully tactics? Outbursts like this do nothing either to vouch for Michael’s credibility or support his contentions. On the contrary, they can only undermine both.

Michael continued: “2. When you are shown that the limitations of finite consciousness (your god, your B, in fact, yourself nancing about and spouting stupidities) are categorically distinct things from the issues of identity and actuality; when you’re shown that infinity is a definitive, axiomatic, mathematical principle of necessity: you respond as if you don’t understand!”

See, Cohen is right: “When the believer is in the presence of an unbeliever, it is to preach and ‘witness’, not to listen.” I addressed Michael’s feeble attempts to refute Peikoff’s argument, and I explained the conceptual basis of the concept of infinity – i.e., as it is legitimately understood. It is apparent that it was Michael who has not understood. He confused Peikoff’s example of application with his proof. Then he proceeded to indulge in gratuitous, self-serving assertions which completely ignored the points raised against his imaginary “infinite consciousness.”

Michael huffed again: “You’re not a liar, you’re stupid!”

There there. Perhaps Michael thought that this outburst would make him feel better. It didn’t. His contempt is unsatiable.

Michael wrote: “3. When you are shown that your god, your B, is bound by volition rather than nature and, therefore, that the construct of perfect divinity could not possibly or logically be this strawman of yours, you respond as if you don’t understand.”

Here Michael is in need of correction again. For one thing, he seems to be confusing me with Rick Warden. Moreover, Michael has failed to understand my point that his assertion of the primacy of consciousness cannot be consistently maintained since it can never be complete, making it necessary to borrow from the primacy of existence. Michael even gives me the rope to hang him with in his very objection here. The view that his god is bound by its nature is evidence precisely of this: it did not create its own nature; its nature is not a product of its own conscious activity; its nature is not bound by its volition. Affirming that something is bound by its nature is an implicit affirmation of the primacy of existence, even in the confines of an imagination bent on leaving reality completely behind, as in the case of theism. And yet, on top of this, Michael states that “according to Judeo-Christianity, ultimately, consciousness does have primacy over existence.” He has inconsistent metaphysics coming out his ears, and he doesn’t even realize it. But he still wants to say I’m the stupid one.

Michael continued: “4. When you are shown – what was, in fact, self-evident all along, i.e., that ultimate existence relative to divine perfection (A!) necessarily is divine consciousness, that the two are one and the same thing – you still defend following claptrap of B as if you don’t understand!”

Quoting me: [Y]ou have one foot on the primacy of existence, and another on the primacy of consciousness. Now, perhaps I should have worded it this way, but I didn’t expect my point to raise your ire as it has.”

My point is completely accurate, and it’s so clear and obvious that it’s troubling that he continues to kick against the pricks in such a huffy manner as he does. Michael is the one who has proposed an “analogical” model of reality, where the primacy of existence applies to human consciousness in “this” realm, and that “ultimately, consciousness does have primacy over existence” originating in some “transcendent” realm. His attempts to compartmentalize all this only worsen the matter; they cannot be integrated without contradiction. Either he is simply in denial over this point, or he simply has not grasped it yet. But there’s no question that the primacy of existence and the primacy of consciousness are incompatible and mutually exclusive. There’s also no question that the primacy of existence is the orientation between the subject of consciousness and its objects found in all instances of consciousness in the non-imaginary realm of existence.

Michael goes on: ‘No. You shouldn’t have uttered this stupidity at all. But I offered you an olive branch, an opportunity recant unsustainable arguments due to your failure to grasp this particular aspect of the problem and to do so with dignity. Instead, you respond with more of the same idiocy and have the temerity to make me out to be the bad guy, the one who doesn’t get it. LOL! You are beyond my ire. It’s my contempt with which I regard you now.”

Michael’s contempt has been variably evident from the very beginning of his participation in this discussion. It is nothing new. I strongly doubt that I am the cause of his contempt. His contempt is likely something he’s been carrying around for many years, and he’s simply looking for new victims to cast it on. I am not a victim, and Michael will never be able to victimize me. I still stand solid and sure, and that will only take his contempt to new heights. It is not my problem.

Michael’s worldview, premised as it is on the primacy of consciousness, can only lead to the primacy of a bad attitude in its adherents. Michael is a living example of this.

Michael says that “The problem of existence and, therefore, the construct of divine perfection is objectively self-evident to all. In other words, the idea of God objectively exists in and of itself; it imposes itself on our minds without our willing that it do so. It’s axiomatic. It resides at the base of knowledge, and the atheist proves this every time he opens his yap to deny that there be any actuality behind it.”

In order to accept any of this “claptrap,” I would have to ignore and systematically deny the fundamental distinction, which I know exists, between reality and imagination. I can imagine Michael’s god just as I can imagine the Lahu tribesman’s Geusha. But nothing will ever be able to alter the fact that what I’m imagining is not real, no matter what labels we want to fix it (e.g., “divine perfection,” “the eternally existing now!” etc.).

Michael writes: “In his stupid argument against theism (‘Divine Lonesomeness’), Dawson necessarily acknowledges that the idea of God refers to a Being Who existed prior to all other existents as the Creator of all other existents apart from Him, WHICH OBVIOUSLY INCLUDES THE SPACE-TIME CONTINUUM!”

This is like saying “God caused causality.” It is utterly incoherent. Prior to this creative act, there could be no action whatsoever, since causality is the identity of action. Similarly with the notion of creating “THE SPACE-TIME CONTIUUM.” This attempt to rebut the argument incoherently (and gratuitously) posits consciousness outside of time. But as I pointed out, consciousness is a type of activity, and activity implies time – i.e., action over time. On the view Michael proposes, there could be no conscious activity prior to his god creating “THE SPACE-TIME CONTINUUM,” including its own alleged conscious activity. It’s just more fantasy bottled up and put out for sale as “philosophy.” It’s completely anti-philosophical, completely anti-rational, completely anti-conceptual.

When Michael states: “Dawson simultaneously argues the eternally existent now and argues against it, proving it’s [sic] cogency as encompassed by the construct of divine perfection.”

Now Michael is straw-manning me. I did not “argue the eternally existent now”. Michael is confused. I simply explained why the notion is incoherent given the attempt to package it with consciousness. All this has gone straight over Michael’s head, and he has allowed his contempt to prevent him from understanding all of this. Michael’s devotion to a set of imaginary constructs informed by notions completely devoid of objective content while using the cover of legitimate concepts which have been gratuitously ripped from their rational context, has set the tone of his mission to accomplish nothing in particular in his discussion with me, save perhaps to find a new object for his growing contempt.

Michael then flares his nostrils: “Dawson, the nincompoop of nincompoops is arguing that the idea of a self-subsistent Creator Who resides outside and independently of the space-time continuum is irrational because this idea of a self-subsistent Creator Who resides outside and independently of the space-time continuum would not have an actually existent object to apprehend apart from Himself in His timeless because He doesn’t reside outside and independently of the space-time continuum!”

Actually, the incoherence in Michael’s god-belief is even worse. He makes use of the concept ‘consciousness’ while denying its genetic roots, including the temporal implications of action. Consciousness is a type of activity. But positing consciousness “outside and independently of the space-time continuum” can only mean the consciousness in question is not capable of any action. But in this state of being “outside and independent of the space-time continuum,” Michael still treats it as though it were capable of action, namely creating the space-time continuum in the first place. It all collapses into stolen concept upon stolen concept, which is the hallmark of mystical incoherence. But we should use caution here: pointing this out will only leave mystics roasting in their own fumes of contempt. Want evidence? Observe Michael’s behavior in the comments of my blog.

Instead of regaining lost ground, Michael simply digs his hole deeper and deeper.

Michael gratuitously asserts: “The possibility of God’s existence cannot be rationally denied out right. It cannot be done! Any such argument will always entail an inherent, self-negating contradiction!”

For one, if there is no rational justification for positing “the possibility of God’s existence” in the first place, then there’s no need to deny it: it is simply inadmissible at its first mention. And of course, there is no rational justification for positing “the possibility of God’s existence.” There is no “inherent, self-negating contradiction” in pointing any of this out. Nor is there any “inherent, self-negating contradiction” in the following anti-theistic argument:
Premise 1: That which is imaginary is not real.  
Premise: 2: If something is not real, it does not actually exist.  
Premise 3: If the god of Christianity is imaginary, then it is not real and therefore does not actually exist.  
Premise 4: The god of Christianity is imaginary.  
Conclusion: Therefore, the god of Christianity is not real and therefore does not actually exist.
The Christian’s god is a figment of his imagination, informed by a storybook worldview which likens the universe to a cartoon.

Michael fumes: “So Judeo-Christianity has no epistemology, eh? Well, one thing’s for sure, unlike Judeo-Christianity, no atheistic system of thought can point to a rationally coherent foundation for its epistemology.”

Actually, Objectivism can: we have the primacy of existence. This is not a principle that one will learn about in the pages of Leviticus or the First Epistle to the Corinthians. It is completely incompatible with the religious view of the world, and yet one must assume it even in denying it. So Michael is simply spouting absolute falsehoods here.

What Michael does next is an attempt to assimilate Objectivist principles as if they properly belonged to Christianity. I guess I can’t blame him: since Objectivism’s principles are undeniably true, one could only hope that they were on his side. But Objectivism’s principles are clearly not on any theist’s side. He has to deny them, even though such denial is self-refuting and incoherent.

Meanwhile, Michael’s newly adopted sidekick Nide piped in with the following comment: “These fellows haven’t been reflecting. They need to search their souls. Where the soul is, there you will find God.”

In other words, one must turn the focus of his awareness inward to “find God.” Talk about slips of the tongue! This is a dead give-away that what the Christian calls “knowledge of God” is really just his own imagination. He turns his focus inward, to his imagination, and that is where he “finds God.” But Objectivists have been pointing this out for decades. No wonder Michael’s contempt continues to break the bounds of adult civility in our discussion. He’s performatively making my case for me.

Michael writes: “The impression comes to us immediately and all at once: either (1) matter has always existed in some form or another, in some dimensional estate or another, or (2) it was caused to exist by a being who has always existed, a necessarily transcendent being of unlimited genius and power. In other words, the First Cause is either inanimate or sentient, immanent or transcendent.”

Michael’s false dichotomy here notwithstanding, what the Christian needs to do is demonstrate the objective validity of the notion that matter was created by an act of consciousness. Surely we can imagine this. But imagination is not fact. If Michael has any evidence to support the assumption that matter can be created by an act of consciousness, he is welcome to present it. But if he has no such evidence, then he should come out of the closet on the matter and openly concede that he does not.

As for me, I know of no evidence to support the notion that consciousness can create matter. Which means: I have no legitimate basis to accept such a notion as a distinct possibility. Simply imagining it is not a sufficient basis to accept it as a real possibility, let alone an actual phenomenon. Throughout my discussion with Michael David Rawlings, I have repeatedly pointed out to him that, given its emphatic affirmation and adherence to the primacy of existence, Objectivism explicitly recognizes the fundamental distinction between reality and imagination. Michael has consistently avoided interacting with this point, and we should not be surprised by this: Christianity is all about building up phantasm-constructs in the imagination of the believer which compel him through fear and break his spirit as a human being. Without these imagined phantasm-constructs, Christianity is absolutely contentless. So acknowledging the fundamental distinction between reality and imagination will only be fatal to Christian theism. So Michael’s aversion to interacting with this point is to be expected: it’s the one pin-prick that brings the whole artifice of Christianity crashing down on itself.


Inconsistent Metaphysics at the Root of the Christian Worldview

One of the observations I had made in my discussion with Michael is the fact that Christianity cannot maintain a consistent stance on the issue of metaphysical primacy. Above we have already saw Michael’s admission that “according to Judeo-Christianity, ultimately, consciousness does have primacy over existence.” He insists that “God’s primacy over existence is absolute.” So Michael admits outright that Christianity affirms the primacy of consciousness metaphysics. The primacy of consciousness is the root of metaphysical subjectivism, since it grants metaphysical primacy to the subject of consciousness in the subject-object relationship. So by affirming the primacy of consciousness, Michael admits that the essence of Christian metaphysics is subjective in nature. It’s a worldview essentially premised on the view that wishing makes it so.

Another Christian commenter, Rick Warden, sought to refute my argument that Christianity affirms the primacy of consciousness by claiming that the dogmatic premise that the Christian god did not create itself can only mean that the primacy of existence is the proper metaphysical orientation of Christianity. Of course, it is easy to see that Warden’s line of argument is a non sequitur: it would not follow simply from the premise that the Christian god did not create itself, that the primacy of existence is thereby consistently affirmed throughout Christianity.

But Warden’s objection did introduce a point which I have made in past writings, namely that even with respect solely to the Christian god, the Christian cannot maintain a consistent metaphysics. The issue here is very simple, and it should not be difficult for Michael or any other Christian to grasp. Keep in mind that Christians say that their god is conscious. So there are two things to consider here: one, the orientation between the Christian god as a subject and anything it is said to have created, such as a flower, as an object of its consciousness; and two, the orientation between the Christian god as a subject and itself as an object of its consciousness. Neither of these considerations should, so far, be controversial for the Christian: the Christian maintains that his god created the flower and has awareness of it, that the flower is an object of his god’s awareness; and Christians typically hold that the Christian god is self-aware, that it can have itself as an object of its own awareness, just as we can. So the Christian should not be protesting the setup of our examination, unless of course he’s afraid of where it may lead and is simply not emotionally prepared for what may come.

Michael’s response to this line of inquiry has consisted of reciting a mantra phrase, namely “divine perfection,” and charging that my line of inquiry does not accurately take into account whatever this is supposed to mean. He says that “the construct of divine perfection… is universally self-evident,” and yet, even if this were true (it’s not; if Michael actually thinks it’s self-evident, it’s because this notion is so entrenched in his imagination that it seems immediate to him; one has direct, introspective awareness of things he imagines), it would not obviate my line of inquiry since the Christian god is still maintained to be conscious of the things it is said to have created as well as of itself.

Indeed, note the line of argument proposed by Rick Warden: Warden insisted emphatically that the primacy of consciousness is not the proper metaphysics of Christianity. This is in direct contradiction to explicit statements made by Michael. In opposed restricted senses, both are correct: on the one hand, Warden is correct that a consciousness not creating itself implies the primacy of existence, though it would not follow from this that other statements about this consciousness are consistent with the primacy of existence; on the other, Michael has affirmed outright that “according to Judeo-Christianity, ultimately, consciousness does have primacy over existence” and that “God’s primacy over existence is absolute.” The fact of the matter, however, is that neither of these two Christians can hold the metaphysical position they have affirmed consistently. True, the Christian god is portrayed as a consciousness enjoying metaphysical primacy over the objects it has created: it created the flower, it determined how many petals it has, it determined its quantity of pistols and stamens, it determined when and where it would grow, and how long it would live, etc. So the primacy of consciousness is the metaphysics involved in the subject-object relationship of the Christian god’s consciousness when the object under consideration is something it is said to have designed and created. It is in the context of such a relationship that the Christian god’s wishing makes it so.

But when the Christian god is the object of its own awareness, when the relationship under consideration is that of the Christian god’s self-awareness, as Warden was concerned about, the picture changes fundamentally. Here the Christian cannot maintain the primacy of consciousness, since, as Warden pointed out, Christianity holds that the Christian god did not create itself. And clearly it did not design and create its own nature, whatever that nature might be. Its nature as a “divine perfection” is not something it wished into being at some point. So when the subject-object relationship of the Christian god’s consciousness has itself as its own object of awareness, the primacy of consciousness cannot be maintained. Here the Christian has no choice but to borrow the primacy of existence from the Objectivist and apply it internally within Christianity, where it, too, cannot be consistently maintained.

This metaphysical inconsistency is apart from and in addition to the metaphysical inconsistency we saw above with respect to how the Christian worldview treats human consciousness. Recall above that Michael had insisted that “Nowhere in scripture is it asserted that a finite mind (subject) can have primacy over an existent (object).” And yet, we have already seen sufficient indication “in scripture” where the primacy of consciousness is unmistakably affirmed in the case of human consciousness.

Michael’s belligerent denials and repeated resorting to name-calling on both of these topics can only indicate that he has not fully grasped the issue of metaphysical primacy in terms of the subject-object relationship, which is an open question when any conscious activity is in play, whether that conscious activity is actual (as in the case of human consciousness) or imaginary (as in the case of theism). Or, alternatively, it indicates that he does grasp these points, but resents their implications for his position and consequently finds it necessarily to aim his hostility at those who point it out. Neither alternative justifies his frequent resorting to name-calling and other hostile actions, such as commanding other commenters to “shut up.” Such behavior only suggests that he cannot handle the truth and is frustrated by repeated attempts to confront him with the truth. Nor does such behavior rescue his worldview from the internal collapse of its debilitating stolen concepts.

When I stated that “I really have no idea what an ‘infinite consciousness’ could be,” Michael replied:
Really? Now, were you suffering from this bout of amnesia before or after you premised your argument on it in “Divine Lonesomeness”? that is, before you switched your premise in your futile attempt to make your argument work, a bit subterfuge that evinces a very good understanding of the distinction between them and, thus, their respective identities.”
Here Michael is both confused and incoherent. One can cite a notion in an argument while confessing that it really has no meaning, especially when that notion is not native to one’s own position and its meaningless has been shown to be a sufficient reason to dismantle objections raised against that argument which rely on re-affirming the notion in question as though it were conceptually valid. There is no “amnesia” on my part in any of this. My point in the above statement is to emphasize the fact that, from what I know to be true, the notion of an “infinite consciousness” not only has no referent in reality, it is literally incoherent. There really is nothing incongruous between this and earlier statements I’ve made. But Michael, as evidenced by his frequent fits of belligerence and eruptions of name-calling, is clearly in desperation mode, so he’s anxious to turn any statement I make, no matter how incidental or passing, into something it isn’t. Observe:

When I point out that the notion of an “infinite consciousness” is “literally and utterly nonsensical,” Michael replies:
Right. And Aristotle and Moses were buffoons. But tell me something, genius, since you don’t grasp the axiomatic, mathematical necessity of infinity (you know, the pertinent imperative you left out of my argument), how did you refute you the A of divine perfection? Are you saying that you don’t grasp the mathematical axiom and so that’s why you left it out? Or are you imply [sic] that you do get it, but need not directly refute it?
See how Michael wants to read much, much more into what I state here? For one, I have never stated that Aristotle was a “buffoon.” This is Michael’s own interpretation – his eisegesis - of my position. Objectivists do not affirm everything attributed to Aristotle in the writings that have survived and have been attributed to him. Objectivists acknowledge that he did not fully extinguish the mystical implications in many ideas that he accepted from his forebears and affirmed in his own teachings. Do Christians affirm everything Aristotle taught or is thought to have taught? Indeed, Nide (who now posts as “Richard” – Michael’s adopted sidekick) has gone on record stating “Aristotle was wrong about much. It always amazes me that people take him seriously.” Is Michael expecting everyone to take everything Aristotle said seriously? I’ve never made such an assertion. Indeed, whence comes Michael’s belligerent attitude?

As for Moses, the character in the Judeo-Christian storybook, there is much in its stories that make him look like a buffoon. Indeed, the bush that was burning on the top of Mt. Sinai must have been cannabis. If Moses really existed as described in those stories, he was just one in a long line of primitive witch doctors. Michael is welcome to worship at his feet if he so chooses.

As for “the axiomatic, mathematical necessity of infinity,” the mathematical use and application of the concept ‘infinity’ in no way assumes or implies that “infinity” is some conscious, transcendent agent that created the universe and has the ability to revise the identities of its contents willy-nilly. The “argument” for such a notion rests on non sequiturs and a hugely false theory of concepts. There is no objective relationship between the concept of infinity as it is used in mathematics and the Christian god whatsoever. And Michael hasn’t shown any. My, how surprising!

With this, we can be assured that the headstone for Michael’s Christianity can be lowered into place. The decomposing cadaver of his worldview has caused quite a stink, but time has come to lower the casket into the bowels of the earth now that the final nail has sealed it shut.

by Dawson Bethrick

941 comments:

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Bahnsen Burner said...

Back on 19 Nov. in this thread, I wrote:

<< the bible does not provide a theory of concepts. In fact, its authors demonstrate no understanding of the nature of concepts, the process by which they are formed, the relationship between a concept and its referents, the proper method of forming objective definitions of concepts, etc., etc. We learn nothing about the nature of concepts or the process by which the human mind forms them from the bible. >>

In response to your statement (21 Nov.): “Judeo-Christianity does have a theory of concepts. LOL! And we’re about to see that very clearly.”

I wrote:

<< To make it clear that whatever you present as a distinctively Christian theory of concepts, I will be looking for biblical citations for the contents of that theory that you presumably will present at some point. But first of all, I would like to know the distinctively Christian theory’s definition of ‘concept’ – what, according to the bible, is a concept? Where can we find this definition in the bible?

I’m not talking about what theologians centuries or more later have proposed in order to address certain problems which have cropped up in the history of philosophy. A distinctively Christian theory of concepts would need to have its basis in the content of the bible. Otherwise, it’s what *men* have put together, and thus in need of disentangling from secular influences which may have played a role in the formation of such a theory.
>>

[continued…]

Bahnsen Burner said...

Notice two important points in the first paragraph:

1. “I will be looking for biblical citations for the contents of that theory that you presumably will present at some point.” So I’m not looking for some extrabiblical references or personal speculations of your own. I’m looking for what the Christian bible has to say regarding the nature, formation, definition and use of concepts.

2. “But first of all, I would like to know the distinctively Christian theory’s definition of ‘concept’ – what, according to the bible, is a concept? Where can we find this definition in the bible?” Clearly one of the first orders of business in a theory of concepts would be to provide a clear and concise definition of what a concept is. Where can we find this in the bible? You offer no biblical citation which addresses this question. We already know it’s not in “the Book of Job.”

Notice the three following points I made in the second paragraph above:

3. “I’m not talking about what theologians centuries or more later have proposed in order to address certain problems which have cropped up in the history of philosophy.” Similar to point 1 above, I’m not asking about what theologians have developed as responses to issues like universals, the one-many problem, epistemological exploration, etc. I’m not concerned with what theologians have published. A book by a theologian is not the bible.

4. “A distinctively Christian theory of concepts would need to have its basis in the content of the bible.” In other words, for any epistemological theory to be the proper domain of Christianity, it would need to be something the bible actually spells out. As Photosynthesis rightly pointed out, we’re not interested in some eisegetical adaptation of isolated verses culled from here and there which magically fall into some predetermined mold essentially formulated as an assimilation of secular ideas.

5. “Otherwise, it’s what *men* have put together, and thus in need of disentangling from secular influences which may have played a role in the formation of such a theory.” If the “Christian theory of concepts” which you eventually get around to presenting (supposing you ever do) is essentially some eisegetical hodgepodge that draws from secular thought, there’s really no relevant justification for labeling it a “Christian theory of concepts” in the first place.

Nide has already admitted that he doesn’t have a theory of concepts and doesn’t see the need for one. He knows that there is no such thing as a “Christian theory of concepts,” so he poo-poos the entire question.

[continued…]

Bahnsen Burner said...

Going back even further, back on 7 Nov. in this thread, I wrote:

<< I’m not interested in, nor do I have time for, “mountainous” tomes of tradition or theology. Let’s cut to the chase. What does the epistemology of Judeo-Christian orthodoxy which is “derived directly from the bible” have to say about the nature of concepts? What is a concept, according to the bible? How is a concept formed, according to the bible? To what exactly does a concept refer, according to the bible? Feel free to use first-level conceptual examples, like ‘ball’ or ‘chair’ or ‘length’ to explain your point. Don’t forget to incorporate biblical verses to authenticate your claim that the epistemological points you present are bible-authentic. >>

So you see, Michael, from very early on in this discussion, I’ve been asking essentially the same question, and you have yet to produce what I’ve asked for. I contend that there is no theory of concepts in the bible. But you say you’ve already “outlined Christianity’s ‘theory of concepts’.” Not that I can see. I still have no idea where in the bible I can go, for instance, to find the Christian definition of ‘concept’.



So to help you address my question, here’s a template that can guide your presentation of a distinctively Christian theory of concepts:

1. According to the bible, a concept is [insert definition of concept according to the bible] as indicated in [bible book, chapter and verse] which states “_______________________________________.”

2. According to the bible, a concept is formed by [insert step-by-step explication of the concept-formation process according to the bible] as indicated in [bible book, chapter and verse] which states “_______________________________________.”

3. According to the bible, a concept refers to [insert explanation of what concepts, according to the bible, refer] as indicated in [bible book, chapter and verse] which states “_______________________________________.”

Naturally, there will be additional questions regarding any distinctively Christian theory of concepts that you might be able to piece together in response to my questions. But they can wait. Once we have everything needed to get a full understanding of the distinctively Christian theory of concepts (granting for argument’s sake that there might be such a thing), we can compare it to the objective theory of concepts which is outlined in Ayn Rand’s Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology, to see which of the two best suits man’s cognitive needs.

[continued…]

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael wrote: “But you can't see it because you think mere humans are the masters of certain philosophical constructs and modes of cognition.”

No, that’s not why I don’t see it. I don’t see it because you haven’t presented what I asked about.

Michael wrote: “You think Christianity borrows from these, when in fact the first principles of existence as truly governed by the logical imperatives of the comprehensive expression of identity (collectively, the law of identity proper, the law of contradiction, the law of excluded middle), including the operational aspects of cognition (the univocal [the literal], the analogical [the comparisons/contrasts of reality], the equivocal [the metaphoric]) are universal and self-evident, ‘understood by the things that are made’ (Romans 1:18-28).”

This is more distraction. It does nothing to cover your inability to present a distinctively Christian theory of concepts.

Michael: “It’s the secular systems of philosophy that hit or miss what has been revealed by God in His creation. The Bible, Divine logic, the Holy Spirit and an obedient heart get it right every time.”

This too fails to address my question.

Michael: “God doesn’t ask the impossible of us. He gave us a mind that can readily apprehend the first principles of existence. His logic may be readily apprehended beyond that point too; it’s universally and objectively obvious to all. That is the Imago Dei, The Divine autograph stamped on us all.”

And this too does not address my question.

Michael: “Obedience is the key that unlocks the door to the world of truth and consistent logic. Obedience, Dear Watson!”

Nor does this.

Michael: “But we are fallen and frail and easily deceived on our own; hence, God directly intervened in history as well. He gave us His written word, and He gave us His living word in the Person of Christ.”

And this does not address my question. Still no hide nor hair of a distinctively Christian theory of concepts here.

[continued…]

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael: “We discover truth when we obey the rules of logic and embrace the only consistently reasonable conclusion evinced in the axiomatic problem of origin. We can’t disobey them and find truth.”

For one thing, the Christian’s imagined “problem of origin” is certainly not axiomatic. Also, simply obeying the rules of logic is not sufficient to discover truth. Logic is the form by which inference is possible. What’s needed for truth is not only logic, but also content, and that comes from perception of reality. We have awareness of objects. Well and good. Now we need a means of identifying and integrating them into the sum of our knowledge. That’s what concepts do. That’s why we need a theory of concepts. Christianity has no theory of concepts. So as a contender in the realm of epistemology, Christianity is a non-starter. All it can do is anaesthetize the human mind and cause it to stagnate while it struggles to resolve distractive paradoxes that have nothing to do with anything real.

Michael wrote: “We can’t tell ourselves that God would be an eternally self-subsistent Being, for example, Who resides outside and independently of creation in one instance and then pretend that such a Being would not necessarily be the ground of all existence and the origin of all that exists apart from Him by babbling that consciousness over existence makes no sense in the next.”

Maybe, maybe not. But one thing is for certain: a person can imagine that “God [is] an eternally self-subsistent Being… Who resides outside and independently of creation…” and that this being is “the ground of all existence and the origin of all that exists apart from him.” Such a person could very well be clueless when it comes to an explicit understanding of the proper relationship between consciousness and its objects, and yet implicitly recognize, in other areas of life (such as getting out of bed, combing his hair, eating food, driving to work, inputting data into a computer database, running an activity report, paying a mortgage, buying groceries, raking leaves in the yard, getting the kids ready for bed, etc., none of which are distinctively religious activities by any means). A mind which accepts the primacy of consciousness metaphysics always compartmentalizes that acceptance so as not to adversely affect cognition in areas where the influence of such a false metaphysical view will only have damaging consequences in terms of one’s values. This is where Device 5 of the biblical mind-game comes in: assaulting integrity. Basically it’s a very sophisticated aspect of the biblical devotional program of turning one’s mind against itself while still maintaining outward functioning necessary to go about life like everyone else.

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael,

To help you present the “Christian theory of concepts,” i.e., a theory that is indeed distinctively Christian in nature, perhaps you can show how the Christian understanding of concepts can be applied in order to derive the concept ‘length’. This is one of the concepts that Rand uses to illustrate the application of her theory (cf. Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology, p. 11).

So my question is, what are the steps according to the “Christian theory of concepts” that one would take in forming the concept ‘length’?

Of course, whatever answer you give here, will need to be related back to principles (note that word!) that we can learn explicitly by reading the bible.

Your answer?

Regards,
Dawson

Anonymous said...

"Nide has already admitted that he doesn’t have a theory of concepts and doesn’t see the need for one. He knows that there is no such thing as a “Christian theory of concepts,” so he poo-poos the entire question."


Actually, no, I haven't admitted to anything. However, your question is dumb and useless. Your seriously an ass. But, as I said earlier, somewhere, "theories of knowledge or concepts" have been debated since the beginning of philosophy. The problem is the debate is way beyond over in spite of what you or anybody else what's to think.But, If Christianity doesn't have a "theory of concepts", it's not a defect. However, The fear the lord is the beginning of Knowledge. That's good enough for me. The rest of the process is automatic. But again, it's funny that you keep pressing and harassing Christians about "a theory of concepts" when your charlatan philosophy can't even get past the basic problems of philosophy. Remember what that liar and hypocrite rand about taking our senses for granted. if anybody hated their mind, it definetely was rand. So, keep showing your behind, Dawson, it's not only rude but embarrasing.

Unknown said...

Michael, this seems to be the core of christianity’s method of building knowledge: “From there we may see that a hierarchy of true knowledge is built on the rational apprehensions of axiomatic propositions and the empirical impressions of sensory perception as processed, assimilated and integrated in obedience to the innate logical imperatives of the comprehensive expression of identity and the operational aspects of cognition. But to get this right, we also need the direct guidance of the Holy Spirit and the operations manual of revelatory knowledge so that we don’t stray outside the constraints of logic into error especially in the realm of science. And the first thing we learn about science from the Bible is that the proper metaphysical presupposition for science is a mechanistic naturalism that holds to God’s primacy over creation, not an ontological naturalism which arrogantly thinks to render God impotent.”

I think I follow this from the last few post as they relate to the metaphysics. What I’m not sure about is how christianity decides which ideas of science are right and which aren’t. Sometimes there can be several competing ideas or theories about the same thing. I'm also a little unsure on a few other details but will submit this question for now.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson,

You write: “You then wrote: ‘Just like you don’t grasp the fact that Dawson must necessarily hold to a strictly materialistic conceptualization of consciousness regardless of what claims. Oh, yes, he’s given enough information now to see that clearly.’[sic]

This is just more of your unargued, immature nonsense. For one, the very notion of ‘a strictly materialistic conceptualization of consciousness’ is a contradiction in terms. But I don’t really expect you to see that. Not yet anyhow. Perhaps never if you continue to allow your conceit and bad attitude impede your judgment.”[sic]
____________________________

You don’t expect me to see that, eh?

Well, let me explain something to you, genius. A strictly materialistic conceptualization of consciousness it not a contradiction in terms, and you would know that if you understood what the materialist means when he asserts that. But, apparently, you don’t.

The materialist (more at physicalist in terms of recent science) does not assert that the substance of consciousness in and of itself is necessarily or entirely material as such. Instead, he asserts that consciousness ultimately reduces to the material (or the physical) and consists of nothing but that which is ultimately material (or physical). In short, there is no spiritual aspect to consciousness whatsoever, and existence is univocal in nature. Hence, according to the materialist, consciousness consists of nothing other than and nothing more than the sum of the physiological structures and biochemical interactions of the central nervous system which arguably includes the apparatuses of sensory perception.

The only conceit (more at the arrogance of ignorance) in evidence here is yours.

What we may see from this: Judeo-Christianity holds essentially that which the materialist (or physicalist) holds . . . sans the soul. In other words, Judeo-Christianity holds that the material (or physical) aspect of consciousness, that which interfaces with the soul, consists of the sum of the physiological structures and biochemical interactions of the central nervous system which arguably includes the apparatuses of sensory perception.

Bahnsen Burner said...

I wrote: "Nide has already admitted that he doesn’t have a theory of concepts and doesn’t see the need for one. He knows that there is no such thing as a “Christian theory of concepts,” so he poo-poos the entire question."

Nide: “Actually, no, I haven't admitted to anything.”

Actually, yes, you have admitted precisely this. Go back and re-read what you wrote.

Nide: “However, your question is dumb and useless. Your seriously an ass.”

I suspect that if you had a cogent answer to my question, you wouldn’t think it was “dumb and useless.” And it is because I have dissolved the entire illusion of “Christian epistemology” with one tiny question that you cannot answer, that you think I am “seriously an ass.”

Calling my question “dumb and useless” does not answer my question. Calling me an ass is not an argument. You have neither answers nor arguments. Ridicule is all you have.

Nide: “But, as I said earlier, somewhere, ‘theories of knowledge or concepts’ have been debated since the beginning of philosophy.”

This too does not answer my question. But it does raise a curious point which leaves Christianity out in the cold: in order to debate the merits of a theory, that theory needs to exist. But since Christianity has no theory of concepts, it cannot be a contender in such debates. All it can do is borrow from non-Christian worldviews. Christianity is a parasite.

Nide: “The problem is the debate is way beyond over in spite of what you or anybody else what's to think.”

This too does not answer my question. That debates continue in various fields of thought is irrelevant to the topic at hand. This is just another attempt to drag the discussion off topic. You’re hiding, Nide. Which means: you’re niding.

Nide: “But, If Christianity doesn't have a "theory of concepts", it's not a defect.”

It is if Christianity is being sold as a comprehensive worldview. A crucial component of a comprehensive worldview is called epistemology. Vital to epistemology is an explanation of how the human mind discovers and validates knowledge. Central to this is a theory of concepts, since we retain knowledge in the form of concepts. As I stated, “A theory of concepts explains how the human mind forms concepts from perceptual input.” Show me any passages where the bible explains this. Begin by showing where the bible provides a definition of ‘concept’.

If you can’t do this, just admit it. As freddies_dead poignantly stated to Michael: “Simply conceding that you have no answer to the criticism would have sufficed.”

Nide: “However, The fear the lord is the beginning of Knowledge.”

There you go, then: not only does your worldview fail to give you any understanding of the nature and formation of concepts, you seat all your knowledge on the shifting foundation of emotions as your starting point. Good going!

Nide: “That's good enough for me.”

If that’s really the case, then simply admit that your worldview has no native theory of concepts.

Nide: “The rest of the process is automatic.”

For the Christian, right: “knowing” does not involve cognitive effort like thinking, isolating facts, drawing logical inferences, and other volitional conscious activities – it “just happens,” and the believer has no idea how. He thus supposes that it’s “automatic.” It happens by itself, without his initiative or involvement.

Nide: “But again, it's funny that you keep pressing and harassing Christians about ‘a theory of concepts’”

Yes, it is funny. It really makes them writhe in anxiety, for they know they have no answer.

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael wrote: “You then wrote: ‘Just like you don’t grasp the fact that Dawson must necessarily hold to a strictly materialistic conceptualization of consciousness regardless of what claims. Oh, yes, he’s given enough information now to see that clearly.’[sic]

I responded: “This is just more of your unargued, immature nonsense. For one, the very notion of ‘a strictly materialistic conceptualization of consciousness’ is a contradiction in terms. But I don’t really expect you to see that. Not yet anyhow. Perhaps never if you continue to allow your conceit and bad attitude impede your judgment.”

Michael replies: “You don’t expect me to see that, eh?”

No, and judging by your response, I was right.

Michael writes: “A strictly materialistic conceptualization of consciousness it [is] not a contradiction in terms, and you would know that if you understood what the materialist means when he asserts that. But, apparently, you don’t.”

Materialists do not operate on a consistently objective basis, so they do not get to set the terms. They affirm a false view of man which essentially denies the axiom of consciousness. That is a distinctive feature of materialism, and that is why Objectivism is not and cannot be a form of materialism.

Notice that you still have not produced an argument showing that Objectivism is a form of strict materialism. The only way you would be able to do this is by completely blotting out from your own awareness the fact that Objectivism explicitly affirms the axiom of consciousness. But then you wouldn’t be arguing against Objectivism.

Michael: “The materialist (more at physicalist in terms of recent science) does not assert that the substance of consciousness in and of itself is necessarily or entirely material as such. Instead, he asserts that consciousness ultimately reduces to the material (or the physical) and consists of nothing but that which is ultimately material (or physical).”

See, there you go. I was right: it constitutes a denial of the axiom of consciousness. I’ve explained all this. But I still don’t expect you to see it. Your worldview also denies the axiom of consciousness. And just as you don’t see how your worldview implodes on itself by its adherence to the primacy of consciousness, you’re not going to see many of the points I’ve raised against Christianity. Yes, it is beyond your understanding, Michael. It’s not that you’re stupid. Not at all. It’s that your attitude prevents you from learning. Go back and read the passages I quoted from Cohen. It’s all there. He’s got you pegged.

Michael: “The only conceit (more at the arrogance of ignorance) in evidence here is yours.”

Says the guy who blew in here pumping his own unstated “credentials” and continues to refer to himself as an expert authority on the matters involved in this discussion. You may have done your share of hoop-jumping to get your “credentials,” Michael, but I am certainly not impressed by your ability to think and understand these things. Indeed, the picture you paint of yourself looks dimmer and dimmer as the discussion drags on.

Michael: “What we may see from this: Judeo-Christianity holds essentially that which the materialist (or physicalist) holds . . . sans the soul.”

And as we’ve seen, Christianity denies the axiom of consciousness as well. Both are wrong for the same reason.

Now, how’s that “Christian theory of concepts” coming? Give us a demonstration. Show us how the concept ‘length’ is formed according to the “Christian theory of concepts” you think you’ve outlined (but haven’t).

Regards,
Dawson

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Ydemoc,

"...the God of affirmative theology is beset by a problem of long historical standing from which he cannot escape. All of the supposedly positive qualities of God arise in a distinctively human context of finite existence, and when wrenched from this context to apply to a supernatural being, they cease to have meaning.”

This appears to be the thrust of Smith’s thesis in regard to the rest. This supposed “problem of long historical standing” is something that plagues the atheist’s mind, apparently, as it arbitrarily flies past the objectively and universally understood construct of divine perfection: namely, a Being Who resides outside and independently of the space-time continuum and is the ultimate ground and origin of all existence.

This construct is inherent to the problem of origin. It’s inescapable. It’s existence cannot be relationally denied. The idea of God objectively exists in and of itself and imposes itself on the human mind without the latter willing that it do so. Therefore, it axiomatically resides at the base of knowledge, and the atheist proves this every time he opens his yap to deny there be any substance behind the construct.

This is self-evident. The various imperatives, discussed in the above, that inherently obtain to this construct are self-evident too. It’s silly to argue otherwise. Such to the contrary are circular in complexion and inherently self-negating.

It just flies right over. . . .

Further, finite minds can and do apprehend the meaning of perfection beyond this construct as well; i.e., we ascertain/calculate mathematical perfections all the time. It’s nonsense to argue otherwise.

What difference does it make whether or not these things exist in terms of their full expressions beyond our minds? We readily apprehend what it means to divide a divisible substance without end. We see that it may be done, just not by us. We readily apprehend the essence of a perfect circle. What difference does it make that we can only reproduce an approximation of it in terms of the calculation of it in our minds or in the world beyond our minds? We can’t translate the exact calculations we produce in our minds of anything in the world beyond. We can’t perfectly square a foundation or perfectly triangulate beyond our minds either. Yet all of these thing are indispensable to construction, design and engineering.

Such mathematical axioms/calculation are universal and universally applied to the real world every day. Do our minds and their contents exist within existence or not?

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

[Continued . . . ]

What does Smith mean we can’t distinguish the difference between the perfections of cognition (whether they be about the divine, the mathematical or the moral) and the reproductions of cognition? That’s all he’s really talking about. Do we or do we not recognize the difference? Do we or do we not strive for perfection? You bet we do. We know the difference. It’s not a mystery.

Obtusely, atheists confound an academic distinction, a difference that makes no practical difference, into a metaphysical quagmire.

Finite minds cannot comprehend God. So? That’s all Smith is really saying in the final analysis. Smith uses an awful lot of words about the implications of a construct that can be summed up in just one sentence.

It does not follow that finite minds cannot accurately apprehend God.

Smith’s thinking, therefore, is univocal as he irrationally disregards the obvious and inescapable dichotomy between the apparent perfection of things and the imperfection of finite minds.

What is perfect love? It’s the process of one loving another as fully as one loves oneself.

Who but God achieves that with perfection? That’s not a meaningless anthropomorphic imposition on divinity; that’s an anthropomorphic being making an objectively definitive distinction.

Question: Does Smith or does he not effectively make the very same distinctions in his thesis?

Answer: Yes, he does.

So why is he pretending that theists can’t or don’t?

Hello!

Look at this mess:

“When the Christian says that God is alive, does he mean that God is alive in the same sense as natural organisms?”

No. Of course not. God is supernatural.

“If so, God must be a material entity who will eventually die.”

There is no “if so”.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

[Continued . . . ]

“When God is said to be wise or to possess knowledge, is this the conceptual knowledge with which man is familiar?”

No. It’s a comprehensively perfect store of knowledge of a nature that man comprehensively recognizes to be something beyond his kin.

“If so, God is capable of error and can acquire his knowledge only through mental effort.”

There is no “if so”.

“When God is said to have a certain power or capacity, is this power similar to the concept as we understand it?”

No. It’s precisely the concept as we understand it. God’s power is unlimited, and we perfectly understand that our power over substances is not.

“If so, God must be limited.”

No. Smith’s self-imposed lack of logic is limiting.

“When God is said to be loving, is this a love with which we are familiar?”

Yes. But it is not a love that we can achieve apart from Him.

“If so, God must have emotions with which to feel passion.”

Indeed, He does.

END

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson,

You write: "No, and judging by your response, I was right."

No. You're not right.

The immediate issue as defined by me, not by you, in this instance goes to this statement and no other: "For one, the very notion of ‘a strictly materialistic conceptualization of consciousness’ is a contradiction in terms" (Dawson).

Hence, I pointed out that the materialist (or physicalist of current science) reduces consciousness to the material (or the physical) as he eschews the existence of a soul. It is in this sense that he holds to a strictly materialistic concept. This does not necessarily mean that for him the sum of the physiological structures and biochemical interactions of the central nervous system is wholly material, no more than the force of gravity is wholly material. That is why most contemporary materialists are to be understood in terms of physicalism; that is why most of them insist on it.

Your habitual “changes in the rules” and in the flow of discourse are tiresome.

Now, if we’re moving on to your specific dispute with the materialist or the physicalist, or a discussion over whether or not Objectivism holds to a form of materialism, that’s fine, but don’t go switching the topic on me without warning as you suggest that I don’t understand the nature of your dispute with the materialist. LOL! It’s not rocket science.

That’s all for today.



Anonymous said...

"There you go, then: not only does your worldview fail to give you any understanding of the nature and formation of concepts, you seat all your knowledge on the shifting foundation of emotions as your starting point. Good going!"

So, what?


"If that’s really the case, then simply admit that your worldview has no native theory of concepts."

I thought you said that I admitted this somewhere?


But, Like I said earlier, Your obsession with a "theory of concepts is merely a trick to try and make people feel like they are missing out on something.You ever ask your boss or co-workers if they have a "theory of concepts"? I bet they function pretty well without one. Actually, it's "objectivism" that's based on fear.


"For the Christian, right: “knowing” does not involve cognitive effort like thinking, isolating facts, drawing logical inferences, and other volitional conscious activities – it “just happens,” and the believer has no idea how. He thus supposes that it’s “automatic.” It happens by itself, without his initiative or involvement."

How do you know?


"Yes, it is funny. It really makes them writhe in anxiety, for they know they have no answer."

An answer to what your obsessions?


I'll let the "philosophers" worry about a "theory of concepts."







Anonymous said...

Yo Mich have you read this, if you want a really good laugh check it out:

http://www.epinions.com/review/Introduction_to_Objectivist_Epistemology_by_Ayn_Rand/book-review-30E2-EB75595-398D1CBA-prod1?sb=1

Here are some excerpts:

"I should have known that there wouldn't be a single idea of any importance, depth, weight or real substance in her Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology. But I guess hope springs eternal -- that can be my only rationale for once against subjecting myself to Rand.
In short, Rand is a moron. She is a dogmatic crypto-facist whose pseudo-religion is on the same level as scientology. But whereas L. Ron Hubbard's pseudo-religion hung its hooks on techno-babble, Rand hangs her pseudo-religion on philoso-babble. The end results are much the same: small groups of highly loyal followers who never bother to seriously question the gaping holes of logic, sense and decency which riddle their movement.
But make no doubts about it, Rand is involved in pseudo-religion. How many philosophers, modern or otherwise, have their own "foundation?" Most do not need it. Their works can stand the rigors of time without prostelyzing -- or, and most other philosophers understand this, their work likely deserves to be relegated to the dust-bins of history."



"She also makes vast sins of logic and sense. She says that the accuracy of the sense must be taken for granted! How can this be? Our senses are manifestly inaccurate, obscuring information which is easily deducible while hiding facts that are actually evident. There has not been an epistemologist of weight for five hundred years who has just said, "Oh, yeah, let's just take the senses for granted as being, y'know, evident." Particularly in such an exotic field as epistemology, when most of what you do talk about -- ideas, knowledge, etc. -- are things completely private and hidden from any sense perception outside of the individual. Or, as Rand says: "Existence exists -- and the act of grasping that statement implies two corollary axioms: that something exists which one perceives and that one exists possessing consciousness, consciousness being the faculty of perceiving what exists."Neat and a childlike tautology.

Anonymous said...

Hum, let's see ... in my absence Michael tried to get away from the charge of appeal to authority only to then, in the same comment, shovel that shit back up his own ass by declaring my description of his appeal to authority in the very same terms that he defended his appeal to authority as not being such.

OK then. I don't need to give Michael his shit back. It barely touched the floor when he rescued it back inside.

...

He also confessed that there was no mathematical infinity in the book of Job, thus eliminating one of his claims about a fictional character holding to the same fallacious account of math to actual to divine (which "Kyle," "surprisingly" confirmed). A faulty attempt that he extended in his latest answer to Ydemoc, but that fails for the very same reasons I described before (non-sequiturs with appeals to incredulity).

...

Before that he attempted to take command of the criticisms I raised. He starts his "Socratic" method by asking me again to state Peikoff's assumptions, which is a red-herring from the fact that he had no answers to my criticisms of his math-to-actual-to-divine bullshit.

Of course, I have no intention of discussing Peikoff, as it does not matter to my criticism. I am criticizing Michael's bullshit argument myself. I showed my arguments clearly. Asked pertinent questions, and was ignored. I was not expecting Michael to answer anyway because his problems in that argument are embarrassingly clear. No surprise that he should hide behind this pretended "Socratic" method for red-herring.

...

OK. Shit shovelled and secured back into Michael's ass. Not much more for me to do.

Bahnsen Burner said...

Quoting George H. Smith: "...the God of affirmative theology is beset by a problem of long historical standing from which he cannot escape. All of the supposedly positive qualities of God arise in a distinctively human context of finite existence, and when wrenched from this context to apply to a supernatural being, they cease to have meaning.”

Michael responded: “This appears to be the thrust of Smith’s thesis in regard to the rest. This supposed “problem of long historical standing” is something that plagues the atheist’s mind, apparently, as it arbitrarily flies past the objectively and universally understood construct of divine perfection: namely, a Being Who resides outside and independently of the space-time continuum and is the ultimate ground and origin of all existence.”

But Smith’s point is that the concepts which Christians use to reference their god and its qualities originate in “a distinctively human context” and are subsequently ripped from their objective foundations in order to “apply to a supernatural being,” just as we saw in the case of Christianity’s misappropriation of the concept ‘consciousness’ (remember “pure five”?). Christianity’s essential denial of the axiom of consciousness at the foundational level of thought is just the beginning of the problem which Smith is talking about. Far from answering Smith, your attempt to provide a response to his criticism simply gives more examples of the same problem in action: you are using a series of otherwise legitimate concepts which have been ripped from their objective foundations in order to apply to a realm which the believer constructs and enshrines in his imagination.

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

I wrote: "No, and judging by your response, I was right."

Michael predictably replied: “No. You're not right.”

I am right, but again, I don’t expect you to see it. You are as of yet far too unfamiliar with the points I’m making.

Michael continued: “The immediate issue as defined by me, not by you, in this instance goes to this statement and no other: "For one, the very notion of ‘a strictly materialistic conceptualization of consciousness’ is a contradiction in terms.”

What you seem to be missing is that conceptualization presupposes the axiom of consciousness. But yet this is what has been denied in materialism. So the notion of “a strictly materialistic conceptualization of consciousness” amounts to a huge stolen concept. I realize this is well beyond your grasp, but it’s child’s play for Objectivists.

Michael: “Hence, I pointed out that the materialist (or physicalist of current science) reduces consciousness to the material (or the physical) as he eschews the existence of a soul.”

That is not what makes materialism false. As I pointed out, materialism’s denial of the axiom of consciousness is what makes it false. The whole artifice of materialism thus amounts to a pile of stolen concepts. That’s where the self-contradiction, which you are yet incapable of recognizing, takes place.

Michael: “Your habitual ‘changes in the rules’ and in the flow of discourse are tiresome.”

I haven’t changed any of the rules, Michael. You’re just as yet unaware of what the axiom of consciousness means. After all, your own worldview denies it outright. I’ve explained all this. I haven’t changed anything.

Michael, I think you’re all hosed down here. You really have nothing that you can come back with to undo the mess you’ve made for yourself in this discussion. I suggest you take some time – perhaps several months, if need be – and do some hard thinking on all these things. Your attitude will not allow you to learn from me. So you need to re-examine your purpose in all this. Repeatedly affirming your floating abstractions while failing to deal with the criticisms which have been brought forth will gain you nothing here. The bluff has been exposed and it’s nonsensical for you to continue on as you do here. Quite frankly, you’re wasting your time.

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

Nide,

It's clear you have nothing of substance to offer here. You've had your chance. Come clean. Just stop dancing around your worldview's dismal deficiencies. You don't care if your worldview is philosophically bankrupt. You've made that clear. You want to go on with its mind-negating program all the same. Fine. We don't care. It's your problem, not ours. Continuing as you do simply makes you look even more stubbornly foolish than you did on the Fundamentally Flawed program. The course you insist on taking will not help you save face. You've already lost it. It's unsalvageable at this point.

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

Photo,

You wrote: “Hum, let's see ... in my absence Michael tried to get away from the charge of appeal to authority only to then, in the same comment, shovel that shit back up his own ass by declaring my description of his appeal to authority in the very same terms that he defended his appeal to authority as not being such.”

Indeed, he’s given us quite a spectacle. He has repeatedly attributed arguments and conclusions to both biblical and non-biblical figures without providing any citation to back any of it up. He resorts to name-dropping, not to inform, but to intimidate. This may have worked on him, so naturally he thinks it’s effective. But it won’t fly around here.

Photo: “He also confessed that there was no mathematical infinity in the book of Job, thus eliminating one of his claims about a fictional character holding to the same fallacious account of math to actual to divine (which ‘Kyle’, ‘surprisingly’ confirmed). A faulty attempt that he extended in his latest answer to Ydemoc, but that fails for the very same reasons I described before (non-sequiturs with appeals to incredulity).”

Yes, I thought that amazing coincidence that “Kyle” points first to “the Book of Job” as his source for philosophical understanding of infinity, was just a little too amazing. I’ve asked for a specifically non-eisegetical examination of any passage from “the Book of Job” which speaks to the mathematical concept of infinity. So far, none has been presented. I shan’t hold my breath. It’s the same with trying to find a theory of concepts somewhere in the many pages of the Christian bible. Such a thing is not to be found there.

Quite hilarious actually!

Regards,
Dawson

Anonymous said...

The bluff has been exposed and it’s nonsensical for you to continue on as you do here.

I suspect that Michael's friends in middle school keep telling him how smart he is. Looking for further recognition keeps him coming. Either physically or mentally, he is a teen searching for reaffirmation. He can't get the idea out of his mind that we have to recognize his genius. His mother told him! His friends at school admire him for making his teachers hesitate! He succeeded in his real life at impressing lesser minds by learning some vocabulary, some catch phrases, some poorly thought arguments. And now these heathens won't admire him! They won't bend their knees to his mastery! Tantrum, presumption of scholarship, another tantrum, demand for recognition of his intellect, "LOL!" in the middle of a tantrum. "LOL!" instead of answers, alter-ego/friend who pretends to come with no dog in this fight ...

Anonymous said...

Anyway, see ya all later. It has been fun.

Bahnsen Burner said...

That sums it up beautifully, Photo!

If "copy and paste" is all one needs to do to further the discussion, this will do just fine.

Regards,
Dawson

Anonymous said...

Dawson,

Well, at least I had the testosterone to go on FF something your definetely lacking.See you got a lot of mouth but pack no punch.It's easy to run your mouth behind a computer.

The funny thing is that you really have deluded yourself into believing that what you say means anything.

Good work, jackass.

Anonymous said...

Richard vents some frustration ... the other worshippers in attendance at his church think that was god's word coming out of Rich's anus and utter an "Amen!"

(I had to come back and say good night to you Rich. I knew you would not sleep well otherwise. Good night!)

Anonymous said...

Photo,

Yea, goodnight.

Maybe tomorrow you'll come up with something meaningful.
I know you've been busy staring at Dawson's behind.

freddies_dead said...

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

construct of divine perfection

Is this construct "divine" (or "perfect") due to conscious activity, or is it as it is irrespective of what anyone (or anything) else wants/wishes?

Gnardude said...

Richard are you really going to brag about the Fundamentally Flawed debacle? If you think things went well for you there you probably believe "Kyle Jamison" is not a sock-puppet as well.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Ydemoc,

Given that you would not wish to presume too much, rather, given that you would presume nothing at all in the Socratic tradition as you seek out the mystery of the operational aspects of the laws of logic, do you think it would make sense to ask what the underlying presupposition of Smith’s observations is? Do you think it’s possible that the answer to that question would serve to reveal the nature of his reasoning, i.e., whether it be univocal or analogical?

Anonymous said...

Gnardude,

it went well.

Now, go kick rocks.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

freddies_dead,

You write: "Is this construct 'divine' (or 'perfect') due to conscious activity, or is it as it is irrespective of what anyone (or anything) else wants/wishes?"

It's the latter. But you already know that. You're just pretending not to see the inescapable alternatives inherent to the problem of origin. Right?

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Richard,

What is this "Fundamentally Flawed debacle" that Gnardude is talking about?

Anonymous said...

Hi Michael,

Sometime ago I debated some atheists from the UK.

Dawson has linked to it.

but just in case:

google "fundamentally flawed podcast" and look for Hezekiah Ahaz.


Ydemoc said...

Hi again, Michael,

Thanks for your most recent question. I gave it a quick read just now while attending to other things (work, actually).

It, as well as numerous others you've asked, deserves to be addressed, by me (even if my doing so results in my asking more questions) -- and especially since you've addressed many of my inquiries. I fully intend to do this at some point. It's just that right at the moment, I'm fairly busy with my work.

As a courtesy, I just thought I should let you know.

Thanks.

Ydemoc

Justin Hall said...

Micheal it is a regularly scheduled pod cast that Richard appeared on twice under the name Hezekiah Ahaz to argue for the presuppositional approach (TAG). He did not do very well but in his defense I don't think he had any experience in verbal debate and as he pointed out he had the courage to show up.

http://fundamentally-flawed.com/page/7/

episode 47

http://fundamentally-flawed.com/page/9/

episode 41

freddies_dead said...

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

freddies_dead,

You write: "Is this construct 'divine' (or 'perfect') due to conscious activity, or is it as it is irrespective of what anyone (or anything) else wants/wishes?"

It's the latter. But you already know that.


I did but I wondered which standpoint you were going to affirm in your self-adopted role as spokesperson for orthodox Judeo-Christianity.

You're just pretending not to see the inescapable alternatives inherent to the problem of origin. Right?

Nope, just highlighting your inability to maintain consistency with your claim that "ultimately, consciousness does have primacy over existence".

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Kyle,

You write: "I think I follow this from the last few post as they relate to the metaphysics. What I’m not sure about is how christianity decides which ideas of science are right and which aren’t. Sometimes there can be several competing ideas or theories about the same thing. I'm also a little unsure on a few other details but will submit this question for now."

Well, that’s a tough one, isn’t it? Creation reveals the fundamentals of origin and logic while revelatory knowledge reveals the correct metaphysical presupposition for scientific inquiry and the fact that scientific investigation and discovery are left to us. But after what point are they left to us? Despite what some claim, abiogenesis and an evolutionary paradigm of common ancestry are utterly incompatible with the Bible’s theological imperatives.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Richard,

Yes, I read the review.

Anonymous said...

Michael,

Cool.

It's interesting that none of the so called objectivist here have bothered to give an answer to that review for the hope that is in them.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

freddies_dead,

But you’re not making any sense, are you?

I already told you that the construct and its inherent imperatives are universally and objectively self-evident to all as immediately apprehended in the axiomatic problem of origin. Hence, the answer would necessarily be that it’s apparent “irrespective of what anyone (or anything) else wants/wishes?"

You write: “I did but I wondered which standpoint you were going to affirm in your self-adopted role as spokesperson for orthodox Judeo-Christianity.”

“Self-appointed,” you mean, right? Is Dawson a self-appointed expert on Objectivism?

LOL!

But then my credentials or the lack thereof would have no bearing on something that is “universally and objectively self-evident to all”. Right?

You write: “Nope, just highlighting your inability to maintain consistency with your claim that ‘ultimately, consciousness does have primacy over existence‘.”

But how could you be highlighting any such thing? The construct’s “imperatives are universally and objectively self-evident to all”.

You’re sort of confused, aren’t you?

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

freddies_dead,

But you’re not making any sense, are you?

I already told you that the construct and its inherent imperatives are universally and objectively self-evident to all as immediately apprehended in the axiomatic problem of origin. Hence, the answer would necessarily be that it’s apparent “irrespective of what anyone (or anything) else wants/wishes?"

You write: “I did but I wondered which standpoint you were going to affirm in your self-adopted role as spokesperson for orthodox Judeo-Christianity.”

“Self-appointed,” you mean, right? Is Dawson a self-appointed expert on Objectivism?

LOL!

But then my credentials or the lack thereof would have no bearing on something that is “universally and objectively self-evident to all”. Right?

You write: “Nope, just highlighting your inability to maintain consistency with your claim that ‘ultimately, consciousness does have primacy over existence‘.”

But how could you be highlighting any such thing? The construct’s “imperatives are universally and objectively self-evident to all”.

You’re sort of confused, aren’t you?

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson,

You write: " . . . 'the Book of Job' which speaks to the mathematical concept of infinity."

I answered that already, more than once, really. Apparently, you missed it.



Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson,

Let me see if I've got this straight: are you asserting that because the Bible doesn’t express its theory of knowledge in a textbook fashion, it doesn’t have one? This seems to be what you’re saying. This seems to be the sort of scriptural references you’re looking for. If that’s the case, you’re expectation in this instance is even worse than your mindless, obtuse declaration that “causality presupposes existence.”

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson,

You mindlessly write: “A theory of concepts explains how the human mind forms concepts from perceptual input.

No. Objectivism holds in its dunderheaded, univocal scheme of realty that “[a] theory of concepts explains how the human mind forms concepts from perceptual input.”

The Bible holds that a “theory of concepts explains how the human mind forms concepts from” more than just “perceptual input.”

I already told you how the Bible does it from scripture: “From there we may see that a hierarchy of true knowledge is built on the rational apprehensions of axiomatic propositions and the empirical impressions of sensory perception as processed, assimilated and integrated in obedience to the innate logical imperatives of the comprehensive expression of identity and the operational aspects of cognition. But to get this right, we also need the direct guidance of the Holy Spirit and the operations manual of revelatory knowledge (Bible) so that we don’t stray outside the constraints of logic into error especially with regard to the object of science. And the first thing we learn about science from the Bible is that the proper metaphysical presupposition for science is a mechanistic naturalism that holds to God’s primacy over creation, not an ontological naturalism which arrogantly thinks to render God impotent.”

Anonymous said...

"Let me see if I've got this straight: are you asserting that because the Bible doesn’t express its theory of knowledge in a textbook fashion, it doesn’t have one? This seems to be what you’re saying. This seems to be the sort of scriptural references you’re looking for. If that’s the case, you’re expectation in this instance is even worse than your mindless, obtuse declaration that “causality presupposes existence.”"

Michael well said. In fact, in the past I have tried explaining this to Dawson. But you think he cared?

Some people are stubborn, you know.

I wonder where photo is hiding.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson,

You write: "But Smith’s point is that the concepts which Christians use to reference their god and its qualities originate in “a distinctively human context” and are subsequently ripped from their objective foundations in order to “apply to a supernatural being,” just as we saw in the case of Christianity’s misappropriation of the concept ‘consciousness’ (remember “pure five”?)."

LOL!

I understand perfectly well what Smith's point is and showed that his contention is false. Like you, Smith’s an idiot and a liar, pretending not to understand the construct of God and its inherent imperatives which are universally and objectively apparent to all .

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson,

You write: “I am right, but again, I don’t expect you to see it. You are as of yet far too unfamiliar with the points I’m making.”

Okay, have it your way, imbecile.

I am light-years ahead of you in terms of comparative philosophy. Your acolytes have no idea what a phony you are. Bottom line: the only observation I was making is that the modern materialist (physicalist) does not necessarily hold that the substance of consciousness is entirely material. That statement is true, you imbecile.

Dawson writes: “What you seem to be missing is that conceptualization presupposes the axiom of consciousness.”

No. What you’re unquestionably missing or pretending not to understand is that I was never talking about any systemic issue, you imbecile, and the statement “that conceptualization presupposes the axiom of consciousness” is not profound or unique to Objectivism, you imbecile. This sentiment is of the very same nature as the obtuse stupidity of “causality presupposes existence,” you imbecile.

You write: “But yet this is what has been denied in materialism.”

Exactly, that’s a different issue altogether from the one I was talking about when I wrote “a strictly materialistic conceptualization of consciousness,”

Michael: “Hence, I pointed out that the materialist (or physicalist of current science) reduces consciousness to the material (or the physical) as he eschews the existence of a soul.”

You write: “That is not what makes materialism false.”

So the immediate problem with materialism is more basic, right, you imbecile? Would that include Noam Chomsky’s view as well, you imbecile?

In the meantime, precisely what does consciousness consist of according to the Objectivist?

*crickets chirping*

Anonymous said...

Michael,

It would help you a lot if you paid attention to what others say rather than hide behind what you think they're gonna say and then assume by a few words that they said what you are imagining. For example, while checking what I have written I found several sentences of mine that are unintelligible. I will not tell you which ones of course. Anyway, I noticed too how that happened, but the issue here would be: why did you not ask for me to clarify those? They were not too many, but, despite I did not intend them to be unintelligible, they served as tests for how well you are reading what we write.

Anyway, to the point. Dawson has explained to you what consciousness is as identified by objectivists. Not as per their say so. I have found that objectivism is not about redefining terms and such shit. It's not about declaring things to be so and so arbitrarily, but to get there through the proper analysis from first principles. This might be going above your head big time. Understandable since what you claim to be a Christian epistemology and perhaps also theory of concepts is nothing but declarations. Your own declarations by the way. Arbitrary beliefs claimed to be based on the bible, but that you forgot to link there. Lest we learn that there is nothing in the bible of that sort. But who cares? It is still arbitrary declarations.

Dawson asked you to take a time before continuing to make your mind about what you wanted to get from these conversations. I would invite you to read around this blog to figure out how objectivism is built from foundations and on. How it is not about declaring shit like your supposed Christian epistemology. Quite foreign to you I understand, but, if you expect to demolish, making such display of ignorance is just embarrassing. Making the display while insulting Dawson for your own faults is worse. I know I might be talking to a brick wall here, but heck. You won't be able to excuse yourself because "nobody told you that."

But don't be fooled by my tone. I despise your stupidity as much today as before. You further confirm my first diagnosis and show that I was actually too kind to begin with. You have truly convinced me that you think with your ass, and I do not see you making any better any time soon.

...

Anonymous said...

So Michael, to make things worse, freebies_dead invited you to shovel a huge amount of your own crap back up your ass, and, not only did you celebrate it, you danced around and did so mindlessly. I bet you will never notice it. This shows yet again that you have not understood anything about objectivism, nor anything about primacy. Not surprising because you seem to think that primacy is something of a title ("God holds primacy!").

And of course, you keep unable to help yourself when it comes to arguments from authority:

So the immediate problem with materialism is more basic, right, you imbecile? Would that include Noam Chomsky’s view as well, you imbecile?

And demanding that we recognize your genius any time you show that you have no idea what you are talking about:

I am light-years ahead of you in terms of comparative philosophy.

Yet, in your complete disdain for clear terms (must be because analogical thinking allows terms to vary within and without sentences, but Christianity couldn't survive without stripping concepts out of their meaning and allow them to become nonsensical bullshit when they refer to their god, and, by extension, back to anything else, right thinking-anus?), you allowed yourself to describe, again, objectivism as materialist, forgetting a few things:

1. That materialism is no more (I know you later tried to clean your act by equating it with physicalism, but they are not equal).

2. That these are schools of thought, not just willy-nilly terms. (But Christianity's survival depends on equivocation, aka "analogical thinking.")

3. That these schools of thought start somewhere different than where other schools of thought start.

But this is too much help. Help that your imbecility does not deserve. Dawson also gave you a big push of help, which went way over your head because you can't pay attention once you notice that we don't have any respect left for you. You concentrate in trying to show off your "amazing" "intellect" instead of actually using it and understand what you might have gotten wrong.

Go lick your wounds. Start that brain working. Disengage the ass from the process. Understand that you don't know as much as you think you do.

END

Bahnsen Burner said...

For anyone who hasn’t seen it, here’s my transcript of one portion in his “debate” on Fundamentally Flawed:

___________________

Nide: [excited] “G-… You… Jim, you just told me you were no fr… How do you know you’re real, Jim, you can’t even, you can’t even account for your own existence!”

Alex: [calmly] “Okay, well, let me ask you a question. Let me ask you a question, Hezekiah.”

Nide: “Okay.”

Alex: “Can you hear somebody called Jim speaking to you?”

Nide: “Yeah.”

Alex: “Okay, are you real?”

Nide: [pause] “Ummmmmm… yeah…. but…”

Alex: “Do you trust your senses?”

Nide: [pause] “I do.”

Alex: “Do you trust that Jim is real?”

Nide: [pause] “Ummm… that’s what I’m trying to establish.”

[Alex and Nide talking over each other]

Alex: “Just let me finish. You’ve admitted that you can hear somebody called Jim speaking. You’ve admitted that you accept that your senses are giving you correct information. So, you’ve got two alternatives: either Jim is real, or you’re imagining him.”

Nide: “And and and and that’s… [nervous giggling] and that’s the whole…”

Jim: “Which is more likely to be true based on the empirically valid evidence for my existence? Which is more likely to be true, that you are imagining this entire conversation, or that I really am sitting here up in this conversation…”

[Jim and Nide talking over each other]

Nide: “I just take it for… I just take it for granted. I don’t have… I h… I don’t have any evidence that you’re real, Jim. I just take it for granted.”

Jim: “So that’s twice now that you’ve admitted that your entire worldview is based on something which is taken for granted, and yet you are the one which…"

Nide: [flustered] “But we’ve been saying that the whole time!”

[Jim and Nide talking over each other]

[continued…]

Bahnsen Burner said...

Jim: “Is that what you’re saying?”

Nide: [drowning in his own flustered words]

Jim: “If you took more time to listen to the reply, then you might be able to provide more coherent answers.”

Nide: “Okay, go ahead.”

Jim: “Are you essentially saying that you’re entire worldview is based upon a presumption?”

Nide: “We’ve [nervous giggling] When have… when I… When have I ever denied that? When have I ever denied that?”

Jim: “So therefore you’ve finally admitted that the very next valid question to ask, is can you give an example of when that is a bad way of viewing the world, and when a much better way of viewing the world is to make objectively valid observations?”

Nide: “But en… that’s when problems arise because we all… we all assume things, and then we go from there. So you’re… you’re… Whatever you start with, you assume it too.”

Jim: “When you present evidence for things, they’re no longer assumptions, they’re empirical observations.”

[Jim and Nide talking over each other]

Nide: “You could be imagining the evidence. And how is it that you’re not? That’s the whole point.”

[deafening silence]

Nide: “See… So, it… it… it… We’re at…”

Alex: “You see, this is the thing. The reason why we’re going quiet there is not because it’s a good question, it’s because it’s actually incomprehensible practically."

Nide: [limp and defeated] “Okay, if you say so.”

_______________________________

Notice some key similarities between Nide’s performance here and Michael’s performance in this discussion. For one, Nide does not take time to listen and think about what has been said to him. Ditto for Michael. Second, because of the first, Nide replies to things stated to him with incoherent responses. Ditto for Michael. Third, Nide makes affirmations that are completely arbitrary, void of evidence, utterly bereft of reference to reality. Ditto for Michael. Fourth, Nide exhibits a bizarre habit of denying the real and affirming the unreal. Ditto for Michael. Essentially, Christianity has turned their minds inside out. They call this “renewing.” The can have it.

One noteworthy difference between Nide and Michael, however, is that Nide can apparently last longer in a discussion before resorting to personal attacks. As you can see in this section of the discussion, nowhere does Nide break down into a temper tantrum and start calling the other participants “dolt” or “imbecile” or “stupid.” So ironically (I didn’t know this was possible), Nide shows more maturity than Michael. Not much, but at least a tad more.

Regards,
Dawson

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Richard,

Michael well said. In fact, in the past I have tried explaining this to Dawson. But you think he cared?

It's not about caring. It's about realization. Even if not in textbook fashion, why would the bible require us to have it read and then "interpreted" by ass-holes of the caliber of Michael's in order to become a theory of concepts or an epistemology? Why can't that be clear enough for everybody to see? Since it is not clear whatsoever and different theologians and other religious bullshitters have had to put the meaning into the bible, which is clear because they "curiously" don't get any better a philosophy than those prevailing in their times only with the "plus" of being invested of Christian mysticism, we can't but conclude that they have engaged in eisegesis, rather than being taking some objectively demonstrable information from their book of fantasies. It becomes worse if we read the passages and compare them to the incredibly stupid imaginings that Michael declared here after just a few words in the bible. Crap like that can't be anything but eisegesis.

So sorry Richard, but thinking your god's thoughts through your ass cannot produce but pestilence.

I bet you did not notice that your friend Michael was putting his crap back up his ass big time again and again all through his recent comments, did you? I do not remember saying him to go fuck himself. If I did he took it too literally. If I didn't it would be too late now.

Good night Richard. I might not come back to shovel some shit up your ass. If you miss it just grab a shovel and do it yourself.

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael affirmed (as he does, over and over again) the nonsense notion “construct of divine perfection.”

freddies_dead asked: “Is this construct ‘divine’ (or ‘perfect’) due to conscious activity, or is it as it is irrespective of what anyone (or anything) else wants/wishes?”

This is an excellent question as it points to the construct’s orientation with respect to the issue of metaphysical primacy. Is the construct ‘divine’ because of conscious activity (the primacy of consciousness)? Or, is the construct ‘divine’ independent of any conscious activity (the primacy of existence)?

We have already seen (as I explained in the main entry of this blog, above) that no Christian – even Michael, with all his huffing and puffing and throwing around of insults and bad attitude – can consistently maintain the primacy of consciousness metaphysics, in spite of his admission that “according to Judeo-Christianity, ultimately, consciousness does have primacy over existence.” Michael still has not overcome this criticism, and freddies_dead’s question helps show why he never will be able to overcome this criticism.

In response to freddies_dead’s question, Michael replied:

<< It's the latter. >>

So, put together with with freddies_dead’s question, Michael’s answer means: the construct is ‘divine’ “irrespective of what anyone (or anything) else wants/wishes.” In other words, the construct is ‘divine’ independent of any conscious activity, which affirms: the primacy of existence.

As Jim Gardner would say, “We have a goal!”

Thus, in the final analysis, Christianity cannot consistently maintain the primacy of consciousness, as I had already explained.

Likely sensing the fundamental conflict internal to his system (but likely not grasping just how devastating it really is for his position), Michael couldn’t just answer the question; he had to attack freddies_dead personally:

<< But you already know that. You're just pretending not to see the inescapable alternatives inherent to the problem of origin. Right?”

freddies_dead replied: “Nope, just highlighting your inability to maintain consistency with your claim that ‘ultimately, consciousness does have primacy over existence’.”

Freddies_dead is correct: he was not pretending anything having to do with what Michael calls “the inescapable alternatives inherent to the problem of origin.” His question had nothing to do with the so-called “problem of origin” to begin with. Freddies_dead’s question is expressly in regard to the issue of metaphysical primacy. Given Michael’s response, his baseless accusation against freddies_dead, and his apparent failure to integrate his response to the question with his earlier affirmation of the primacy of consciousness, I can only suspect that all of this is whizzing right over Michael’s head. But in actuality, it’s another Blagojevich-caught-on-tape moment.

Hey, don’t get sore at us if your worldview is fundamentally flawed!

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

Regarding the question as to whether one could learn about the mathematical concept of infinity by reading “the Book of Job,” Michael replied:

<< I answered that already, more than once, really. Apparently, you missed it. >>

Please, make your position clear on the matter. Either the mathematical concept of infinity is presented in an informed manner in “the Book of Job,” or it’s not. Which is it?

Check the appropriate box:

Yes ____

No ____

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael wrote: “Let me see if I've got this straight: are you asserting that because the Bible doesn’t express its theory of knowledge in a textbook fashion, it doesn’t have one?”

I never said this, so let me set you straight: I’m asking if the bible presents a theory of concepts in an informative manner addressing the basic questions I have explicitly laid out. Can we learn about the nature of concepts, the method by which the human mind forms them, the proper way to define them, etc., by examining any portion of the bible? Yes or no? If you affirm yes, then I invite you to cite the passage(s) in the bible which you think do this. If no, then just admit it.

Again, as I have stated already, I am not interested in eisegetical adaptations of non-Christian theories decorated with theological jargon and proposed as a substitute for something the bible nowhere supplies.

And no, my query (not expectation – I already know what to expect, and you’re serving it up right on schedule) is not “mindless.” You are the one that insisted (with your juvenile “LOL!”) that Christianity has a theory of concepts. At minimum, this “theory” of yours should cover the basic questions I have raised (you can begin with stating the Christian theory’s definition of ‘concept’) and biblical citations which authenticate said theory as distinctively Christian.

So far, nothing you’ve contributed to this discussion addresses the questions I have related to what a theory of concepts should at minimum provide.

I also suggested that you give us a demonstration of how the “Christian theory of concepts” works using the concept ‘length’. How, according to the Christian theory of concepts, do we form the concept ‘length’? Please, be specific. Throwing around a bunch of lofty, unconnected floating abstractions around won’t cut it.

I wrote: “A theory of concepts explains how the human mind forms concepts from perceptual input.

Michael: “No. Objectivism holds in its dunderheaded, univocal scheme of realty that ‘[a] theory of concepts explains how the human mind forms concepts from perceptual input’.”

If anything is “self-evident,” Michael, it’s the fact that we form concepts on the basis of perceptual input. You seem to agree that we do at least this. Whether you want to say we form concepts from other sources (please, explain!) is another matter. But it’s clear that we form concepts denoting things we perceive, such as ‘rock’, ‘tree’, ‘wind’, ‘cloud’, ‘house’, ‘man’, etc. The objective theory of concepts explains how the human mind does this. Does the bible explain how the human mind does this? If so, WHERE???????

[continued…]

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael: “The Bible holds that a ‘theory of concepts explains how the human mind forms concepts from’ more than just ‘perceptual input’.”

Okay! Good, WHERE does the bible state this? Please, Michael, just one citation where we can learn what you say here in the bible. Can you do it??????

Michael wrote: “I already told you how the Bible does it from scripture.”

No, you haven’t. And just reading through what you quoted from your earlier comment proves this. Observe:

<< “From there we may see that a hierarchy of true knowledge is built on the rational apprehensions of axiomatic propositions and the empirical impressions of sensory perception as processed, assimilated and integrated in obedience to the innate logical imperatives of the comprehensive expression of identity and the operational aspects of cognition. But to get this right, we also need the direct guidance of the Holy Spirit and the operations manual of revelatory knowledge (Bible) so that we don’t stray outside the constraints of logic into error especially with regard to the object of science. And the first thing we learn about science from the Bible is that the proper metaphysical presupposition for science is a mechanistic naturalism that holds to God’s primacy over creation, not an ontological naturalism which arrogantly thinks to render God impotent.” >>

Notice what’s missing? NOT ONE BIBLICAL CITATION IN ANY OF THIS!

Where does the bible say that “a hierarchy of true knowledge is built on the rational apprehensions of axiomatic propositions and the empirical impressions of sensory perception as processed, assimilated and integrated in obedience to the innate logical imperatives of the comprehensive expression of identity and the operational aspects of cognition”?

Where can we learn what you’re telling us IN THE BIBLE?????

Good grief! How many times does my question need to be explained to you before you get it?

“Credentials” my ass!

Regards,
Dawson

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Ydemoc,

You write:

"Hi again, Michael,

I realize that you and I have mostly been a differnt track from you and many of the others. But I have to ask: Can you break down the following for me, i.e., into terms that I, as a slow learner, might be able to process?

You wrote: '...From there we may see that a hierarchy of true knowledge is built on the rational apprehensions of axiomatic propositions and the empirical impressions of sensory perception as processed, assimilated and integrated in obedience to the innate logical imperatives of the comprehensive expression of identity and the operational aspects of cognition.'

I think I get it. Seriously, I do. But I just want to make sure."
_____________________________

Sure. By all means, let’s start fleshing out Christianity’s nonexistent theory of knowledge, beginning with the axiomatic propositions. . . .

Tomorrow.

Bahnsen Burner said...

I wrote: "But Smith’s point is that the concepts which Christians use to reference their god and its qualities originate in ‘a distinctively human context’ and are subsequently ripped from their objective foundations in order to ‘apply to a supernatural being’, just as we saw in the case of Christianity’s misappropriation of the concept ‘consciousness’ (remember ‘pure five’?)."

Michael responded: “I understand perfectly well what Smith's point is and showed that his contention is false.”

No, you haven’t shown that Smith’s contention is false. All you did is supply more examples of the theological nervosa that he describes. Your entire response to Smith consists of references to and unargued assertions about this “construct of divine perfection,” “the idea of God,” the so-called “problem of origin,” etc. Then you start calling everyone idiots. There’s no argument in any of what you’ve stated in response to Smith. There’s no connection to reality made between these notions you continue to repeat ad nauseum and the reality we perceive. It’s all from imagination, and in order to make the concepts you use apply in the fake environment in which you apply them, they have to be ripped from the context in which they were formed, sheared of objective meaning and back-filled with arbitrariness inspired by ancient primitives who didn’t know which way is up.

You’re not giving any cure here, Michael. On the contrary, you’re just exhibiting some of the symptoms that Smith has identified.

Amazing!

Regards,
Dawson

Anonymous said...

Photo,

Like they say, you're a poor excuse for a human being.
Seriously, you're a nasty individual.

It's interesting that Dawson approves of your henious behavior.


Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Richard,

I doubt that you can know if Dawson approves or disapproves of whatever behaviour you might be talking about. After all, it's not his problem. He deals with the behaviours that he gets. He said that you had to deal with what comes at you yourself.

You really wanted me to do the shovelling didn't you?

Good night Rich.

Bahnsen Burner said...

I wrote: “I am right, but again, I don’t expect you to see it. You are as of yet far too unfamiliar with the points I’m making.”

Michael: “Okay, have it your way, imbecile…I am light-years ahead of you in terms of comparative philosophy. Your acolytes have no idea what a phony you are. Bottom line: the only observation I was making is that the modern materialist (physicalist) does not necessarily hold that the substance of consciousness is entirely material. That statement is true, you imbecile.”

Notice Michael provides no argument here which speaks to the matter at hand. But, he doesn’t miss the opportunity to insult me.

I wrote: “What you seem to be missing is that conceptualization presupposes the axiom of consciousness.”

Michael: “No. What you’re unquestionably missing or pretending not to understand is that I was never talking about any systemic issue, you imbecile, and the statement ‘that conceptualization presupposes the axiom of consciousness’ is not profound or unique to Objectivism, you imbecile.”

Again, no argument here. Just more insults. But it’s clear that he’s concerned about which system gets credit for identifying important facts. Where can we find the axiom of consciousness in the bible? Michael can only blank out on this, since it’s clear from this thread of the discussion that he hasn’t grasped it, and it’s clear from his misappropriation of the concept ‘consciousness’ in order to apply to his “divine construct” that he implicitly and unmistakably denies the axiom consciousness. Moreover, where does the bible speak about what the process of conceptualization presupposes? Where?????

Please, spare us the eisegesis. It won’t fly here.

Michael: “This sentiment is of the very same nature as the obtuse stupidity of ‘causality presupposes existence’, you imbecile.”

So, you don’t think it’s the case that causality presupposes existence? Really? Really?

I wrote: “But yet this is what has been denied in materialism.”

Michael: “Exactly,”

No, Michael, you can’t now come back and say “exactly” here. Remember, just as does materialism, your worldview too denies the axiom of consciousness. You’ve already shown this repeatedly and consistently.

Michael: “that’s a different issue altogether from the one I was talking about when I wrote ‘“a strictly materialistic conceptualization of consciousness’,”

Maybe, but most probably not. The point I was making was broader and yet inclusive of what you were writing about. I’m simply pointing out that the very notion of “a strictly materialistic conceptualization of consciousness” is a contradiction in terms because of the underlying denial of the axiom of consciousness involved in materialism.

Michael: “Hence, I pointed out that the materialist (or physicalist of current science) reduces consciousness to the material (or the physical) as he eschews the existence of a soul.”

I wrote: “That is not what makes materialism false.”

Michael: “So the immediate problem with materialism is more basic, right, you imbecile? Would that include Noam Chomsky’s view as well, you imbecile?”

From what I recall of Chomsky’s view (he’s way out there on so many issues), his view also implicitly denies the axiom of consciousness. I suspect that’s the case, but I’m no expert on Chomsky.

Michael: “In the meantime, precisely what does consciousness consist of according to the Objectivist?”

See? You’re doing it again! You’re denying the axiom of consciousness, Michael. I’ve already stated that my worldview will not stand for that. You’re question is amiss because you haven’t grasped the axiom of consciousness.

Wow! Just wow!

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael: “By all means, let’s start fleshing out Christianity’s nonexistent theory of knowledge, beginning with the axiomatic propositions. . . .”

Two things, Michael:

1) When you “start fleshing out” your “Christian epistemology,” make sure you tie *every element* you affirm as a feature of this contraption to direct citations from the bible. Define your terms as you go, and tie your definitions to what can be learned in the bible by direct citations from the bible.I will be looking for this, and also I’ll be looking for how whatever you present can be used as a guide to forming knowledge from what we perceive. If it fails on one or both of these points, you fail.

2) Lay off the insults. They do you no good. In fact, they only harm your credibility. Start acting like an adult if at all possible. I will be looking for this too.

Regards,
Dawson

Anonymous said...

Photo,

one shuold learn when he isn't funny anymore.

Hey Dawson,

Is photo's henious bevahior adult like?

Bahnsen Burner said...

Nide: “Hey Dawson, Is photo's henious bevahior adult like?”

“henious”? I don’t know what that means.

Do you mean photo’s expressions of righteous indignation? That sort of answers itself.

Do you approve of Michael’s foul-mouthed language, his frequent use of insults, his apparently homo-erotic fixations on nether orifices which photo has rightly sought to cork?

Of course, I’m guessing you do, since you say nothing against it.

Keep in mind, Nide, the record shows that I made numerous attempts to keep this dialogue civil. But Michael insisted on bringing it down to a pre-adolescent level with his temper tantrums, furious outbursts and major meltdowns. You should see some of the messages I’ve received privately from observers who were quite astonished by Michael’s unexplained and irrational behavior. The guy has made a laughingstock of himself, and it’s apparent that he doesn’t realize it.

Regards,
Dawson

Anonymous said...

"Do you mean photo’s expressions of righteous indignation? That sort of answers itself."

What does photo have a problem with?

He doesn't even subscribe to anything. He claims that here is here to point out "flaws" in other people's arguments.

"Do you approve of Michael’s foul-mouthed language, his frequent use of insults, his apparently homo-erotic fixations on nether orifices which photo has rightly sought to cork? "

Well, I thought you did to. Remember what you told me, that is, that orthodox Christianity approves of name
calling. So, I'm not really sure why you're complaining.


Why would anybody send you a message in private when they could easily post their complaints here. weirdos.

Anonymous said...

Rich,

one shuold learn when he isn't funny anymore

Exactly. Have you learned yet that your pretended stupidity is not fun anymore?

But we can make a deal. You start making the effort to understand when/if you have made a stupid argument, and I will not insult you when offering you an explanation. For example, when caught wrong, what about you don't play the fool?

For example, when you offered that hasty generalization about Aristotle while ignoring what Dawson actually said. I suggested you read what Dawson said, and then check if your first comment made sense. Yet all you did was play the fool. Instead of reading what Dawson said you insisted on your initial comment.

I sincerely don't think that you understand how foolish you can be. But that thing was pure playing the fool in that you did not even care to check and try to figure out what I was referring to. To be an authentic but sincere fool is one thing. To be lazy to even try and check is quite another.

Have some honesty and we might have a better interaction. No need to admit your prior mistakes. Keep it to yourself if you want. All I am asking you is to learn and avoid doing the same thing(s) again. Why? Because they are immature and insulting.

There's many more ways to insult than using the words I use. ANother example, you asked me to have some manners, yet you called me a cheer-leader after other attempts at insulting me in other ways. That implied that instead of following the conversation (I was making my own points), you were, ahem, cheer leading. That's insulting too. So. If you don't want that, don't do it.

Good night Richard.

P.S. As per Michael, sorry man, but he is such an ass that I do not promise you to have the slightest respect for him. He has no self-respect to begin with.

Bahnsen Burner said...

I asked: "Do you mean photo’s expressions of righteous indignation? That sort of answers itself."

Nide: “What does photo have a problem with?”

Ask him.

Nide: “He doesn't even subscribe to anything.”

I see, so, you’re his spokesman now?

Nide: “He claims that here is here to point out ‘flaws’ in other people's arguments.”

Do you mean he “claims that he is here to point out…”? It wouldn’t follow from this that he “doesn’t… subscribe to anything.”

I asked: "Do you approve of Michael’s foul-mouthed language, his frequent use of insults, his apparently homo-erotic fixations on nether orifices which photo has rightly sought to cork? "

Nide: “Well, I thought you did to.”

I didn’t quite get your answer. Is that a yes or a no?

Nide: “Remember what you told me, that is, that orthodox Christianity approves of name calling. So, I'm not really sure why you're complaining.”

No complaining. I’m simply asking you a point-blank question. Why don’t you answer it? Do you approve of the three categories of childishness that I listed, or not?

Nide: “Why would anybody send you a message in private when they could easily post their complaints here. weirdos.”

I get many private messages from readers of my blog. I have since I started blogging. I see nothing wrong with it. I post my e-mail address for a reason. Why do you think they’re “weirdos”? Is e-mailing someone “weird” in your view?

Regards,
Dawson

Anonymous said...

Richard,

Well, I thought you did to. Remember what you told me, that is, that orthodox Christianity approves of name
calling. So, I'm not really sure why you're complaining.


See what you are doing here? How on Earth do you suppose this comes across to Dawson just after you asked him if he approves of my behaviour? How really? Be honest and have at least some self respect here.

Man. Good thing for you your comment came just before I made my comment above. Otherwise I would have given you much more of your own ... soup. I shall desist this once. But think about it before you write anything else. I have little patience for dishonest stupidity.

Anonymous said...

Dawson,

If you were honest, you will agree that photo took things to the extreme with his perverted behavior.

"foul-mouth language" that's photo your taking about.

"homo-erotic fixations" that's definitely photo your talking about. Notice that this is the most photo has ever talked or been around.

"insults"- Well, you pressed the man beyond his limits. I'm assuming.

Bahnsen Burner said...

Nide,

Just answer the question. Here it is again:

Do you approve of Michael’s foul-mouthed language, his frequent use of insults, his apparently homo-erotic fixations on nether orifices which photo has rightly sought to cork?

Yes or no. Your answer please.

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

You know, it’s always fascinating what observers will find and send me privately.

Keep in mind what Nide wrote just above:

<< Why would anybody send you a message in private when they could easily post their complaints here. weirdos. >>

Now whom is Nide calling a “weirdo”? Apparently anyone who sends a blogger private e-mail.

On 22 Nov., we find the following exchange between Nide and Michael in the comments of this blog:

[snip]

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...
Richard, put the follow gaget on you blog so I can follow it! Okay? The atom subscribe feed won't exhibit the blogs I follow in my profile. I want others to read you.

Also, go to my profile and email me. I want to tell you something in private.

Love the post, cool background.

Cheers.
November 22, 2012 8:05 PM

Richard said...
Ok great.
November 22, 2012 9:42 PM

Richard said...
Michael,

You can add me from your blogger dashboard. That should show me on your follow list.
November 22, 2012 10:51 PM

[unsnip]

Then on 23 Nov., in a comment which Richard submitted to this blog, we find:

[snip]
Richard said...
Michael,

I emailed you.
November 23, 2012 10:21 AM
[unsnip]

So Nide has e-mailed Michael privately, and Michael has e-mailed Nide privately. But Nide just got through announcing on my blog that people who do this are “weirdos.”

Amazing!

Special thanks to Observer No. 462 for pointing this out.

Regards,
Dawson

Anonymous said...

Dawson,

are you that bored?

Amazing!

freddies_dead said...

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

freddies_dead,

But you’re not making any sense, are you?


In your opinion perhaps.

I already told you that the construct and its inherent imperatives are universally and objectively self-evident to all as immediately apprehended in the axiomatic problem of origin. Hence, the answer would necessarily be that it’s apparent “irrespective of what anyone (or anything) else wants/wishes?"

I know that you've asserted all kinds of stuff using concepts stolen from the objectivist worldview, torn from their context and repackaged without any real content. I'm just not sure why you think this is a compelling argument for orthodox Judeo-Christianity.

You write: “I did but I wondered which standpoint you were going to affirm in your self-adopted role as spokesperson for orthodox Judeo-Christianity.”

“Self-appointed,” you mean, right?


What ever floats your boat cuntchops.

Is Dawson a self-appointed expert on Objectivism?

As far as I know Dawson hasn't gone stumbling around on somebody else's blog bleating about his credentials and whining that he should be taken seriously just because he says so but I'm sure he can confirm that himself.

LOL!

Lol, indeed.

But then my credentials or the lack thereof would have no bearing on something that is “universally and objectively self-evident to all”. Right?

True, which makes me wonder why you insisted we should accept your claims about your credentials in the first place. I suspect that photo was spot on when he said it was all part of your desperate need to have some kind of authority on your side.

You write: “Nope, just highlighting your inability to maintain consistency with your claim that ‘ultimately, consciousness does have primacy over existence‘.”

But how could you be highlighting any such thing?


By showing how, while you affirm the primacy of consciousness, you cannot make your argument for orthodox Judeo-Christianity whilst remaining consistent with what you affirm. Instead you must make your argument as if existence holds metaphysical primacy.

The construct’s “imperatives are universally and objectively self-evident to all”.

And back to your asserting things using stolen and mangled concepts...

You’re sort of confused, aren’t you?

On the contrary, I'm not the one arguing in a way that's inconsistent with the fundamental basis of my worldview.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson,

You write: "You’re denying the axiom of consciousness. . . ."

How 'am I denying "the axiom of consciousness"? The question presupposes it. Apparently, this question as expressed entails an underlying assumption that crosses the terms of consciousness as understood by the Objectivist. If that’s the case, explain the concept again in the Objectivist’s terms. Apparently, I missed it. I told you before that your insistence on writing voluminous discourses instead of dealing with one issue at a time is nonproductive.

And I'm insulting you?!

I make a simple observation about the materialist’s view of consciousness that is absolutely true and has absolutely nothing to do with any systemic issue beyond itself, and you intentionally misunderstand me, not once but twice, and talk to me like I'm an idiot. Fine. Have it your way. Remember? You're not a liar, just an imbecile.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

freddies,

You write: “I know that you've asserted all kinds of stuff using concepts stolen from the objectivist worldview, torn from their context and repackaged without any real content. I'm just not sure why you think this is a compelling argument for orthodox Judeo-Christianity.”

I have done no such thing. Instead, I have used Objectivist terms in an attempt to relate the Christian view to the Objectivist insofar as the two systems agree. I already told all of you to scrap that approach. It doesn’t work. There’s no stealing. There’s just your slow-slop inability to shift gears.

And the issue you raised was about the construct of perfect divinity! Objectivism certainly does not hold to that! So get back on topic. That’s the issue you raised.

Once again, I already told you that the construct and its inherent imperatives are universally and objectively self-evident to all as immediately apprehended in the axiomatic problem of origin.

And I have shown that as well.

Did you have specific question pertaining to this construct or not?

Unknown said...

Michael, you write, "Did you have [a] specific question pertaining to this construct or not?"

Just so, Michael. lol. Romper room. Dawson asking for a biblical citation showing a mathematic expression of finite divisibility and divine indivisibility in Job. Romper room. Mangling the academic point on materialism. Romper room. I see that the “paranoia” has spread too. Textbook descriptions. I'm out of here, Michael. These guys are nuts. I left a comment under "Labsci and I Discuss Evolution" on your blog. I’d like to follow up on the epistemology with you there if that’s okay.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Ydemoc,

Axiomatic Propositions. . . .

First, let’s drop terms like existence exists or consciousness exists. That’s throwing the black-and-white think crowd off.

We have the existence of the universe and all of its contents, which of course includes the existence of conscious beings. Yes? Can we agree on that?

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

BTW, Dawson, let's get something straight here. I made a comment about photo having his head up someone's crack instead of thinking for himself. That's a pretty common idiom with a pretty common meaning.

It was you who wandered off into the gutter, once again, imagining things that were never there.

Pathetic.

You Objectivists are barking mad.

Justin Hall said...

@Ydemoc

Hey Ydemoc you barking mad objecitivist. Just wanted to let you know that Derik, remember Derik migh be getting back into the game around teh new year. Things just might come back to life over at http://evolutionofskepticism.wordpress.com/

I hope to once again make some new pod casts altho I suspect that Derik will not want to focus on apologetics anymore. It bores him. Anyway take care.. Bark! Bark!

Anonymous said...

Justin,

Great way to advertise.

You can thank me and Mich for life around here.

Later bud.

Ydemoc said...

Hi again, Michael,

Toothache and all, I'm still working on wrapping my head around the whole "analogical-univocal" stuff. And, of course, there are still more questions outstanding from you, which I was going back over and attempting to tackle today. However, in an effort to not have answers owed to you pile up, and to not leave you hanging too much, I thought I would tackle your most recent.

You write: "First, let’s drop terms like existence exists or consciousness exists."

Why? Why would anyone want or need to do such a thing? Why dispense with a philosophical axiom (or axioms) when it not only explicitly names a perceptually self-evident fact, but also meets the the following additional criteria:

-- Its truth is not inferred from prior truths

-- Its truth is conceptually irreducible

-- It's truth is implicit in all perception

-- It's truth is implicit in all knowledge and any statement

-- It's truth must be assumed even in denying it

What would justify jettisoning genuinely axiomatic concepts which provides knowledge with a starting point which is:

-- objective
-- conceptually irreducible
-- perceptually self-evident
-- undeniably true
-- universal (1)

Why do this -- and take it seriously? I suppose one might try to do it as sort of a "thought experiment." But then, that's all it would be: A thought experiment, which -- while doing that very thought experiment -- the axioms and the primacy of existence would obtain, whether one chooses to recognize it or not, i.e., existence exists, consciousness is conscious of something, and if something exists, some *thing* exists (it is what it is and acts according to its nature.)

And it seems clear to me that the degree to which one takes his or her own thought experiment seriously on such matter as this, is the degree to which one's mind strains on the tether that keeps it grounded to reality. Strain far enough, eventually it snaps, and what one ends up with is individuals defending as fact such a conversational donkey, or city strolling corpses; or worse, one ends up flying planes into Twin Towers, or centuries earlier, burning individuals imagined to be witches.

In your writings on this blog, you have indicated that you are well-acquainted with all that I just presented. And it has appeared to me that you vehemently reject most if not all of it -- at least as presented by Objectivism. So I present it again, not in an effort to tell you something which you are unfamiliar with, but to let you know what my thinking is on the matter. Plus, writing it out, re-reading original sources and citing them, helps me in formulating answers to your question(s).

(continued...)

Ydemoc said...

You wrote: "We have the existence of the universe and all of its contents, which of course includes the existence of conscious beings. Yes? Can we agree on that?"

I can agree to this, but certainly *not* as a formula for an axiom, not as the explicit starting point of knowledge, since the concepts you use are derivative, more advanced than what qualifies as axiomatic. Accepting this as some kind of axiom would not satisfy the criteria laid out above.

"'Existence exists' does not specify *what* exists, it is a formula which would cover the first sensation of an infant or the most complex knowledge of a scientist. It applies equally to both. It is only the fact of recognizing: There is something. ...[A] proposition about the nature of what exists is not the same thing as an axiom" (2)


(1) Dawson Bethrick; RazorsKiss on the Christian God as the Basis of Knowledge - Part 2: RK's Axioms; http://bahnsenburner.blogspot.com/2009/08/razorskiss-on-christian-god-as-basis-of_18.html

(2) Ayn Rand: Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology; p. 247, 249

Again, my intention is not to tell you something which you're unfamiliar with, since you have indicated that you are quite familiar with all this. It's just my way of presenting an answer to your question.

But I think the most important thing for me to know from this exchange would be a coherent reply to the inquiry: What would justify wanting or needing to, as you put it, "drop terms like existence exists"?

Thanks.

Ydemoc

Ydemoc said...

Justin,

Thanks for that heads-up!

Ydemoc

Anonymous said...

Michael comes ass-first and farts and shits all over the place. Since it is fun putting the crap back up his ass, here we go again. (Richard will have to close his eyes, since he does not like the spectacle, but I can do little, if Michael did not want to be treated like an ass, he should not behave like an ass).

BTW, Dawson, let's get something straight here. I made a comment about photo having his head up someone's crack instead of thinking for himself. That's a pretty common idiom with a pretty common meaning. It was you who wandered off into the gutter, once again, imagining things that were never there.

Let's us see what "common idiom" looks like in Michael's own words:

I’ll tell you where you’ve been. Like a good sycophant, you’ve been rooting around in Dawson’s poop shoot, getting all confused and dizzy from the fumes.

Does not look a lot like a common idiom at all. It looks also a lot like he went to the gutter. So we can quickly conclude, as if it was not evident anyway, that Michael is full of shit (well, he's an ass-hole, what else could we expect?). This time I hope that you ass had not enough lubrication Mike, and that it is hurting badly. I suspect it is hurting badly actually, given how desperate you are to cover your crap. But adding crap is not precisely a good strategy for that.

As if that was not enough, he produced that after I just commented to Ydemoc my diagnosis of what Michael crap was like. A diagnosis that was opposite to that of Dawson's at the time. So much for me not thinking by myself. Ups! More shit jammed back up Michael's ass.

As if that were not enough, again, when I presented Michael with devastating problems to his bullshit about math infinity to actual infinity to divine infinity, instead of dealing with it he tried to distract me from the issue by asking me to discuss about Peikoff, something he was talking about with Dawson. In other words, he tried to stop me from thinking by myself and represent or defend someone else's arguments. Ups. Yet more shit up your ass Mike. I am not sorry at all.

Of course, when I explained how his argument failed, he had no answers to give. He has been presenting things he has not thought properly about, and thus, if somebody sees an obvious problem, one he never thought about, and presents the problems in clear terms, he has to refuge behind red-herrings and appeals to authority to try and save "cheeks." Poor guy not used to be shown for the imbecile he is, he demands the recognition of his credentials. What a monumental ass-hole you are Michael.

I celebrate that the crap has hurt your "thinking" anus Michael. You have no idea how much fun you provide in your desperation, Thanks for making your pain so evident.

Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...

"Kyle", probably Michael's alter ego, or a "friend" pretending to come with no dogs in this fight provides more entertainment in the form of bullshit. Unfortunately for "him" and Michael, they can't get their act together.

I asked "Kyle": What's a historical observation of theology and philosophy? That there's a mathematical concept of infinity, therefore divine perfection?

"Kyle" replied: Specifically, as it applies to divinity, I know it from the Book of Job, Aristotle’s Metaphysics and my own reflections on the mathematical maxim of division.

See that he cited the book of Job here.

Michael had been babbling around in desperate attempts to avoid confronting the non-sequitur nature f that math to divine crap by flirting with appeals to authority, where he listed "Moses" as one holding to that crap. So with "Kyle"'s priming he continued:

Kyle’s absolutely right. Apparently, he's a serious student of philosophy. That's right, philosophy.

Only to blow it up (fart it?) when he (Michael) confessed: No. The author of Job (Moses, according to Talmudic tradition) does not illustrate the matter with lines or numbers.

The amount of bullshit shovelled back into Michael's and "Kyle"'s asses, all by themselves!

Not content, perhaps wanting more shit back up their asses (perhaps they're out of ammo), "Kyle" comes back and confirms:

Just so, Michael. lol. Romper room. Dawson asking for a biblical citation showing a mathematic expression of finite divisibility and divine indivisibility in Job.

It was you, ass-hole, who said that this math infinity to divine infinity was in the book of Job. You. Not me. Not Dawson. It was you. And it is you who have shovelled all that bullshit back up your own asses. Romper room.

freddies_dead said...

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

freddies,

You write: “I know that you've asserted all kinds of stuff using concepts stolen from the objectivist worldview, torn from their context and repackaged without any real content. I'm just not sure why you think this is a compelling argument for orthodox Judeo-Christianity.”

I have done no such thing.


Of course you have.

Instead, I have used Objectivist terms in an attempt to relate the Christian view to the Objectivist insofar as the two systems agree.

Your attempt failed. Mostly because the two systems fundamentally disagree and you have to mangle the concepts badly in order to try and cram your God in there, but also because you're unable to relate the Christian view while maintaining consistency with one of its core premises - that consciousness holds metaphysical primacy.

I already told all of you to scrap that approach. It doesn’t work. There’s no stealing. There’s just your slow-slop inability to shift gears.

Lol, move along objectivists, there's no inconsistency here for I, the great Michael David Rawlings, so decree it! We know what you've told us Michael, but why should we accept your assertions when you can't even maintain consistency with your own worldview?

And the issue you raised was about the construct of perfect divinity!

The issue is one of consistency, and I used the construct of perfect divinity to demonstrate the problem.

Objectivism certainly does not hold to that! So get back on topic. That’s the issue you raised.

I never went off topic. This red herring isn't fooling anyone.

Once again, I already told you that the construct and its inherent imperatives are universally and objectively self-evident to all as immediately apprehended in the axiomatic problem of origin.

And once again, I do not care about what you've asserted using stolen and mangled concepts when you can't even maintain consistency with the foundations of your own worldview as you make your statements.

And I have shown that as well.

All you've shown is inconsistency.

Did you have specific question pertaining to this construct or not?

I already asked the question, and your answer highlighted the Christian's inability to hold to the primacy of consciousness in any consistent manner. I'm happy with that thanks.

ActionJackson864 said...

Hey everyone, I just came by to "bark mad" at Dawson for not writing a book already. : ] I'm still a frequent reader of the posts and debates here. I continue to appreciate your efforts and wrtings Dawson, and I continue to enjoy watching/ reading Michael reduce himself to a childish debater by calling Objectivists names. looks like things are getting "ruff"...very "ruff ruff" for Michael.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Ydemoc,

But we’ve already established our mutual agreement on the basic axioms in the above. Why are you going back over them? Fine. Put aside the existence of the universal for the moment, and let us review.

1. Existence exists is to say that something exists. Yes?

2. The apprehension that something exists is to acknowledge that consciousness exists. Yes?

3. And the apprehension that something exists apart from oneself is to acknowledge the distinction between self and other (identity). Yes?

These would be the first-level axioms of being.

You asked why one would wish to disregard these axioms “as the explicit starting point of knowledge”.

Indeed, why would one? Certainly I haven’t. LOL!

freddies seems to think that these first-level axioms of being are something profound or unique to Objectivism. That, of course, is false. Silly. They are self-evident, universally recognized by all, as all must necessarily acknowledge them in order to deny they have any actuality. Hence, they are at the base of knowledge. No system of thought has an exclusive claim on them.

Also, all systems of thought bottomed on realism accept them to be true, i.e., actually existent or real. Hence, Objectivism does not have an exclusive claim on that conviction either and never has.

Long before Rand came along, indeed, since the beginning of history, these three principles of being were held to be axiomatic/true. Rand’s enumeration of these fundamentals is nothing new.

The reason I dispensed with the attempt to establish a mutual ground of agreement between Judeo-Christianity and Objectivism goes to the conflict that arises after this “starting point of knowledge” , not before.

Now, in the Socratic tradition of assuming to know nothing more at this point in the discourse, do you or do you not understand that what I’ve said in the above is necessarily true, objectively and historically?

freddies_dead said...

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

freddies seems to think that these first-level axioms of being are something profound or unique to Objectivism.

And where exactly did I make this alleged claim? Answer: nowhere. Indeed, all I've been doing is demonstrating that you cannot maintain consistency with your professed worldview. True to form though, instead of responding to the criticism, you throw out some red herrings and resort to insults like an indignant little child.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

photo,

You write: "Only to blow it up (fart it?) when he (Michael) confessed: 'No. The author of Job (Moses, according to Talmudic tradition) does not illustrate the matter with lines or numbers.' "

Right. Because the mathematical distinction between the divisibility and mutability of the finite and the indivisibility and immutability of the infinite is not expressed analogously in terms of lines or numbers in Job as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics, and neither Kyle nor I ever said it was.

Are you insinuating that the argument in Job does express it in such analogous terms? If so, would you please cite the pertinent passages that show this?

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

freddies,

I wrote: "freddies seems to think that these first-level axioms of being are something profound or unique to Objectivism."

You write: "And where exactly did I make this alleged claim? Answer: nowhere."

That's the impression I got when you said something about stealing ideas from Objectivism. I thought you were talking about the fundamental axioms of being. Apparently you were talking about something else altogether and I just misunderstood you. That's all. No reason to get upset. If you were talking about something else, fine. That's good.

"They are self-evident, universally recognized by all, as all must necessarily acknowledge them in order to deny they have any actuality. Hence, they are at the base of knowledge. No system of thought has an exclusive claim on them" (Michael).

So we would agree on this much at least, right?

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Ydemoc,

You write: "But I think the most important thing for me to know from this exchange would be a coherent reply to the inquiry: What would justify wanting or needing to, as you put it, 'drop terms like existence exists'?

There is no reason to drop them, unless they’re causing confusion. They were previously established, and we both agree on them, do we not? That's all. I don't recall you ever saying that I was stealing ideas from Objectivism, so I assumed you understood that the fundamental axioms of being are universally and objectivity recognized by all, not profound or unique to Objectivism. My point is that we can move on to the next level of apprehension.

Beyond that, I thought freedies and others were talking about the fundamental principles of being in regard to the allegation that I was stealing ideas from Objectivism, but apparently freedies was talking about something else. He just cleared that up. That’s good. Though I must confess, now that I know he wasn’t talking about the fundamental principles of being, I have no idea what he thinks I’m stealing. Do you?

: )

Also, it appears that photo and I have been missing each other as well. Apparently he thought that either Kyle or I had claimed that the mathematical axiom of the divisibility and mutability of the finite, and the indivisibility and immutability of the infinite is expressed analogously in terms of a line or numbers in Job as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics. I know I never said that. I don’t think Kyle did either. Perhaps photo remembers something from his reading of Job that would show otherwise, and that’s the contradiction he’s alluding to. I must confess that due to my limited knowledge about the inner workings of photo’s mind, I’m not sure which of these two mistakes he thinks we’ve made. He seems to be saying that either (1) we did claim it to be expressed analogously in terms of a line or numbers in Job or (2) that it is in fact thusly expressed that way in Job and we simply misremembered it as being expressed rhetorically sans such an analogy.

I’m sure, now that we have sorted out the core of the problem, photo will either show where Kyle or I stated that it was thusly expressed or he will show in Job where it is thusly expressed.

That should clear things up.

: )

I think we might be making some progress. What do you say?

Ydemoc said...

Hi again, Michael,

Thanks for your reply. Although I'm working on a response to your latest comments to me, I just wanted to let you know that addressing the bulk of it may not come as quickly as my last reply to you did.

In the meantime, would you mind clarifying what you meant when you wrote: "Put aside the existence of the universal for the moment..."

Thanks.

Ydemoc



Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

We'll come back it (the universe). Let's be clear on the first principles of being.

Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...

Michael,

Also, it appears that photo and I have been missing each other as well.

Oh no. I've got you exactly. You are an ass-hole and proud of it.

photo will either show where Kyle or I stated that it was thusly expressed or he will show in Job where it is thusly expressed.

Right. Now for the "I did not mean that" routine as played by that di-nity of Michael and "Kyle." Sure Michael. Because you had no intention to deceive. You only wanted to make an appeal to authority. No worries. I understand.

Now please go fuck yourself. That should clear your "things" up.

: )

Anonymous said...

And photo continues his indecent behavior.

Bahnsen Burner said...

I’m very busy this week, so I cannot post a lot of comments at this time. But I wanted to give some of my thoughts on an issue that Michael spoke on.

Regarding the book of Job, it’s unclear what philosophical principles in regard to infinity that the mysterious Kyle was intimating that he learned from this source.

Here’s what was stated:

Photosynthesis wrote: “What's a historical observation of theology and philosophy? That there's a mathematical concept of infinity, therefore divine perfection?”

“Kyle Jamison” responded: “Specifically, as it applies to divinity, I know it from the Book of Job, Aristotle’s Metaphysics and my own reflections on the mathematical maxim of division.”

The question is what the pronoun “it” (in “as it applies to divinity” and “I know it”) refers to. While “Kyle’s” statement is somewhat (perhaps safely) vague, the best implication given photo’s question and “Kyle’s” answer leading with this sentence seems to be that “it” here refers to the “mathematical concept of infinity.”

This inference regarding the intended antecedent of “it” in this sentence is further buttressed by the syntactical cleft (i.e., foreground information vs. background information) between “it” on the one hand and “divinity” on the other, which is present in photo’s question (namely “That there’s a mathematical concept of infinity, therefore divine perfection?”). Thus, when “Kyle” responds to photo’s question by immediately saying “as it applies to divine perfection,” the implication that “it” refers to the “mathematical concept of infinity” is naturally inferred. Perhaps “Kyle” did not intend this. If not, what did he intend the antecedent of “it” to be here? What else could it be?

Of course, if ‘perhaps’ is the mode holding primacy over the inferences from Kyle’s statement available to us, we might also infer perhaps that he wasn’t really sure what he was trying to say and simply wanted for some reason to work in a reference to “the Book of Job,” which he curiously lists first, into his reply to photo’s question. Really, what did the mysterious “Kyle” mean to say here? What exactly was he attributing to “the Book of Job”? It is up to “him” to explain this.

Thus I submit: If there’s lack of clarity in this sidebar controversy, it originates in “Kyle’s” comment, not only in its lack of specificity, but also in the choice of sources which he cites given the question he was responding to.

Regards
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

I will respond to Michael on this topic as well, if only to emphasize a good point that photo has already made:

Michael writes: “BTW, Dawson, let's get something straight here. I made a comment about photo having his head up someone's crack instead of thinking for himself. That's a pretty common idiom with a pretty common meaning.”

Photo’s reply to this is sufficient as it is to answer Michael. But photo did make a germane point to Michael’s would-be criticism when he stated:

<< As if that was not enough, he [Michael] produced that after I just commented to Ydemoc my diagnosis of what Michael crap was like. A diagnosis that was opposite to that of Dawson's at the time. >>

This is an excellent point. Early on, not long after my discussion with Michael started, photo chimed in to announce that Michael was an asshole. I responded to this, saying (arguably prematurely on my part):

<< Michael does not strike me as either a snob or an asshole. Far from it. In fact, he seems quite level-headed to me and willing to have a two-way conversation on these matters. That's rare in my experience. >>

At the time, this seemed to be the case, at least through the filter of my exceptionally generous initial charitableness. Of course, Michael has outrun my charitableness with his temper tantrums, insulting language and horrendously bad attitude.

But it should be clear that photo was not “rooting around” in my “poop shoot” (chute?), intoxicating himself on my “fumes,” as Michael’s ostensively common “idiom” would have it. I don’t think there’s any question that photo likely disagrees with certain aspects of my position. He’s certainly not a thinker dependent on my say so, and neither is anyone else around here. I’m not some Charlie Manson with some kind of charismatic power over others. If Michael wants to suggest otherwise, he needs to produce legitimate, relevant evidence. But on what basis could he bring objection to such a view given his worldview’s cultish enshrinement (to put it very mildly) of a personality which is alleged to have walked the earth some two thousand years ago? Blank out.

Again, what exactly is the problem here?

Regards,
Dawson

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Ydemoc,

I did, however, carefully go over Kyle's statements, and I see that he did not state that the mathematical axiom of the divisibility and mutability of the finite, and the indivisibility and immutability of the infinite is expressed analogously in terms of a line or numbers in Job as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics.

Now, I know I never stated any such thing, much less thought such a thing.

So either photo is implying that it is stated analogously in terms of a line or numbers in Job, or he's talking about something else.

Here's what we got from him by way of an explanation:

Right. Now for the "I did not mean that" routine as played by that di-nity of Michael and "Kyle." Sure Michael. Because you had no intention to deceive. You only wanted to make an appeal to authority. No worries. I understand.

Now please go fuck yourself. That should clear your "things" up.


Well, see, this is a problem. This really doesn’t clear anything up. Things are now more confused than before. I clearly stated, more than once, that the mathematical axiom of the divisibility and mutability of the finite, and the indivisibility and immutability of the infinite is expressed out right in Job in a formal philosophical dialogue, not analogously in terms of a line or numbers as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics. But photo implies, I think, that this constitutes the “intention to deceive.”

Further, I pointed out that a Creator that resides outside and independently of the space-continuum that He created would quite obviously not be a Being Who was divisible or mutable like His finite creation; rather, He would be a being of infinite power and prescience and genius Who could divisibly reduce the finite back down to the nothing out of which he originally created it. That is not rocket science. That is not hard to understand.

So what are we to conclude from this?

Well, apparently, photo believes that it is stated analogously in terms of a line or numbers in Job as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics. Well, I must say, I’m not aware of any such thing, and I’ve read Job several times in my life, at least seven or eight times and once again last night. It would be helpful if photo were to cite the passages that show this. That way I may be corrected and we can move on . . . assuming of course that what he’s implying is true.

It’s either that or he’s talking about something completely different. He does mention something about “an appeal to authority.” He says, “No worries.” He indicates that he understands.

Well, I don’t. I really don’t understand what he’s talking about.

But he does think it’s a good idea for me to go &^*@ myself. Actually, I was thinking that a better idea would be for him to coherently explain himself.

Do you know what photo is talking about, Ydemoc?

I don‘t. I truly don‘t. I truly have no knowledge that the matter is stated in Job the way photo seems to be implying. I read Job again last night, and once again, I did not see what photo seems to be implying.

I don’t see how I can defend my integrity against a negative. I have no idea why my integrity is being attacked over this. Do you, Ydemoc?

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson,

Dear Lord! Does everything have to be spelled out to you in black-and-white? The common expression “get your head out of your ass” or “get your head out of the clouds” or my variation thereof has to be spelled to you?!

Tiresome!

I made that statement in response to statements made by photo wherein he essentially repeated the very same arguments made by YOU, arguments that had already been addressed by me. Indeed, he repeated the very same objections based on the very same misstatements of my arguments as those first uttered by YOU. And at no point did he put my actual arguments into evidence.

It’s as simple as that. In that instance, I was not implying that photo agrees with you 100%. Beyond that, I have no idea what’s going on in his head in regard to your other arguments as he expresses an original thought of coherency at the rate of “once in a blue moon.”

And, finally, once again, it was not I who dragged that expression into the gutter. Your filth never occurred to me.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson,

You asked, "What's the problem here?"

Well one of the problems is this ongoing nonsense about Kyle and me. I've already told you that Kyle and I are not the same person. You know as much about him as I.

That is tiresome.

As for Kyle's statement in response to photo's question, what's the point? Kyle's gone. He thinks you guys are nuts. He and I are discussing Judeo-Christianity's epistemology on my blog now. Apparently, that's all he was interested in. Further, as one who is also familiar with the centuries-old, historical observation made by dozens of the inspired authors of the Bible, secular philosophers and theologians, I explained to photo the manner in which the mathematical axiom as applied to divine perfection is expressed in Job, MORE THAN ONCE!

HOW MANY TIMES DOES IT TAKE?

The mathematical axiom of the divisibility and mutability of the finite as opposed to the indivisibility and immutability of infinite perfection is not expressed analogously in terms of a line in Job as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics. For that matter, Augustine, Aquinas, Calvin, Descartes, Locke and Berkeley, for examples, do not express the matter in the analogous terms employed by Aristotle either! In all of these other instances its argued rhetorically within the framework of the comprehensive expression of the principle of identity.

No one on this blog ever implied or said it was argued in Job in the Aristotelian fashion . . . except for photo!

Hence, the only sense I can make out of photo’s allegation of deceit is that he’s implying that in fact it is expressed that way in Job. Well, then, why doesn’t he simply cite this from scripture so that we can move on?

What’s the problem?

Dear Lord!

Kyle doesn’t need to explain anything. I don’t need to explain anything more. It is photo who owes us all an explanation, and telling me to go @$%^& myself is not helpful. Moreover, when I offered to explain the matter to him via the Socratic method of dialogue in order that we tackle one aspect of the logic at a time, to build a hierarchy of understanding from first principles to the abstraction, he told me, in effect, to go *&^%$ myself in that instance too. This after claiming that he didn’t understand it and was asking me to explain it.

What’s the problem?

And apparently he’s mistaking the mere academic observation regarding the historicity of this construct in the corpus of theological and philosophic thought for the logical fallacy of appeal to authority, which, of course, has absolutely nothing to do with any such fallacy in any way, shape or form. And in one of your posts you clearly encourage his claptrap along this line.

What’s the problem?

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson,

In conclusion. . . .

Photosynthesis wrote: “What's a historical observation of theology and philosophy? That there's a mathematical concept of infinity, therefore divine perfection?”

“Kyle Jamison” responded: “Specifically, as it applies to divinity, I know it from the Book of Job, Aristotle’s Metaphysics and my own reflections on the mathematical maxim of division.”


Yes. The antecedent of “it” in Kyle’s response per photo’s question logically goes to “a mathematical concept of infinity”. I think that’s precisely what Kyle intended, and I don’t see a problem. Where are you getting a problem out of this?

photo’s first question goes to the historicity of the construct in theology and philosophy (Or does it? as he seems to be confusing this academic observation with a logical fallacy.). Hence, clearly, Kyle is talking about the mathematical axiom of infinity as it applies to divine perfection in the corpus of theological and philosophical thought, utterly unaware of photo‘s apparent confusion over the nature of the logical fallacy of the appeal to authority.

What’s the problem?!

Where does Kyle state that this construct is analogously expressed in the Aristotelian fashion in Job . . . or anywhere else in the historical corpus of this construct for that matter?

Are you seeing something I’m not, Dawson? Hmm?

So, photo is either claiming (1) that Kyle is saying that the matter is expressed in the Aristotelian fashion in Job, or (2) photo himself is claiming that the matter is expressed in the Aristotelian fashion in Job. Hence, the supposed inconsistency.

1. Clearly, Kyle made no such claim. Hence, if this is what photo has in mind, he’s obviously reading something into Kyle’s statement that is not there!

2. If photo is claiming that the matter is expressed in the Aristotelian fashion in Job, the charge of deceit goes to me, as I’m the only one who went on to explain in no uncertain terms that it is not expressed that way in Job.

Therefore, it is photo’s responsibility to explain himself to us. It is his responsibility to explain how he extrapolated the non-existent claim attributed to Kyle or to provide scriptural citation(s) showing that I’m wrong about the fashion in which the matter is expressed in Job.

So far the only truly coherent utterance we’ve gotten out of him on this matter is “go %$#& yourself.”

No. What we have here is photo apparently (1) confounding the logical fallacy of appeal to authority with a mere academic observation about the historicity of something, (2) imagining something that doesn’t exist and/or (3) claiming to know something about Job for which he has provided no evidence.

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael,

You wrote: “The common expression ‘get your head out of your ass’ or ‘get your head out of the clouds’ or my variation thereof has to be spelled to you?!”

You’re confusing two things in all this: 1) whether or not I understood one of your comments as a “variation” on an “common idiom,” and 2) whether it was you or (somehow?) I who dragged the discussion into the gutter. I suspect you’re confusing the first with the second so as to distort the second.

As far as 1) is concerned, what you meant with your uncalled for and unnecessarily graphic “poop shoot” reference was clear enough.

As for 2), all credit goes to you in bringing gutter talk into this discussion. There is no reasonable way you can pin that on me. Early on I called for keeping the tone of the discussion friendly. Things were going fairly well until 25-26 Nov. when your dam burst and you unloaded your double-barrels full of foul-mouthed language, with references to pants pulled down to one’s ankles, his backside exposed, and “rooting around” in someone’s “poop shoot.” Your juvenile behavior has continued as you lace your comments with insulting language, peppering your statements with “imbecile,” “whore,” “snake,” “liar,” “idiot,” etc., more than I care to remember.

All this was YOU, Michael. All this was YOUR doing. I did not do this. You did it. You suffered the meltdown, and it was you chose not to contain your ‘tongue’ in all this. You need to take ownership of your actions, Michael David Rawlings, and stop trying to pin the blame of your actions on others. That’s just transparent evasion right there.

None of this behavior on your part is called for in a civil discussion between adults. If you cannot handle the course of the discussion emotionally, then that should be enough to tell everyone, including yourself, that there’s something wrong.

You run a blog of your own. Do you allow people to post comments using the kind of foul-mouthed language you have used here?

Again, given your frequent temper tantrums and emotional outbursts coupled with your persisting failure to make any solid points on behalf of vindicating Christianity from criticism, I can only wonder what exactly it is you think you’re trying to accomplish here. Thanks to your own indiscretions, your “credentials” have proven to be a fleeting vapor, and your ability to listen and understand an opposing view is seriously defective. Things need to be explained to you multiple times, and you continue to come back flailing away at caricature of what has been explained. This pattern is consistent enough for me to suspect that you have deep personal issues which are way beyond my reach. So I don’t know why you continue coming back here with your miserably bad attitude. What are you trying to accomplish? At least Rick Warden had enough sense to move on. You say that “Kyle's gone. He thinks you guys are nuts.” People move on for a variety of reasons. I don’t know why Kyle moved on, or even that he did; nothing’s stopping him from coming back if he wants to. But if people normally move on when they think the others in attendance are “nuts,” then we could infer that you do NOT think we are nuts here, since you keep coming back. And yet, you continue to berate us with insulting language, “imbecile,” “stupid,” and the such.

You have some real issues to work out for yourself, Michael.

I’m glad these aren’t my problems!

Regards,
Dawson

Anonymous said...

Michael,

The levels you fell in your last comment are so incredibly filled with nonsense, that should I describe them properly, Richard would never speak to me again, Dawson's blog would carry a warning before entering it saying "not proper for anybody less than 21 years old," and my own brain would hurt in trying to do such a description.

All I can say is that you truly have issues. Awful issues. That you have shown in your latest comment incredible disrespect for yourself and for those who might consider themselves your friends (you think that they are either idiots, dishonest, or both). That enough explanations have been provided to you, yet you go to the most amazing displays of stupidity. Maybe you are just going from modus defecatus into modus trollus defecatus. I doubt it though, but I do not see any reason to continue talking to you. The level of stupidity in that comment is enough to convince even the most casual reader that the probability that you pronounced a single sensible argument is zero. Nothing else to do.

Before you mistake me again with Dawson, remember it was me who returned your crap back to you. Oftentimes with your help and that of "Kyle." But, again, any foul language directed at you, that you might pretend to blame on Dawson, was me.

Bahnsen Burner said...

Regarding the presence or absence of “the mathematical concept of infinity” in “the Book of Job,” Michael wrote:

<< as one who is also familiar with the centuries-old, historical observation made by dozens of the inspired authors of the Bible, secular philosophers and theologians, I explained to photo the manner in which the mathematical axiom as applied to divine perfection is expressed in Job, MORE THAN ONCE! >>

Perhaps you have, but I must say, whatever you’ve given on this, has not impressed me as much of an explanation. You don’t even cite any passage from “the Book of Job.” You just say that what you tell us is in there without connecting what you tell us to any specific passage in “the Book of Job.”

You say: “The mathematical axiom of the divisibility and mutability of the finite as opposed to the indivisibility and immutability of infinite perfection is not expressed analogously in terms of a line in Job as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics.”

Okay, so you tell us how “the mathematical axiom” you cite is not presented in Job.

You then say: “In all of these other instances [which I’m supposing includes “the Book of Job”] its argued rhetorically within the framework of the comprehensive expression of the principle of identity.”

Okay, so what exactly is Job’s “argument,” and in what specific passages can it be found? How exactly does it relate to “the mathematical concept of infinity”? I haven’t read “the Book of Job” in years, so help me out here.

In response to the statement by “Kyle Jamison” which reads: “Specifically, as it applies to divinity, I know it from the Book of Job, Aristotle’s Metaphysics and my own reflections on the mathematical maxim of division.”

Michael wrote: “Yes. The antecedent of ‘it’ in Kyle’s response per photo’s question logically goes to ‘a mathematical concept of infinity’. I think that’s precisely what Kyle intended, and I don’t see a problem. Where are you getting a problem out of this?”

Well, first of all, I did not explain why we inferred that “Kyle” was referring to the “mathematical concept of infinity” in “the Book of Job” in order to raise a problem. My main purpose here was to explain *why* we were inferring that this is what he meant.

My question is: what specifically can we learn about the “mathematical concept of infinity” from “the Book of Job.” This is not an invitation for more eisegetical bluster, but for actual citations to the text in question which speak to the concept which “Kyle” said he learned from that text.

I don’t see why asking this is such a problem, but apparently it is. After all, according to you, Michael, “Kyle’s gone” and, per your statement, he thinks we’re “nuts.”

You asked: “Where does Kyle state that this construct is analogously expressed in the Aristotelian fashion in Job . . . or anywhere else in the historical corpus of this construct for that matter?”

I don’t think “Kyle” said it is. I’m not asking about what “Kyle” didn’t say. I’m asking about what “Kyle” did say. He indicated that he learned about the “mathematical concept of infinity” from “the Book of Job.” I’m simply asking for specific references.

What’s the problem in this?

[continued…]

Bahnsen Burner said...

As for your appeals to authority, photo my have differing or additional reasons, but I would say they are there, albeit implicit, given not only your numerous, curiously strange efforts early on in this discussion to proclaim yourself as a credential-bearing authority on whatever matters you are presumably supposed to be held as an authority, but also your penchant for dropping big names in the history of philosophy in contexts which suggest they all unanimously agree with whatever point you’re trying to make and/or unanimously disagree with whatever position Objectivism affirms, and consistently without citation, as though merely dropping the name were sufficient. At one point you even tried to make the rash inference that I think Aristotle was a “buffoon” (your word), when in fact I had never made any such suggestion. Yes, you deny that you’ve committed any fallacy here. Fine, Michael. Whatever. I’m not going to bicker about this. All I’m doing is pointing generally to the reasons why some have suspected you of this error. It seems habitual with you since you very commonly attribute a specific position to a known thinker without citing any supporting reference. And it seems that “Kyle” has this same habit, since we’re still wondering what specifically can be learned from “the Book of Job” about the “mathematical concept of infinity.”

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

Photo wrote: “Before you mistake me again with Dawson, remember it was me who returned your crap back to you. Oftentimes with your help and that of ‘Kyle’. But, again, any foul language directed at you, that you might pretend to blame on Dawson, was me.”

Michael,

We can very sensibly say that all photo was doing, was answering a fool according to his folly. Surely you don’t see anything wrong with that, do you?

Regards,
Dawson

Anonymous said...

Dawson,

You are way too charitable, way too patient, and way too forgiving.

It's just amazing. I mean it in a good way.

Best Regards!

Bahnsen Burner said...

No prob, photo. As I have pointed out before, the Christians are the entertainment. Kindly hand them the rope, and they'll do all the hanging by themselves. It works like a charm.

Regards,
Dawson

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Richard,

Now you can open your eyes. I am done. Close them thought, as a precaution, whenever Michael starts writing ... oh, my mistake, you already close your eyes when he writes since you have complained about my language, but not about Michael's.

I have to say that I admire that you have withhold your usual self today, which is a huge advance. (I wonder if you will show that you learned anything next time around, but today I am proud of you.)

Good night.

Anonymous said...

Photo,

looks like you learned too.

Good Job.

Why do you want me to ask Michael to quit calling you an Idiot?

I think it's funny.

But since you were good today I guess I can put in a word for you.


Michael, photo doesn't like being called an idiot. Do you think you can just call him stupid instead?


Thanks.

Ydemoc said...

Hi again, Michael,

First, let me say that it *seems to me* that you are using me to address or get points across to some of the other folks on this blog. If so, that’s cool. I don’t mind. Do it to your delight.

If I’m mistaken about this and you are not, in fact, (to one degree or another) doing this, my bad. However, you might still keep in mind that, lately, I have been focused more on *our* exchanges and haven’t completely gotten my head into your exchanges with others. Sure, I’ve picked up bits and pieces here and there, but I haven’t been as focused as I could (or probably should be) on the through-lines you’re having with them -- at least not enough to offer an informed opinion on your inquiries vis-à-vis what other posters have said, (except, perhaps, in selective instances). This might not be such a bad thing -- for me. I mean, heck, I have enough questions piling up from you as it is!

Anyway, sorry for the delay in responding. Let me begin by answering questions you posed at the end of each of your replies. Recall that a few days back, you wrote:

“Now, in the Socratic tradition of assuming to know nothing more at this point in the discourse, do you or do you not understand that what I’ve said in the above is necessarily true, objectively and historically?”

And then, in a comment following that one, you wrote:

“I think we might be making some progress. What do you say?”

Unfortunately, by my read of things up to this point, I cannot agree to either of these. Here are some reasons why:

REASON 1: You state: “But we’ve already established our mutual agreement on the basic axioms in the above.”

Maybe I missed something somewhere, or maybe I mistakenly led you to believe that something was the case when it wasn’t, but I don’t recall anyone having “established our mutual agreement on the basic axioms in the above” -- and certainly not given the way you’ve attempted to formulate these axioms.

And, notwithstanding that you have championed such notions as “construct of divine perfection,” “eternally existent now,” “pure consciousness,” “a Being Who resides outside and independently of the space-time continuum and is the ultimate ground and origin of all existence,” etc. -- all of which are clearly antithetical to the Objectivist axioms -- even if I were to ignore all this, as you seem to be asking me to do, I still would be unable to reach any kind of “mutual agreement” with you on these matters, again, given that what you have put forth as axioms are not as Objectivism formulates them.

I would argue that this would be enough at this point to say that there has been no meeting of the minds on this particular matter. (However, the good news is, the same may not hold true pertaining our mutual fondness for the music of Bob Dylan! Yes, I took a gander at your profile.) But let me proceed with some other problem areas I have...

REASON 2: Nowhere in your formulations did I see on your part any mention of or agreement with either of the following:



a) When Rand speaks of existence existing independent of consciousness (i.e., the primacy of existence), she states explicitly that existence exists independent of *any* consciousness. She writes: “The rejection of these axioms represents a reversal: the primacy of consciousness—the notion that the universe has no independent existence, that it is the product of a consciousness (either human or divine or both). The epistemological corollary is the notion that man gains knowledge of reality by looking inward (either at his own consciousness or at the revelations it receives from another, superior consciousness).“ [“The Metaphysical Versus the Man-Made,” Philosophy: Who Needs It, p. 24]



b) “Existence and identity are not attributes of existents, they are the existents. . . . The units of the concepts “existence” and “identity” are every entity, attribute, action, event or phenomenon (including consciousness) that exists, **has ever existed or will ever exist.**”

(continued...)

Ydemoc said...

I’m sure you’re familiar with all this, but I present them merely as a way of underscoring why it is that I am unable to agree with your axioms as formulated.

REASON 3: You had stated last week, on December 15: “First, let’s drop terms like existence exists or consciousness exists. That’s throwing the black-and-white think crowd off.”

I responded: “Why? Why would anyone want or need to do such a thing?...”

You responded: “Indeed, why would one? Certainly I haven’t. LOL!”

I had also written: “What would justify jettisoning genuinely axiomatic concepts which provides knowledge with a starting point which is:

-- objective
-- conceptually irreducible
-- perceptually self-evident
-- undeniably true
-- universal (1) [Dawson Bethrick; RazorsKiss on the Christian God as the Basis of Knowledge - Part 2: RK's Axioms; http://bahnsenburner.blogspot.com/2009/08/razorskiss-on-christian-god-as-basis-of_18.html]

I also wrote: “But I think the most important thing for me to know from this exchange would be a coherent reply to the inquiry: What would justify wanting or needing to, as you put it, "drop terms like existence exists"?

To which you responded: “There is no reason to drop them, unless they’re causing confusion. They were previously established, and we both agree on them, do we not?”

Your replies come across *to me* as inconsistent. Hence, I cannot assent to a meeting of the minds.

(continued...)

Ydemoc said...

EASON 4: This is kind of a side issue for me, but you write: “Long before Rand came along, indeed, since the beginning of history, these three principles of being were held to be axiomatic/true. Rand’s enumeration of these fundamentals is nothing new.”

I’m not going to quibble too much over this. However, since you seem well-informed, and have all kinds of credentials and all that stuff, I will ask: Can you name anyone in philosophy who put forth the idea that “Existence is Identity, Consciousness is Identification” in precisely that fashion? Can you also name anyone who presents a theory of concepts in the fashion that Rand has, i.e., involving measurement omission?

Whatever the case may be, the fundamental issue here, it seems to me, is not whether Objectivism is old or new, but whether or not, as formulated, it is in accordance with the facts of reality.

Furthermore, if what you say is true, that “...the fundamental axioms of being are universally and objectivity recognized by all, not profound or unique to Objectivism,” then why not use them as formulated by Objectivism?

I think this all goes to underscore why there cannot be any meeting of the minds between us at this point. (But we always have tomorrow!)

REASON 5: You write: “The reason I dispensed with the attempt to establish a mutual ground of agreement between Judeo-Christianity and Objectivism goes to the conflict that arises after this ‘starting point of knowledge,’ not before.”

I’ve run out of gas a little. But let me ask: I thought, according to Christianity, i.e., Proverbs 1:7, that “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge”? Is this the starting point of knowledge of which you speak on behalf of Christianity?

Let me reserve any answer until I receive a little more clarification from you on this one. (It’s probably as clear as day to you, but right now I’m a little burnt out and I don’t want to presume something which might lead to a tangent).

One final note: I spent way too much time with this than I probably should have. And there probably several points which I probably didn't address. But hopefully, anything I missed can be cleared up or clarified in subsequent exchanges.

Thanks.

Ydemoc

Anonymous said...

Mich,

don't expect to get anywhere with Ydemoc.

He will keep asking the same stuff over and over.

Kinda makes you wanna slapem.

Ydemoc said...

NOTE: I failed to provide proper citation for (b) above. Here it is:

“Axiomatic Concepts,”
Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology, p. 56

Ydemoc

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson writes, "You suffered the meltdown, and it was you chose not to contain your ‘tongue’ in all this."

No. There was no meltdown on my part. You see, Dawson, I called you a liar and an imbecile . . . because you are a liar and an imbecile. You're confused.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Michael: “The mathematical axiom of the divisibility and mutability of the finite as opposed to the indivisibility and immutability of infinite perfection is not expressed analogously in terms of a line in Job as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics.”

Dawson: "Okay, so you tell us how 'the mathematical axiom' you cite is not presented in Job."


You need to rephrase your question. It doesn't follow. It's nonsensical.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

photo is clearly a liar and an imbecile too.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Ydemoc,

I didn't ask you about any of the things you're going on about.

Focus.

To say existence exists is to say something exists.

Yes?

To apprehend that something exists is to acknowledge that consciousness exists.

Yes?

And to apprehend that something exists apart from oneself is to acknowledge the principle of identity.

Yes?

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson,

I'm still trying to get to the bottom of something. The following question presupposes the existence of consciousness.

According to Objectivism what is human consciousness and what is it composed of?

Science appears to tell us that at the very least it is predicated on the physiological structure of the central nervous system and the biochemical interactions therein.

Would Objectivism agree that this is the perceptible organizational foundation of human consciousness or not?

If not, why not?

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

[Richard: you better turn your eyes away.]

photo is clearly a liar and an imbecile too.

Said Michael, the very same guy who I told to go fuck himself and went all the way and fucked his own brains off himself. It was an awful spectacle Michael to see what was left of your brain all over the place mixed with your own shit. You should have thought of letting go of some of that shit hat you had reinserted back up your ass before fucking yourself. The pressure was too much, the shit entered your cranial cavities, and there goes what little was left of that brain. Too late now. We should not be surprised at the outcome. Michael was too much of an ass-hole to begin with.

Said Michael, the very same guy who, when confronted with faults in his arguments tries to back them up with big names, fictitious or otherwise, then pretends that those were not appeals to authority, then tries red-herrings.

Said Michael, the very same guy who manages to contradict himself and display his stupidity and lack of cognitive skills by mixing and matching badly remembered sentences and referrals because he can't even think of using the search feature of his web browser. Why bother? He would still be unable to manage more than one sentence at a time.

Said Michael, the very same guy who rather plays modus trollus defecatus once he has been shown to be too stupid to manage his pretended credentials. The very same imbecile who takes pride for thinking with his ass. The very same who rather deviates the conversation from the fact that he can't answers challenges to arguments he just accepted out of utter stupidity. The one who can't follow any conversation enough to distinguish something that was called a non-sequitur from something else that was called an appeal to authority. Poor Michael the ass-hole.

Mike, I would tell you to go fuck yourself again, but seems like you loved it. Your brain loss notwithstanding.

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Did I mention that photo is barking mad too?

Anonymous said...

Did I mention that photo is barking mad too?

Your shit and little brains all over the place and still you want more Michael? Take it and refill your bowels with it yourself. Nobody will stop you. Oh, sorry, that's exactly what you're doing. Sorry for interrupting. Keep at it. I will just get out of the way.

Anonymous said...

Richard,

Now you can open your eyes. If you did not close them then it's your fault. You were warned. I did not want to give Michael any more of his shit back. But he insisted and insisted. I even had covered the mess Michael had made with a sheet. But he really wanted me to mention it. Apparently he enjoys being shown for what he is.

See ya much later.

Anonymous said...

Photo,

You were good yesterday what happened?

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael wrote: “The mathematical axiom of the divisibility and mutability of the finite as opposed to the indivisibility and immutability of infinite perfection is not expressed analogously in terms of a line in Job as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics.”

I responded: "Okay, so you tell us how 'the mathematical axiom' you cite is not presented in Job."

Michael: “You need to rephrase your question. It doesn't follow. It's nonsensical.”

This was not a question, Michael. Read again. Try to understand this time. Focus.

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael: “According to Objectivism what is human consciousness and what is it composed of?”

Is this a philosophical, or a scientific question? If it is a philosophical question, I can only say that the question denies the axiom of consciousness. The axiom of consciousness holds that, philosophically, consciousness is irreducible. So as a philosophical question, it is nonsensical since, as I pointed out before, it denies the axiom of consciousness.

If it is a scientific question, you need to discuss it with a scientist, preferably one whose worldview is grounded in reality as opposed to mystical fantasies. I am not a scientist. A good scientist is likely going to require you to rephrase your question so that it makes sense given the specialties of his knowledge on the matter.

Michael: “Science appears to tell us that at the very least it is predicated on the physiological structure of the central nervous system and the biochemical interactions therein.”

Objectivism holds that consciousness is dependent on biological structures; of course, it holds that consciousness is biological in nature to begin with. But this is not the same thing that it is “composed of” or “reduces to” something that it is not.

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael: “No. There was no meltdown on my part. You see, Dawson, I called you a liar and an imbecile . . . because you are a liar and an imbecile. You're confused.”

Michael also wrote: “photo is clearly a liar and an imbecile too.”

A bit later, Michael wrote: “Did I mention that photo is barking mad too?”

Michael,

Your meltdowns are on record for all to see. When you have actual arguments and facts to back up your asseverations and characterizations, you are welcome to come back to me. If name-calling and bad attitude are all you have, I cannot help you.

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

A week ago, on 11 Dec., I wrote in this thread: “I'm predicting right here and now that Michael will never uncover a theory of concepts anywhere in the pages of the bible, particularly without his especially gratuitous penchant for eisegesis.”

Since then, Michael has found plenty of opportunity to call people stupid, imbecile, idiot, “barking mad,” liar, etc. But for reasons he does not give, he has not explained what we can learn from the bible about the nature of concepts and the method by which we form them. Michael assured us some time ago – with his characteristic “LOL!” – that Christian does have its own theory of concepts. But he has not even told us how Christianity defines the concept ‘concept’, let alone show how such knowledge is tied to anything we can learn from the bible without high doses of eisegesis. Michael has not given us a demonstration of how, on the elusive “Christian theory of concepts,” we can form the concept ‘length’.

So far, my prediction is coming true.

Regards,
Dawson

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

You seem to have forgotten what we’re talking about here.

You asked me to explain the particulars in the following paragraph:

From there we may see that a hierarchy of true knowledge is built on the rational apprehensions of axiomatic propositions and the empirical impressions of sensory perception as processed, assimilated and integrated in obedience to the innate logical imperatives of the comprehensive expression of identity and the operational aspects of cognition. But to get this right, we also need the direct guidance of the Holy Spirit and the operations manual of revelatory knowledge (Bible) so that we don’t stray outside the constraints of logic into error especially with regard to the object of science. And the first thing we learn about science from the Bible is that the proper metaphysical presupposition for science is a mechanistic naturalism that holds to God’s primacy over creation, not an ontological naturalism which arrogantly thinks to render God impotent. —Michael Rawlings

The first item is the axiomatic propositions, so that’s what I’m starting out with.

I began asking you about the existence of the universe and its contents, but you were concerned about the first principles of being, which, of course, are not profound or unique to Objectivism. They are universally and objectively understood by all. I have already told you that I recognize the fundamental asseverations of the first principles of being to be self-evident, and because I am a realist—not a subjectivist, a relativist or a philosophical skeptic—I hold them to be actually existent.

What Rand extrapolates from these universals thereafter is not relevant. You asked me to address the terms in the above, not Rand’s extrapolations. I already know what Rand extrapolates from them, and I do not concur.

Hence, move on. . . .

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson,

You write: "Okay, so you tell us how 'the mathematical axiom' you cite is not presented in Job."

The nature of your statement is interrogative, Dawson.

And it's sense does not logically follow from my statement: "The mathematical axiom of the divisibility and mutability of the finite as opposed to the indivisibility and immutability of infinite perfection is not expressed analogously in terms of a line in Job as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics” (Rawlings).

This statement does not assert that the mathematical axiom is not expressed in Job.

Knock, knock, anybody home?

Unscramble your brain, and restate your interrogative.

Focus, imbecile.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson,

I'm still trying to get to the bottom of something. The following question presupposes the existence of consciousness.

According to Objectivism what is human consciousness and what is it composed of?

Science appears to tell us that at the very least it is predicated on the physiological structure of the central nervous system and the biochemical interactions therein.

Would Objectivism agree that this is the perceptible organizational foundation of human consciousness or not?

If not, why not?

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael wrote: “This statement does not assert that the mathematical axiom is not expressed in Job.”

Michael, my statement was not interrogative. It was simply an attempt to make explicit what you have written, given what you have written. In that sense, it was an assessment, not a question. You are free to challenge it.

If you think that “the mathematical axiom of infinity” IS expressed in “the Book of Job,” then go back and see what I asked you to do. Here, I’ll make it plain again for you: CITE THE TEXT.

Michael: “Knock, knock, anybody home?”

Exactly: CITE THE TEXT.

Michael: “Unscramble your brain, and restate your interrogative.”

Exactly: CITE THE TEXT.

Michael: “Focus, imbecile.”

Exactly: CITE THE TEXT.

When will this ever sink in?

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael repeats his question after I have answered it, showing no willingness to learn from what I have stated already in response to his question. He asks, again: “According to Objectivism what is human consciousness and what is it composed of?”

Michael, your stolen concepts have been exposed. We recognize them. We’ve tried to explain this to you. But as Cohen rightly explains, the Christian doesn’t want to listen. As I said, because of your horrendously bad attitude, I cannot help you.

Now, how about that “Christian theory of concepts”? Still trying to hunt it down?

Regards,
Dawson

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Michael, has presented himself as holder of innumerable credentials, possessor of unlimited knowledge in Christian epistemology and theory of concepts, comparative philosophy, but lest we forget: not only that! Yet, he only manages to display incomprehensible levels of imbecility. Here one more example:

Dawson quoted a couple of paragraphs that should have sufficed. Yet, Michael, who isolated a sentence from its context to begin with, who rather paid no attention to the whole and concentrated on that little piece, needs much more help to notice the obvious. So let's help.

Michael, I have no puppets to illustrate this to you, so try and check what's in bold here:

Your paragraph first:
The mathematical axiom of the divisibility and mutability of the finite as opposed to the indivisibility and immutability of infinite perfection is not expressed analogously in terms of a line in Job as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics.

Dawson writes after that:
Okay, so you tell us how 'the mathematical axiom' you cite is not presented in Job

Hum, this looks a lot like an acknowledgement or rephrasing of what Michael had written. Michael was saying how the "axiom" is not expressed in Job, rather than how it is. Clear enough. Michael was given plenty of opportunity to check what the sentence was when Dawson said:

This was not a question, Michael. Read again. Try to understand this time. Focus.

Not only did Michael insist: The nature of your statement is interrogative, Dawson. But he ironically finished with: Unscramble your brain, and restate your interrogative. Focus, imbecile.

Way to, yet again, refill your bowels with your own shit Michael. Showing your mental ineptitude, your imbecility, your own scrambled brain, while asking Dawson to unscramble his brain and insulting him for your own faults.

But we should not be surprised since you admit that (Michael's own words): I'm still trying to get to the bottom of something.

Of course you are. We have your brains spread all over the place, mixed with a lot of your shit, as evidence that you are trying to get to the bottom of "something," namely your bowels.

Anonymous said...

Photo,

what's your problem man?

Anonymous said...

Mich,

it's just like I toldya.

"objectivists" are like robots bro.

it's kinda funny.

"existence exists" until you nearly spew out the contents of your stomach.



Anonymous said...

Michael, my statement was not interrogative. It was simply an attempt to make explicit what you have written, given what you have written.

Any sane person would think that Michael would now acknowledge his mistake (at least this one), perhaps show some self-respect and decency and stop insulting the host. After all Michael's self-righteous strings of insults happened to ricochet, to be autobiographical, every single time. Any sane person would think that Michael would not risk any more of that. Most importantly because he might have made the mistake of telling his friends that he was about to show those heathens his incredible mastery and intelligence at this blog ... any sane person ...

Anonymous said...

Richard,

what's your problem man?

You ask me?

How clueless are you Richard?

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael wrote: “The mathematical axiom of the divisibility and mutability of the finite as opposed to the indivisibility and immutability of infinite perfection is not expressed analogously in terms of a line in Job as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics.”

I responded: “Okay, so you tell us how 'the mathematical axiom' you cite is not presented in Job.”

Photo now writes: “Hum, this looks a lot like an acknowledgement or rephrasing of what Michael had written. Michael was saying how the "axiom" is not expressed in Job, rather than how it is. Clear enough.”

Yes, exactly. In fact, photo’s analysis is better than mine. I had written that my statement replying to Michael’s was an assessment, but in fact, it’s really as photo says: it’s an *acknowledgment* of what Michael is saying in his statement. It’s certainly no question. What Michael said is clear enough: however “the mathematical axiom of infinity” is presented in “the Book of Job” (assuming it is), it is *not* presented in “the Book of Job” in the manner that it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics.

I really don’t know why it’s so hard to understand this.

Notice that Michael continues habitually to strain at gnats of his own making while swallowing boatloads of camels, to use the bible’s own metaphor. He spends all this energy fussing about something relatively very small while confessionally embracing the whole of Christianity.

I’m still curious, Michael, since you had cited Romans 1 earlier in the discussion: Can you explain how qualities which are characterized as “invisible” can be “clearly seen”? I’ve asked other Christians on this, and instead of explanations, they always come back with insults and ridicule, which do nothing to demonstrate that they have any explanation of such things. Got anything better? If not, please keep your insults and ridicule to yourself – you’ve already voiced them enough.

Regards,
Dawson

Anonymous said...

"How clueless are you Richard?"

Photo how is this not a clueless question?

Anonymous said...

Richard,

Richard quotes me asking: How clueless are you Richard?

Richard replies: Photo how is this not a clueless question?

Because mine was a rhetorical question.

Anonymous said...

Photo,

Ok whatever.

So, how is your question not idiotic ?

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Last time.

I write: “The mathematical axiom of the divisibility and mutability of the finite as opposed to the indivisibility and immutability of infinite perfection is not expressed analogously in terms of a line in Job as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics.”

But since this statement has proven to be too difficult for you, go back to the way in which the thought was expressed TWICE before: the mathematical axiom regarding the divisibility and mutability of the finite, and the indivisibility and immutability of infinite perfection is expressed out right in Job in a formal philosophical dialogue (rhetorically), not analogously in terms of a line as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics.

In other words, Aristotle emphatically notes that a line (or any divisible entity for that matter) may be divided indefinitely. That is an indispensable mathematical axiom that is objectively and universally apprehended by all, one that applies to finite entities only. However, finite consciousness cannot perform said division to its conclusion; hence, Aristotle concludes that there must be a consciousness of infinite perfection (indivisible and immutable) that can divide finite entities down to nothing, otherwise we have an indispensable mathematical axiom that is cogent, yet gratuitous.

That is Aristotle’s argument in Metaphysics. Fact.

Further, a self-subsistent Creator Who resides outside and independently of the space-continuum which He created would quite obviously not be a Being Who was divisible or mutable like His finite creation; rather, He would be a being of infinite power and presence and genius Who could divisibly reduce the finite back down to the nothing out of which He originally created it. That is self-evident.

From cover to cover, the Bible depicts just such a Creator again and again and again. AND YOU MORONS HAVE BEEN GIVEN VOLUMINIOUS SCRIPTURE ON THIS POINT GOING ALL THE WAY BACK TO BICLICAL METAPHYSICS. Fact.

In the Book of Job, of course, we have the very same notion of God expressed throughout; however, we also have an expression regarding the divisibility and mutability of the finite, and the indivisibility and immutability of infinite perfection akin to that of Aristotle’s. The difference is that the mathematical axiom regarding the indefinite divisibility of the finite is presupposed, i.e., understood to be self-evident. God then asks Job if he can comprehend the extent and the innumerable constituents of creation. The answer, of course, is: no, Job cannot, but the divine interrogator can (Job 38). Fact.

Good luck with that though, for it’s expressed in the language of poetry, and based on the rather unimaginative, black-and-white think exhibited here by you knuckleheads, its nuances are probably beyond your kin.

(By the way, the term “line” does appear, but the meaning is implied rather than emphatically illustrated.)
________________________

Dawson writes: “Okay, so you tell us how 'the mathematical axiom' you cite is not presented in Job.”

Shut up, Dawson. The sense of your statement, which is interrogative in nature, is that the mathematical axiom is NOT expressed in Job at all, and you were asking how it’s NOT expressed in Job. And “photo’s analysis is not” merely “better than” yours, it’s correct, whereas yours never was. But being the moron that he is, photo has to argue with me even after it finally dawns on him what the statement was actually saying all along.

Anonymous said...

[Richard. Jump over to next comment]

Michael,

You are the most incredibly mentally challenged person I have ever read writing anything. We had already established that you can't keep up with a sentence, now you went to where no human has gone before.

I don't think you could properly understand how many times and what indescribable amounts of crap you kept inserting back and forth through your own ass in that last comment of yours. You must be truly desensitized from your previous performances. I would explain, but by now onlooking readers must be able to spot them by themselves and imagine the most appropriate adjectives to describe them.

So, from my part, you can go keep fucking yourself. There is nothing for you to lose anymore. You have shown yourself for the ass-hole that you truly are. All by yourself. Congratulations.

Anonymous said...

Richard,

So, how is your question not idiotic ?

Because my question was rhetorical.

Bahnsen Burner said...

Earlier Michael wrote: “The mathematical axiom of the divisibility and mutability of the finite as opposed to the indivisibility and immutability of infinite perfection is not expressed analogously in terms of a line in Job as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics.”

Now Michael writes: “But since this statement has proven to be too difficult for you, go back to the way in which the thought was expressed TWICE before:”

It’s not that your statement is “too difficult” for me. I get it, and I understood its role in the context of what you’ve been saying. I’ve simply been asking for you to point out specifically where in “the Book of Job” we can learn about this “mathematical concept of infinity.” What exactly do we learn about “the mathematical concept of infinity” from “the Book of Job”? Sure, the bible uses the words “finite” and “infinite” at numerous points. But this by itself does not imply that we can learn anything substantial about “the mathematical concept of infinity” from the biblical text, which is what I’ve been inquiring about all this time.

Michael: “the mathematical axiomregarding the divisibility and mutability of the finite, and the indivisibility and immutability of infinite perfection is expressed out right in Job in a formal philosophical dialogue (rhetorically), not analogously in terms of a line as it is in Aristotle’s Metaphysics.”

Okay, then quote the passage in “the Book of Job” which does precisely this. I read chapter 38, and it doesn’t say anything of substance on “the mathematical concept of infinity.” The word ‘infinite’ never even occurs in Job 38, which you cited, but from which you quoted nothing. I did a quick search over on biblegateway.com, looking for instances of ‘finite’ and ‘infinite’ in “the Book of Job” in several translations (KJV, NIV, NASB, NRSV and CEV), and found only one verse – Job 22:5, KJV – in the results of the search. It states: “Is not thy wickedness great? and thine iniquities infinite?”

[continued…]

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael: “In other words, Aristotle emphatically notes that a line (or any divisible entity for that matter) may be divided indefinitely. That is an indispensable mathematical axiom that is objectively and universally apprehended by all, one that applies to finite entities only. However, finite consciousness cannot perform said division to its conclusion; hence, Aristotle concludes that there must be a consciousness of infinite perfection (indivisible and immutable) that can divide finite entities down to nothing, otherwise we have an indispensable mathematical axiom that is cogent, yet gratuitous.”

Yes, this is Aristotle’s argument, and while it may seem quite ingenious, it’s a very poor argument. For one, it ignores the conceptual nature of infinity, which I have pointed out several times now. The concept ‘infinity’ denotes an aspect of conceptualization that is implicit in any concept. It certainly does not require some “consciousness of infinite perfection” to make sense of the concept of infinity. You may have noticed that I have been asking you for some time now about what we can learn about the nature of concepts and the method by which the human mind forms them from the Christian worldview. So far, you’ve not given anything of worthy substance on this. For instance, we still don’t know how the “Christian theory of concepts” defines ‘concept’. I don’t think we can find such knowledge in the bible, but if you think it’s there, Michael, you’re invited to point it out, book, chapter and verse(s).

And notice how Aristotle’s argument accomplishes essentially the same thing as any Christian apologetic argument: it still leaves us with no alternative but to imagine the “consciousness” which is supposedly proven to exist in its conclusion. So again, we must ask: How is what one imagines not imaginary?

Michael: “Further, a self-subsistent Creator Who resides outside and independently of the space-continuum which He created would quite obviously not be a Being Who was divisible or mutable like His finite creation; rather, He would be a being of infinite power and presence and genius Who could divisibly reduce the finite back down to the nothing out of which He originally created it.”

And I can imagine this just as you can, just as anyone else can. But what we imagine is still imaginary. And the only reason why one would go with the results of reality-departing imagination like this, is because he doesn’t understand the conceptual nature of infinity. Remember, theory of concepts anyone? Hello! Yes, I know, what a “barking mad” thing to be concerned about.

Michael: “That is self-evident.”

No, we have to ponder it to draw this conclusion. It’s not at all “self-evident.” To call it “self-evident” is to take a huge number of assumptions completely for granted. That is simply intellectually irresponsible.

"Credentials..." My ass!

[continued…]

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael: “From cover to cover, the Bible depicts just such a Creator again and again and again. AND YOU MORONS HAVE BEEN GIVEN VOLUMINIOUS SCRIPTURE ON THIS POINT GOING ALL THE WAY BACK TO BICLICAL METAPHYSICS. Fact.”

Michael, what I’ve been asking for is direct citations from the biblical text which inform us about the nature and content of this “mathematical concept of infinity” that you’ve been talking about. So far, I’ve seen nothing from you which satisfies this request. Just as I’ve seen nothing from you on this mythical “Christian theory of concepts” you said exists. But since you announced at the beginning of your comment that this is the “last time” you’re presumably going to address the matter, I’m guessing then we won’t find out what we can learn about “the mathematical concept of infinity” from you. Indeed, what exactly do you have to offer?

Michael: “In the Book of Job, of course, we have the very same notion of God expressed throughout; however, we also have an expression regarding the divisibility and mutability of the finite, and the indivisibility and immutability of infinite perfection akin to that of Aristotle’s.”

I asked for you to CITE THE TEXT, remember? Did you not see that? In other words, specifically pinpoint the very verse where “the Book of Job” does what you say it does.

Michael: “The difference is that the mathematical axiom regarding the indefinite divisibility of the finite is presupposed, i.e., understood to be self-evident.”

In other words, it’s taken for granted, at least through the prism of a mind which has learned about “the mathematical concept of infinity” elsewhere. Exactly! Again, “We have a goal!”

Michael: “God then asks Job if he can comprehend the extent and the innumerable constituents of creation. The answer, of course, is: no, Job cannot, but the divine interrogator can (Job 38). Fact.”

Actually, what we have in chapter 38 is a monologue stated from the imaginative point of view of a consciousness which is supposed to enjoy metaphysical primacy over existence. In it, there are a series of rhetorical questions posed to the character of Job, such as “where were you, Job, when I ‘laid the foundations of the earth’?” (v. 4); “who shut up the sea with doors?” (vs. 8 – I didn’t know the sea had “doors”); “has though perceived the breadth of the earth?” (v. 18); “has thou entered into the treasures of the snow? Or hast thou seen the treasures of the hail?” (v. 22); “hast the rain a father? Or who hath begotten the drops of dew?” (v. 28); “out of whose womb came the ice?” (v. 29); “canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion?” (v. 31); “canst though send lightnings, that they may go and say unto thee, Here we are?” (v. 35); “who provideth for the raven his food?” (v. 41); et al.

All of this is intended to make man feel puny and small, all the while ignoring (i.e., taking completely for granted) the inestimable value of possessing the conceptual level of cognition that man has and which one needs in order to fathom all of this. And that’s precisely where the answer to the “puzzle” of infinity lies – in the nature of conceptual integration. Why, Michael, do you think I’ve been trying to raise your awareness for the need of a theory of concepts in the first place?

[continued…]

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael: “Good luck with that though, for it’s expressed in the language of poetry, and based on the rather unimaginative, black-and-white think exhibited here by you knuckleheads, its nuances are probably beyond your kin.”

This is essentially an admission that we need not only eisegesis, but also imagination, to interpret the text in question (“the Book of Job”) in the manner that Michael has come to understand it, given his reliance on eisegesis and imagination. I already know that a person needs to use his imagination when reading the bible in order to grasp what it’s saying. That’s nothing new. I’ve been telling folks all along that the text of the bible plays on believers’ imaginations. Christians typically ignore this observation, since they know it’s true, but occasionally one comes along and says “Prove it!” Well, here’s an admission.

[continued…]

Bahnsen Burner said...

I wrote: “Okay, so you tell us how 'the mathematical axiom' you cite is not presented in Job.”

Michael: “Shut up, Dawson.”

Michael, your rudeness seems to know no bounds. This is my blog. You have no authority here. It’s clear you have nothing but bad attitude and dime-store sophistry to share here. You certainly do not enlighten anyone – you can’t. You have nothing of value to offer. You come over to my blog and can’t even grasp something so simple as a response acknowledging something you yourself have stated, and then you get belligerently piqued by the whole thing when you are rightly corrected on the matter. You really take the cake for juvenile behavior. Clearly I have given this discussion with you more seriousness, time and effort than you deserve. You are an ingrate.

Michael: “The sense of your statement, which is interrogative in nature, is that the mathematical axiom is NOT expressed in Job at all, and you were asking how it’s NOT expressed in Job.”

No, it’s not at all interrogative, nor was it intended to be. It’s very easy, Michael. You say “X is not presented in such-and-such manner in Y source as it is in Z source.” I responded: “Okay, so you tell us here how X is *not* presented in Y source.” There’s no interrogative intention here. It’s simply an acknowledgment. Photo, whom you consider so much more stupid than yourself, easily grasps this. Why can’t you?

Amazing!

Regards,
Dawson

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

I wrote:

Dawson,

I'm still trying to get to the bottom of something. The following question presupposes the existence of consciousness.

According to Objectivism what is human consciousness and what is it composed of?

Science tell us that at the very least it is predicated on the physiological structure of the central nervous system and the biochemical interactions therein.

Would Objectivism agree that this is the perceptible organizational foundation of human consciousness or not?

If not, why not?

________________________

You write: “But as Cohen rightly explains, the Christian doesn’t want to listen.”

Given that the only thing Objectivism ever seems to assert is the obvious as if it were profundity or some inherently contradictory claptrap of a circular complexion, I seriously doubt we’re talking rocket science here, just the conceit of juvenile intellects.

Nevertheless, I missed the following answer before I posted the question a second time; Cohen’s blanket statement regarding the Christian mindset is gibberish.

You write:

Michael: “According to Objectivism what is human consciousness and what is it composed of?”

Is this a philosophical, or a scientific question? If it is a philosophical question, I can only say that the question denies the axiom of consciousness. The axiom of consciousness holds that, philosophically, consciousness is irreducible. So as a philosophical question, it is nonsensical since, as I pointed out before, it denies the axiom of consciousness.


Actually, it’s both philosophical and scientific. Given that the question presupposes the existence of consciousness, your assertion that it “denies the axiom of consciousness” goes to a view that is peculiar to Objectivism, not to any universally held conjecture about its philosophical merit (or lack thereof). Hence, the key to unlocking the mystery of what you imply to be self-evident would appear to hinge on what the Objectivist means by “the axiom of consciousness”.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

[Contined . . .]

If it is a scientific question, you need to discuss it with a scientist, preferably one whose worldview is grounded in reality as opposed to mystical fantasies. I am not a scientist. A good scientist is likely going to require you to rephrase your question so that it makes sense given the specialties of his knowledge on the matter.

Indeed, I have asked this very same question as expressed in the above of scientists in the past, thank you very much, and have gotten a variety of answers . . . depending, inevitably, on the respective scientist’s underlying presupposition about the nature of reality and/or his assessment of data. It’s your naiveté that is on display here, not mine.

Michael: “Science appears to tell us that at the very least it is predicated on the physiological structure of the central nervous system and the biochemical interactions therein.”

Objectivism holds that consciousness is dependent on biological structures; of course, it holds that consciousness is biological in nature to begin with. But this is not the same thing that it is “composed of” or “reduces to” something that it is not.


Indeed, it is not; however, the idea “that consciousness is dependent on biological structures” or “that consciousness is biological in nature to begin with” is an assertion that presupposes a metaphysical naturalism. As for “composed of” and “reduces to”: these are not necessarily synonymous in meaning or complexion. The composition of consciousness goes to the issue of substance; to what precisely consciousness may or may not be reduced goes to one’s perspective, which various among metaphysical naturalists especially.

END

Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...

"Because my question was rhetorical."

Photo your the king of not saying anything.

Im done. Your behavior is incredible.

See ya.

Anonymous said...

There was this TV show where people would vote performers out or in, depending on the quality of their performance. This really stupid guy came once, claiming to be the most amazing music composer since Mozart. He said he would perform his best composition. He took a piece of paper, huffing on it as if it was a musical instrument and "singing." The man was toneless. The public voted the guy out while laughing their asses off. Truly. They laughed to tears.

The guy was not too impressed by the laughter and rather scandalous behaviour of the public. Weird, as if nothing happened. Just slightly sad that he did not make it to be voted in. But he left.

Anyway, people wrote lots and lots of letters. they wanted to see this guy again in the program. Here comes this guy. During the chat before his performance he said that his friends had told him not to sing that one. So he now was going to really perform his best material. I could not differentiate the new thing from the previous, but the public was now ready to laugh and vote the guy out again. So they did.

You would think that by now this guy knows that he has no talent whatsoever? No. Letters again, new invitation. The guy comes back. He says that his friends were wrong, that he should not have listened because his prior "song" was the real deal, but maybe he did not perform it well enough. So he will now perform it at the best level. Again, paper noises, tuneless voice, public having a blast laughing at this poor guy.

To be honest, I did not find any of it funny. However, it showed me that people can be incredibly clueless about their own inadequacies, about their own incompetence.

In some regards, Michael is like that guy. Only much much much worse. He has no idea how incredibly indescribably stupid he is. He has no idea that learning some multi-syllabic words does not make him an intellectual. He has no idea that he can't understand more than one sentence at a time, if at all, only to forget its meaning next second.

I have been having fun at Michael. Unlike the "singer" in that show, who seemed to have a genteel, calm, nature, Michael is an ass-hole and proud of it. Even then, it is no longer funny. I can't imagine him understanding one sentence of what Dawson just wrote to him in a gesture of incredible patience (if infinities can be actual, Dawson's patience would be the real example, not that non-sequitur bullshit presented by Michael).

Anonymous said...

"Yes, this is Aristotle’s argument, and while it may seem quite ingenious, it’s a very poor argument. For one, it ignores the conceptual nature of infinity, which I have pointed out several times now."

"And notice how Aristotle’s argument accomplishes essentially the same thing as any Christian apologetic argument: it still leaves us with no alternative but to imagine the “consciousness” which is supposedly proven to exist in its conclusion."


This is kind of funny. Aristotle's "theory of concepts" is ok but his argument for God some how isn't?

This is nuts. The only "ingrates" I see around here are the "objectivists."


Anonymous said...

Richard,

Photo your the king of not saying anything.

"you're" Richard. Imagine the whole words and you will make this mistake less often. If you mean "you are" then it's "you're." If you mean that something is mine, then it's "your." Got it?

Im done. Your behavior is incredible.

That's what my friends keep saying: You are incredible photo! Keep at it photo! Tell us more photo! I have learned so much from you photo!

Who am I to challenge their good taste?

Anonymous said...

Dawson,

I have been reading around Aristotle's Metaphysics. Searching a bit for "infinite" at times, for "division" at other times, I found what Peikoff claimed about Aristotle's observation (as per your quote to Peikoff, who I have never read), where Aristotle says that, in actuality, division cannot be carried out to infinity (the "however number of segments we have reached, we have that number and no more" or something to the effect). But nowhere have a found that jump into "therefore some infinite guy can do this infinite number of cuts." If you found it, I would like to read it first hand. I know that was not your claim, but Michael's. However, since Michael will not provide references, and I am left with this curiosity, I would like to know how it's phrased by Aristotle, if at all.

If you do not remember, or if you're not sure that it might be there, do not worry. I am still enjoying the read, and might find it at some point. If it's there.

Ydemoc said...

Hello again, Michael,

I just wanted to pop in and let you know that I haven't forgotten about your latest response to me.

It's just that at the moment, other things have priority. But, eventually, I'll post something. I'm just not sure when.

Ydemoc

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Dawson,

"It’s not that your statement is “too difficult” for me. I get it, and I understood its role in the context of what you’ve been saying. I’ve simply been asking for you to point out specifically where in “the Book of Job” we can learn about this “mathematical concept of infinity.”



Bull. You were confused about what was being said by whom and why, especially due to photo's bluster and bull. It is he who took what was a very simple distinction from the outset and utterly mangled it.

The bottom line it this: the divinity you argue against in “Divine Lonesomeness” is necessarily a self-subsistent entity that eternally resides outside and independently of the space-time continuum it created. That’s the foundation of your argument. You necessarily concede the implications inherent to the construct of divine perfect: (1) the eternally existent now, (2) the infinite indivisibility and immutability of the eternal spirit of pure consciousness that can divisibly reduce the finite down to the nothing it was before its creation and (3) the identity of the entity that has primacy over existence, i.e., that the ground of all existence and the origin of all that exists and the spirit of pure consciousness of divinitas perfectus are one and the same thing.

In short, all of your arguments are useless, inherently contradictory and self-negating.

Check. Checkmate.

Point. Match. Game.

I would say that it all just flies right over your head as it did before I came along, but that’s no longer true. You’re a pathological liar raised to the sociopathic power, a fool, an imbecile, a nitwit. And of course photo is all of these things as well.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

[Continued . . .]

Andrew disappeared after I lit him up with all those glaringly obvious highlights he embarrassingly overlooked.

We see that freedies has shut his stupid mouth once it dawned on him that the fundamental property of Objectivism’s metaphysical triad is nothing profound or unique to Objectivism. Of course, that’s precisely what he was accusing me of stealing, nothing else. I was just being the Socratic gadfly gleefully exposing the fool.

I’ve put down the metaphysics of Judeo-Christianity, and I’ve put down the epistemology of Judeo-Christianity. The empirical aspect of the latter, of course, entails the very same theory of concepts as that which would necessarily obtain within a scientific framework premised on methodological/mechanistic naturalism. Voluminous scripture has been provided as well. Poor Dawson, his extrapolation skills are poorly developed as a result of his years of running in the circles of Objectivism’s tautological asseverations that never get beyond the obvious.

We’re still waiting on Ydemoc to make up his mind about what he wants to talk about with regard to the rational aspect of Judeo-Christianity’s epistemology, but he might get lost again.

Jury’s still out.

In the meantime, back to Objectivism’s rather ill-defined axioms of existence and consciousness. . . .

We left off showing Dawson that many scientists—whoopsie daisy!—apparently deny “the axiom of consciousness” too, and I’m going to put a finer tip on that point as well.

END

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Fine, Ydemoc, just stay on topic: the axiomatic propositions or self-evident universals of consciousness, not Objectivism's subjective extrapolations.

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

photo, you going to back up you guff or not? LOL!

Remember. . . .


The Objectivist claims that the only things that can exist are finite. Infinity supposedly has no discernable identity and, therefore, can have no actuality. In other words, the nature of potentialities (the potential things or musings or calculi of consciousness) do not have actuality because the indefinable potentialities of consciousness cannot have primacy over the actualities of existence.

Peikoff argues that for consciousness infinity can never be anything more than an indefinable potentiality. Using Aristotle’s illustration, Peikoff shows that no matter how many times consciousness divides a line, the number of segments will always be a finite number. The idea that a line can be divided an infinite number of times has no actual substance. It’s merely a potentiality; i.e., this implied or theoretical infinity, its nature, has no ground or actual substance or reality in existence. On the other hand, the number of divided segments is always finite, concrete. Those are actual.

(Now, bear in mind that Aristotle -- like Moses and Daniel and Isaiah and others before him, indeed, virtually every other thinker of note in the history of philosophy and theology -- extrapolate from this a conclusion that is 180 degrees the opposite.)

Question: What is the implied, underlying presupposition of this argument? Can you identify it? Can you name it (articulate it) for all to hear and see?

Anonymous said...

I wonder what good it is to continue this Michael issue.

Bull. You were confused about what was being said by whom and why,

Not at all. Michael got Dawson wrong because Michael did not read what Dawson wrote. He just isolated a sentence and made it to be something it was not.

especially due to photo's bluster and bull. It is he who took what was a very simple distinction from the outset and utterly mangled it.

It was Michael who contradicted himself and "Kyle" since one defended the argument (from authority) that this math to actual to divinity was "identified" by "Moses," while the "latter" made an attempt at being more precise and adjudicated it to the book of Job. Then Michael made the contradictory point, that this argument was not presented with numbers and lines in the book of Job (so no math?), but with some shitty jargon-loaded meaningless thing about the "axiom of identity" (so no math?). So there. Michael contradicts himself by first declaring that math-to-divine is in Job, only to then deny that there's math in Job. He then tries to save cheeks by saying that the math has a different form than the "univocal" version of heathens, or even the analogical thinking of believers (what form would it have then? All that's left is equivocal. Could this be an admission to eisegesis?). In other words, if you want to see the math you have to engage in eisegesis, but call it something else. I show him to have contradicted himself, yet he concludes that it was me who mangled this. That's a Christian intellectual for you.

As if that's not enough, Michael thinks that he is in a position where he can judge other people's intelligences and honesty. But I leave that alone this time. As I said. This is no longer funny. It's become the witnessing of a man (Michael of course) reducing his own mind and self-respect to nothingness. A man trying to divide his intellect infinite times so as to end with nothingness, as it would happen at the steps he ignored in his rendition of that math infinity to divine perfection bullshit.

So be it.

(Of course, by this point all I can expect is for Michael to isolate phrases here and there and mangle the meaning of this post. But note that I am not directing it at him. I don't think he has the capacity to understand any of this. We could say I am just thinking out loud.)

Anonymous said...

Michael,

I doubt that you will understand any of this, but I answer out of courtesy, since you seem to want to talk to me (riiiight). I told you already. I do not care about discussing Peikoff. I never did. I clearly wanted to talk about the problems with your divine perfection bullshit, and if you want to talk about it in a honest way, then let's go for it. Here for you again (reposted from here--Dec 11 2012 7:39 am--I notice though, that too much of what I wrote might escape you, since I was assuming a minimal intellectual capacity on your part, which seems to be inexistent. It's up to you to prove otherwise, but I will not hold my breath):

---snip, snip---
... In any event, I am starting fresh. So let's see:

Simultaneously, the finite mind readily apprehends that any divisible entity may be divided without end.

Actually no. The finite mind depends on mathematical foundations in order to understand that, in theory, a divisible entity could be divided without end. By your definition of "readily," the same finite mind should be able to notice where this theoretical division leads if we were to try and imagine that such division is possible in actuality, rather than in abstracto.

That is a perfectly rational, mathematical axiom.

This is not an axion. It is something we infer from other mathematical foundations (axioms).

It follows, infinity is that which is indivisible, immutable and has no beginning or end.

Here you just jumped some important details. What are you talking about? What infinity was indivisible? You said that the object can be divided without end. Where then indivisible? If the object starts being divided, then there was a start in this dividing. So how would it not have a beginning? Try and think what is it that you are talking about here. What's infinite as a result of dividing without end? The division process? The object? The obtained segments?

That’s its identity expressed philosophically.

That's the identity of what here? Other than a hastily malformed concept of infinity I see nothing else. Certainly no divine anything. "Philosophically"?

That’s Aristotle’s point, and centuries before him, that’s Moses’ point and that of the other inspired authors of the Bible. . . . That is not an instance of circular reasoning at all. It’s linear.

Appeal to authority, and nothing else here. So we are missing two things after your grandiose conclusion: how does an abstract infinity become an actual infinity, and how does the actual infinity give credence to a divine one.

Seems like that's what you try in the next paragraph, but it's really not there:

As for infinity’s actuality, on the contrary, what we have here is a very strong reason to believe that some actual realm of origin exists beyond the divisible realm of the finite, something that can divide the divisible without end. Otherwise, we are aware of a mathematical axiom that is impeccably cogent if not inescapable, yet gratuitous?!

Well, your mathematical inference was not impeccable, I know of better ones that lead to concepts of infinity, but yours is faulty and incomplete. Either way, I observed no magic in your faulty inference, and I have observed no magic in the good ones. Therefore, all by themselves, these mathematical procedures do not require any magic. Therefore they are not gratuitous. You said it yourself that it is "impeccably cogent if not inescapable." Thus, where from gratuitous?

[ENDED]
---snip, snip---

So it's up to you.

Anonymous said...

Mich,

Photo aka guffy?

Anonymous said...

Richard,

If you don't want any shit shovelled up your ass stay away from Michael's pile of shit. Accidents happen.

Anonymous said...

Photo,

shut up already, you know?

In spite of what you think, the burden is on all of us.

But I get you buddy. When you have deluded yourself into believing that your nothing but a dumb brain that crawled out of a swamp, we get your insane behavior.

So, what's your evidence that you are nothing more than a dumb brain?


Hope you like that, pal.

By the way, photomania, I don't accept your idea of abstractions or defenition of substance.



freddies_dead said...

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

We see that freedies has shut his stupid mouth once it dawned on him that the fundamental property of Objectivism’s metaphysical triad is nothing profound or unique to Objectivism. Of course, that’s precisely what he was accusing me of stealing, nothing else. I was just being the Socratic gadfly gleefully exposing the fool.

Lol, I stopped responding to your shite when you made it abundantly clear that you were unable to maintain consistency with your own professed worldview. Apparently you can only support your claim that "ultimately consciousness holds primacy" by arguing as if existence holds primacy. There's no point holding a discussion with someone stealing concepts from the very worldview he seeks to deny.

It's also hilarious being called a fool by someone so dense he's a veritable black hole of stupidity. In the words of the band Overkill, "Fuck you!"

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Richard,

shut up already, you know?

If you insist on referring to me, then you contradict your desire for me to shut up. Just see how you continued:

In spite of what you think, the burden is on all of us.

I don't feel any burden. You would have to be more specific for me to understand what you are saying.

But I get you buddy. When you have deluded yourself into believing that your nothing but a dumb brain that crawled out of a swamp, we get your insane behavior.

I do not hold to such a thing. Do you?

So, what's your evidence that you are nothing more than a dumb brain?

You first tell me to shut up. Now you want me to solve one of your problems?

Hope you like that, pal.

You hope I like what, pal?

By the way, photomania, I don't accept your idea of abstractions or defenition of substance.

I have given you neither ideas about abstractions, nor definitions of substance.

So what is it Richard?

Anonymous said...

freddies_dead,

I just want you to know that the mastery of your devastating-yet-short comments have not gone unnoticed.

Bahnsen Burner said...

I wrote: "It’s not that your statement is ‘too difficult’ for me. I get it, and I understood its role in the context of what you’ve been saying. I’ve simply been asking for you to point out specifically where in ‘the Book of Job’ we can learn about this ‘mathematical concept of infinity’.”

Michael huffed: “Bull.”

No, not “bull.” Check the record. I’ve been asking for direct citations from “the Book of Job” to substantiate the references you and “Kyle” made to it concerning “the mathematical axiom of infinity” all along. You know I have. I made this abundantly clear since “the Book of Job” was first introduced in this context, and I’ve had to repeat this over and over and over again, since you simply never seem to get what I’m asking, even though it should be easy for an intellectual giant like you to get it. But you never seem to get it since you continue to kick against it and never come through with any direct citations to support what you’ve attributed to “the Book of Job.”

Finally, now, you have come out and admitted that “The difference [between Aristotle and “the Book of Job” vis. “the mathematical concept of infinity”] is that [in “the Book of Job”] the mathematical axiom regarding the indefinite divisibility of the finite is presupposed, i.e., understood to be self-evident.”

Which is simply an admission that you have to read things you’ve learned about “the mathematical concept of infinity” into the text of “the Book of Job” in order to say “Aha! It’s here too! What a genius Moses et al. were!” As with so many other things (can anyone say “epistemology”?), you “bible scholars” learn about things outside the bible and then bring them back to the bible and say “Oh, look, it’s been here all the time in Jeremiah, Ruth, Deuteronomy, Romans, etc.,” since in fact you eisegetically squeeze it into some passage here or there when in fact the bible offers nothing informative on the matter to begin with. The “mathematical concept of infinity” is a great example. So is this mythical “Christian theory of concepts” that Michael insists is real, but never explains, and never ties to anything we can learn in the bible itself.

Again, “We have a goal!”

[continued…]

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael: “You were confused about what was being said by whom and why, especially due to photo's bluster and bull.”

Not at all. I knew what you and “Kyle” had said, because I read your comments. I simply asked you to tie what you attributed to “the Book of Job” to actual statements that can be found in “the Book of Job.” No confusion on my part here. But it’s clear that this has thrown a wrench into things for you. Observe how flustered you’ve become in all this!

Michael: “The bottom line it this: the divinity you argue against in ‘Divine Lonesomeness’ is necessarily a self-subsistent entity that eternally resides outside and independently of the space-time continuum it created. That’s the foundation of your argument….” Blah blah blah.

Michael, you’ve been so owned on this topic that it amazes me that you still bring it up again, and even worse, you don’t seem to realize which way is up. I explained all this before. You have gone on record affirming that “according to Judeo-Christianity, ultimately, consciousness does have primacy over existence.” I explained what this means in terms of your attempts to wrestle with the problem of divine lonesomeness. How is it that you do not understand? How is it that you do not see your own stolen concepts? Do you still not understand what is happening when a thinker commits the fallacy of the stolen concept? Do you not understand even this????

Yes, Cohen is exactly right. Whatever I say just goes in one ear and right out the other. You don’t understand because you won’t allow yourself to listen. Listening will have to come first, you see. And several of us – photo, freddies, Ydemoc, I – have been pointing out on numerous occasions that you simply haven’t been listening. And now this? Amazing! You’re just back to affirming “pure five” without realizing what a mess you’ve made of the concept ‘five’. It’s hardly something to stand on, Michael. But go ahead. It’s your mind to waste.

[continued…]

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael divined: “Andrew disappeared after I lit him up with all those glaringly obvious highlights he embarrassingly overlooked… We see that freedies has shut his stupid mouth once it dawned on him that the fundamental property of Objectivism’s metaphysical triad is nothing profound or unique to Objectivism.”

How all of a sudden do you have such privy access to another person’s mind that you can speak for the motivation of their actions? Earlier, on 17 Dec., you had stated that “You know as much about [Kyle] as I.” And in the very same comment, you then say “Kyle's gone. He thinks you guys are nuts.” I certainly did not know what “Kyle” thinks about us, so how could you say that “You know as much about him as I”? How do you know why Andrew left the conversation? Perhaps he had other things to do. Perhaps it was my responses to his questions that made him decide to leave. As for freddies_dead, he has now corrected you on yet another misattribution on your part. So not only are you rude (as we have seen in so many of your comments), you’re also presumptuous. None of this speaks well for your “credentials,” Michael. And the fact that you need to be schooled on this by someone you

Michael: “Of course, that’s precisely what he was accusing me of stealing, nothing else.”

Michael, if you think the “metaphysical triad” which Objectivism affirms is not unique to Objectivism, then please, show us where Christianity explicitly affirms the axioms of existence, identity, and consciousness and the primacy of existence. What freddies was pointing out, and I pointed this out too (and I suspect this is why Rick Warden abandoned the conversation) is that you cannot consistently affirm either the primacy of existence or the primacy of consciousness given Christianity’s dogmatic theistic commitments. You stated that “according to Judeo-Christianity, ultimately, consciousness does have primacy over existence,” but you have also conceded that your god did not create itself, that its nature is what it is independent of conscious activity, i.e., that the primacy of existence obtains. I spell all this out in the main entry of this blog above. Your entire worldview is premised on blurring the distinction between reality and imagination. I’ve proven this over and over again, and various statements of yours throughout the conversation have in effect openly conceded this (you just won’t allow yourself to grasp this).

Michael: “I’ve put down the metaphysics of Judeo-Christianity,”

So, where does “the metaphysics of Judeo-Christianity” weigh in on the issue of metaphysical primacy? Point it out in the bible for us. C’mon, Michael. You can’t let Objectivism be “unique and profound” on this, can you????

Michael: “I’ve put down the epistemology of Judeo-Christianity.”

According to “the epistemology of Judeo-Christianity,” what is a concept, and how does the human mind form one? Cite the bible in your answer.

Hear those crickets? They’ve been chirping for a long time now.

[continued…]

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael: “The empirical aspect of the latter, of course, entails the very same theory of concepts as that which would necessarily obtain within a scientific framework premised on methodological/mechanistic naturalism.”

My, what an interesting coincidence! Everyone else “just knows” this same theory of concepts, and yet you can’t even show us where in the bible it says anything informative about the nature of concepts and the process by which they are formed. Given that, how could you even know that “the empirical aspect of the latter… entails the very same theory of concepts as that which would necessarily obtain within a scientific framework premised on methodological/mechanistic naturalism”? How would you know this unless you could compare the “Christian theory of concepts” with that which allegedly “would necessarily obtain within a scientific framework” so described? And how could you compare two things unless knew what those two things are? You’ve shown nothing so far as a distinctively “Christian theory of concepts” anywhere in your comments in this discussion, even though you’ve been asked about it since Day One, back on 4 Nov. Now you’re trying to say that it’s the same as that used “within a scientific framework premised on methodological/mechanistic naturalism”? Nope, that doesn’t work, Michael. We need substance, not mere assertions intended to make Christianity appear so cozy and comfortable next to science.

Michael: “Voluminous scripture has been provided as well.”

You’ve provided no scripture references in regards to concept theory. You have shown nothing insofar as where and what we can learn about concepts in the bible is concerned. You’ve done just as I predicted: you’ve proven yourself to be utterly empty-handed on this matter.

Michael: “Poor Dawson, his extrapolation skills are poorly developed as a result of his years of running in the circles of Objectivism’s tautological asseverations that never get beyond the obvious.”

This is just more admission that one would need to eisegesis in order to squeeze whatever extrabiblical learning one wants to say is in the bible into some passage in order to say “Aha, look! It’s right here! Only it’s expressed in the language of poetry, and you need to bring your imagination in order to get out of the text what we say is in there, but not as it is presented in these other sources where we actually learned about it first.”

In the meantime, back to Objectivism’s rather ill-defined axioms of existence and consciousness. . . .

Michael: “We left off showing Dawson that many scientists—whoopsie daisy!—apparently deny ‘the axiom of consciousness’ too, and I’m going to put a finer tip on that point as well.”

Please continue, Michael. I guess you’re too dense to figure out that you’re really helping to make my point for me. Don’t be surprised if this turns out to be the case. In fact, it already has, you just don’t see it. But go ahead, dig your hole deeper. I’ll wait.

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

Again, Michael, if you think still there is such a thing as a “Christian theory of concepts” which explains not only what concepts are, but which also informs us on the process by which they are formed, please demonstrate to us how *on the “Christian theory of concepts”* the concept ‘length’ can be formed. What inputs are used in forming this concept, and what action does the mind take in forming it?

Please, give us a demonstration of how this works according to the “Christian theory of concepts.” Be sure to credit the bible with anything you think we can learn from it on this topic.

(By the way, if cut-and-paste is all one needs to do in order to move the discussion forward, this will be what I can use if Michael continues dodging on this matter.)

Regards,
Dawson

Bahnsen Burner said...

Regarding Peikoff’s reasoning for why the actual is always finite, Michael quoted a statement of his own from earlier in the discussion:

<< Question: What is the implied, underlying presupposition of this argument? Can you identify it? Can you name it (articulate it) for all to hear and see? >>

I already answered this question back on 12 Dec. I laid out all the points which factor into Peikoff’s reasoning for the view he presents. Michael has not shown that it’s missing anything; indeed he hasn’t even interacted with it at all. And yet, here he’s re-posting his question as if it’s not already been answered. Is this more evidence that Michael is simply not listening? Or, is it evidence that he hopes no one notices that the question he re-posts has already been answered?

Regards,
Dawson

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Oh, look, Richard, freddies_fool did come up with something other than the obvious universals apparent to all that Objectivism pretends to own, that is, the idea of God. Odd. Didn't know that was asserted by Objectivism.

What an utter retard.

Bahnsen Burner said...

Photo wrote: “I just want you to know that the mastery of your devastating-yet-short comments have not gone unnoticed.”

Indeed, they haven’t. Like a vorpal blade, they’ve cut right to the heart of the matter.

Regards,
Dawson

Anonymous said...

We left off showing Dawson that many scientists—whoopsie daisy!—

An appeal to authority? Naaaaaaaaaah!

Bahnsen Burner said...

Michael: “Oh, look, Richard, freddies_fool did come up with something other than the obvious universals apparent to all that Objectivism pretends to own, that is, the idea of God. Odd. Didn't know that was asserted by Objectivism…. What an utter retard.”

More sure signs that this giant of intellectuals “Michael David Rawlings” has no arguments in his quiver, only insults and ridicule sourced in his horrendously bad attitude. Again, I can only wonder what he’s hoping to accomplish here. He just makes himself look more petty and juvenile every time he allows himself to sink to these bottom levels.

Regards,
Dawson

Michael David Rawlings, a.k.a. "Bluemoon" said...

Wrong, Dawson. Let me help you. The underlying presupposition of Peikoff's idiocy is that all consciousness is finite, for which he can provide absolutely no proof, either rationally or empirically. His conclusion is nothing more than the premise restated.

Dimwit.

Anonymous said...

Dawson said: I already answered this question back on 12 Dec. I laid out all the points which factor into Peikoff’s reasoning for the view he presents. Michael has not shown that it’s missing anything; indeed he hasn’t even interacted with it at all. And yet, here he’s re-posting his question as if it’s not already been answered. Is this more evidence that Michael is simply not listening? Or, is it evidence that he hopes no one notices that the question he re-posts has already been answered? [my emphasis]

I noticed, of course, and was going to point this out to Michael, that if he wanted to discuss Peikoff, you had answered his question. But I let it stay as demonstration that he is not listening. There's so much demonstration already though ...

Anonymous said...

Photo,

You keep claiming that the concept of infinite division is not a proof for God.

Get it now?

So, do abstractions exist and what is your definition of substance?


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