warpus said:
I have no problem with people talking about their beliefs. What I have a problem with is somebody backing up an argument with... nothing.
People backed up their beliefs with personal experience. This is legitimate even though it isn't scientific.
warpus said:
One of the things we're discussing is whether it'd be possible to build a machine which is sentient, correct? You're suggesting that:
"Invisible monkeys give us sentience. We would need to control invisible monkeys to be able to build a sentient machine. Oh yeah, we'll also need pink cheese. This is what I believe. There is no proof for it whatsoever, but it is my belief, so it should be a valid argument"
is a valid argument. It gets us nowhere! You can't debunk it or prove it right.
Absolutely not. I never suggested that souls make us intelligent. I never suggested that the argument 'souls = intelligence' was a valid scientific argument either.
Here is the basic structure of this confusing thread as I see it.
You: "we can create intelligence"
Others: "we can't create intelligence because souls are needed"
You: "souls aren't needed, because of X"
Me: "X will not convince Others or other believers that souls do not exist."
You: "Are you saying that the Others raised a valid argument?"
Me: "Nope, I'm saying that X will not convince Others that they are wrong."
I argued that the "thought experiment" which tried to disprove the existence of the invisible monkeys/souls was not going to convince people who believed in monkeys/souls that they do not exist. The "thought experiment" was worthless if its goal was to convince people that monkeys/souls do not exist.
warpus said:
If we're going to be participating in a non-theological discussion such as this, we better be able to back up our arguments! You can't just make up wild theories and then say "This is what I believe".. yeah.. you believe it, alright.. but how do you back this statement up? Does it get us anywhere in our discussion?
As noted earlier, this thread was never defined as a "non-theological discussion."
Regardless, I don't think anyone was "making up wild theories." Backing up personal beliefs with personal experience and opinion is legitimate. Since it's not a scientific laboratory, those statements can be made, and other people may find them useful. You and I may not. But that doesn't mean that you or I should suddenly declare this a "non-theological discussion" and ask that nothing without scientific evidence be presented.
warpus said:
Arguments without backing are worthless.
Very true. But the type of backing necessary depends upon the argument being made.
It is just as unproductive for a non-believer to challenge a believer to prove the existence of a soul through scientific evidence as it is for a believer to challenge a non-believer to disprove the existence of a soul through scientific evidence.