thelastpatriot wrote:You are both wrong.
Oh... well I'll just take your word for it then.
Seriously, if you think I'm wrong then go take a look at my first reply to you and demonstrate where my logic and reasoning is in error. Only once you've done that can you realistically turn around and say 'so you are wrong'. Anything else is just a 'nuh uh' answer and gets us nowhere.
thelastpatriot wrote:As long as there is a belief in something it will exist.
No it won't.
Belief in its existance will exist, but the thing itself will remain as fictional as ever.
Oh hang on, I just started believing that everybody is immortal and can never die; therefore it is true that people are going to live forever. Whoopee!
Seriously, your contention is entirely untenable. Even the simplest of thought experiments demonstrates it to be completely unsustainable. Why continue to fight such an unwinable battle instead of revising your original proposition?
thelastpatriot wrote:My four year old believes there is a monster in his closet. I've showed him over and over that there is not a monster in there. He keeps insisting that he's disappearing or goes through a hidden passage when we look but he is still there. Although I know that there is no monster in my sons closet to him that monster is very real. And as long as that is the case then that monster exist causing me to try to disprove it to my son and him trying to prove it to me.
So, by your logic the monster both (1) exists, and (2) does not exist, simultaneously.
Don't get me wrong, I don't for a minute deny that in your son's infant-mind the closet-monster seems very very real. But that isn't the same thing as it
actually being real, it just means that he believes that state of affairs to be the case. They're two
very very different things.
I mean, I'll happily agree with you that mere belief makes 'belief in a thing' real and that mere belief can make states of being
seem real in the mind of the believer. But neither of those conclusions actually make anything genuinely manifest... to argue such a thing breaks every rule of logic known to man (as repeatedly demonstrated in this post and the one I made previously) and would essentially give us all the powers of Gods (ironic really, to accept your argument in favour of God would also simultaneously render him irrelevant). Clearly you can't be right here.
Look, I'm being as reasonable as I possibly can here, but your philosophy on this issue is clearly untenable, logic is entirely against you, and so far you haven't been able to point out a single flaw in my arguments. Surely you have to either (1) relent entirely, or (2) revise your original position. Continuing in any other fashion will push this 'debate' into the realms of farce.