Robin
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2004
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My next, and I promise the last, in my series of Theism's best case. Again, this is from Blackwell's Companion to Natural Theology and it is called the "Argument from Consciousness", by JP Moreland.
For some reason I had expected to be more challenged by this argument. There are a lot of words there but not much being said. Like many theist arguments the premisses are not directly supported. Instead they take some person's criticisism of the premiss and criticise the criticism.
The principle seems to be that any premiss is true if there exists an unsound refutation of it. Anyway, here is the guts of the argument, quoted from the article:
Let me boil that down.
1. Assume dualism is true
2. Assume that the apparently causal relationship between mental and physical events could not possibly be causal
3. Assume that if it is not causal then there must be mental events keeping the mental events correlated with the physical events.
4. Those mental events are God
5. Ta Da!
Looking at the first premiss we find a world of problems:
What does that even mean? Isn't saying that an event is an entity that exists kind of blurring the difference between "is" and "does"?
What definition of "mental" is being used here? What definition of "physical"?
After that it goes downhill. Premisses 4 and 5 you will recognise from the Gale-Pruss argument I cited earlier. They don't make any more sense in this context.
I will leave the rest to others, but before you dive in, here is a taste of the slightly rambling and very prolix style you can expect:
A new and entirely unfamiliar usage of the word "clarification".
For some reason I had expected to be more challenged by this argument. There are a lot of words there but not much being said. Like many theist arguments the premisses are not directly supported. Instead they take some person's criticisism of the premiss and criticise the criticism.
The principle seems to be that any premiss is true if there exists an unsound refutation of it. Anyway, here is the guts of the argument, quoted from the article:
1. Mental events are genuine nonphysical mental entities that exist.
2. Specific mental and physical event types are regularly correlated.
3. There is an explanation for these correlations.
4. Personal explanation is different from natural scientific explanation.
5.The explanation for these correlations is either a personal or natural scientific explanation.
6. The explanation is not a natural scientific one.
7. Therefore, the explanation is a personal one.
8. If the explanation is personal, then it is theistic.
9. Therefore, the explanation is theistic.
2. Specific mental and physical event types are regularly correlated.
3. There is an explanation for these correlations.
4. Personal explanation is different from natural scientific explanation.
5.The explanation for these correlations is either a personal or natural scientific explanation.
6. The explanation is not a natural scientific one.
7. Therefore, the explanation is a personal one.
8. If the explanation is personal, then it is theistic.
9. Therefore, the explanation is theistic.
Let me boil that down.
1. Assume dualism is true
2. Assume that the apparently causal relationship between mental and physical events could not possibly be causal
3. Assume that if it is not causal then there must be mental events keeping the mental events correlated with the physical events.
4. Those mental events are God
5. Ta Da!
Looking at the first premiss we find a world of problems:
1. Mental events are genuine nonphysical mental entities that exist.
What does that even mean? Isn't saying that an event is an entity that exists kind of blurring the difference between "is" and "does"?
What definition of "mental" is being used here? What definition of "physical"?
After that it goes downhill. Premisses 4 and 5 you will recognise from the Gale-Pruss argument I cited earlier. They don't make any more sense in this context.
I will leave the rest to others, but before you dive in, here is a taste of the slightly rambling and very prolix style you can expect:
Three points of clarification are in order. First, minimally, the sort of modality involved may be taken as physical necessity, a form of necessity that runs throughout possible worlds relevantly physically similar to our actual world (e.g. in having the same physical particulars, properties, relations, and/or laws). Second, strong conceivability is the test that is used to judge causal necessitation (given the lattice structures and so forth of two macro-objects impenetrable with respect to each other, it is strongly inconceivable that one could penetrate the other)...
A new and entirely unfamiliar usage of the word "clarification".