- Joined
- Aug 15, 2015
Because you said
Unless one of those books actually showed evidence of the existence of God - which I'm pretty sure I would have heard about - all of that literature, no matter how respected the individuals are, is a lot of opinion, but not an iota of evidence.
If you want to believe in God it's no skin off my back, but claiming you have evidence of God's existence is laughable.
Eh, depends what you consider evidence. Plantinga's "Victorious Ontological Argument" seems plausibly workable, provided you accept the coherence of the concept of a maximally great being and the validity of modal logic. His evolutionary argument against naturalism (not to mention Street's evolutionary argument against moral realism) would seem to provide some impetus for positing some sort of strategy for dealing with moral/epistemic nihilism. Obviously, there is no scientific evidence either way, but that is also true of any form of realism (including with respect to science and ordinary objects).
Basically, all I am saying is that it is not completely irrational to be (in some form) religious. There are reasons to be, provided you accept or are worried about certain philosophical/moral concerns. Ultimately, everything is going to depend on what you value, in terms of evidence or justified belief.
For my part, I halfway expect to die and find out that Spinoza was right the whole time.