If by that you mean, "Is there a God?" I would say probably not, but we cannot be certain.
Of course, it depends on what you mean by "God". If you mean merely something beyond the physical, it seems to me perfectly possible that something like that exists, although again it is hard to see how we could know. The physical world is just what we're capable of perceiving and understanding (in some ways). There could be something beyond that.
However, while that may be a reasonable thing to suppose, it seems to me a lot less plausible to suppose that it would be personal in any way.
Persons, as we experience them, exist in the physical world - they are physical beings that have appeared in the physical universe as a result of the operation of physical laws. So it's hard to see why, if anything non-physical exists, one would be justified in thinking that it's a person, any more than one would be justified in thinking that it's a blancmange. Of course, just because all the persons we know of are physical does not, in itself, mean that non-physical persons are impossible. On the contrary, there seems no contradiction in the supposition. But it does mean that we'd need very strong reasons to suppose that there
were a non-physical person, just as a non-physical blancmange might be conceivable but that fact alone does not make it plausible to suppose that one exists.
I think that the God of classical or Anselmian theism is unlikely to exist, but I waver in how unlikely I think it is.
Wait, how can you be a Calvinist who doesn't believe in Perseverance of the Saints? Doesn't like the whole doctrine depend on it?
Yes, as I said above the "five points" of Calvinism do seem, at least to me, to hang together. But when I said "Calvinism" in that post I meant it in the broad sense of the traditions which are influenced by Calvin rather than just five-point Calvinism.
Also, I may have asked this before (I think it was in my post that I lost) but if I did ask it, it was never answered so: I once had someone tell me they believed in Irresistable Grace but NOT Unconditional Election. Is there any logical way to hold this view? And have any theologians held it?
I just answered that, in post 695.
EDIT: I just realized that I posted two times in a row. Feel free to merge these posts, I forgot to just edit them.
I have merged the posts, but I don't think it's enormously helpful to guess what my answer to someone's question will be, and then answer it yourself... This is Ask A
Theologian!
Consequentialist ethics are not nearly as compatible with Christianity (especially Calvinism) as are Virtue Ethics or Deontology.
I'd be interested to know why you think that.
Does the Bible state in clear words different degrees of reward? (I agree they exist but I'm not sure where its found.) I do agree there are at least three (Possibly more) degrees of punishment though.
Matthew 11:21-24; Matthew 16:27; Mark 10:40; Luke 12:42-48; Luke 19:11-27; Hebrews 20:29. How "clear" you think those are will vary, of course. Because neither the authors of those books nor Jesus himself were necessarily thinking in terms that translate neatly to later Christian theology.
Also, what is consequentionalist ethics?
Consequentialism is the philosophical ethical theory that what makes an action right or wrong is its consequences. An action that results in good consequences is a good action, and one that results in bad consequences is a bad one.
There are many, many varieties of consequentialism. For example, some consequentialists think that what makes an action right or wrong is not its
actual consequences, but its
probable consequences, or perhaps the consequences that the agent expects. Some consequentialists think that each action is made right or wrong by the consequences (or expected consequences) that
that action itself has (this is called act consequentialism), but others think that each action is made right or wrong by whether it conforms to a rule,
the keeping of which has good or bad consequences (this is called rule consequentialism). Rule consequentialism has the odd result that, on this theory, it may well be the right thing to do to perform an act which has bad consequences, provided that performing that act involves adhering to a rule which overall has good consequences (e.g. following the rule "never tell a lie" may have better consequences than not following it, so one should never tell a lie, even though telling
this lie will have bad consequences). Also, some consequentialists think that there is only one right (or morally acceptable) thing to do in any given situation, namely the action which will have the best consequences; but others, known as satsificing consequentialists, think that there may be a range of morally right things to do in any given situation.
Most consequentialists are utilitarians, which means that they consider the consequentialists as objectively as possible - i.e. the best action is the one that has the best consequences
irrespective of persons. So whether the consequences are good
for me or not (as opposed to good for someone else) is irrelevant to its moral value. Again, there are many different ways in which utilitarians rank actions - i.e. they have different criteria regarding what counts as good and bad. Classic utilitarianism holds that goodness and badness consist solely of pleasure and pain, so a good action is one that produces more pleasure than pain, and a bad action is one that produces more pain than pleasure. But other utilitarians have rejected this and thought that there are other criteria for ranking consequences.
Also, I should point out the difference between Perseverance of the Saints and Eternal Security. The latter essentially says you can do what you want and still be a Chrisitan, even if you turn your back on it, you still won't lose it. Perseverance of the Saints says if you turned your back on it, its evidence that you never had it.
I can't say I see a difference at all. Under what circumstances could one of these doctrines be true and the other not?
Good point, and the example of the inverse square law of gravitational attraction is a good example, because in fact it is wrong and has been replaced by General Relativity. For most uses the old law remains an accurate approximation, but there are situations, even classical problems like the trajectory of Mercury, where it fails.
But one has to keep in mind that (if you want to stay in the realm of physics) a new theory with new "laws" must be able to reproduce the current "laws" at least as a limiting case. So a mechanism for a violation of energy conservation must be able to explain why we observe energy to be mostly conserved.
Of course, if you assume a God that can alter the laws of physics at a whim, all bets are off and anything (maybe except for the logical impossible) can happen.
Yes, these are all very good points.