Formless wrote:Well, remember, like I said most of these arguments are rhetorically effective.
I feel that a rhetorically effective argument should at least stand up to a moment's reflection; it shouldn't fail the eight year old test.
It might not stand a
minute's reflection, let alone an hour or a week's, but it should at least not blow over in the first stiff breeze.
Liberty wrote:Oh, oh, two more!
1. If there is no god, morals are subjective, and everyone determines their own right or wrong, and we can't have that! Therefore, god.
Bleh. That's just warmed-up leftovers from the ontological argument: "I can imagine something good, therefore it must exist," with "therefore, the alternative of it not existing is unthinkable and how
dare you suggest it!" tacked on at the end.
I still like the argument from underlying natural order more, because it doesn't depend on thinking "I can imagine a better horse than the best horse that exists, therefore unicorns must be real!"
2. I know god exists because I feel his presence. He's there for me when I need him. He has changed my life, made a better person, etc. I couldn't live with out him, and I just know he exists.
Lovely.
This one is considerably better than (1), because it takes advantage of a long-standing precedent: We normally take an honest person's word for their own experiences, even their own improbable experiences. Someone tells you "a funny thing happened to me..." and regales you with the sort of bizarre story that only happens to the average person one day in five years, and you're likely to take their word for it.
Whether we can generalize that principle to
cosmically unlikely experiences is, of course, another question...