It appears Pro's argument is quite simple. It is essentially an attempt to exploit the disagreements among theists to argue that theism is invalid. Let us go through the reasoning.
1. Theists should be arguing alongside atheists in religious debates on ideas they largely agree with.
Sure. If an atheist and a theist agree on an idea, they may argue it together against someone who disagrees. I have no problem with this point.
2. They don't because they can get caught in the crossfire but that should be used for self-reflection rather than intellectual hesitation
Different theists have different ways of arguing for their specific religions that do butt heads; that is true. However, just because they advocate for different brands of theism, does not mean they contradict each other on theism itself. It is possible that theism can be argued without arguing for any specific religion.
For example, the Kalam Cosmological argument [1], or the Fine Tuning argument[2], can both be argued without the arguer revealing their brand of theism, since the arguments are used for intelligent design- not any specific designer. These are arguments that theists of all kinds can get behind.
Because they can agree on these specific points, their disagreements must be separate from these points- therefore, a theist could team up with an atheist on specific points against an opposing religion- ie, ideas they largely agree with.
3. The main conclusion of this state of affairs is that theists have already fought all the intellectual battles and concluded on stalemate, where no one religious idea can be disproven: therefore the range of religious ideas, eg in Christianity, can be vast and contradictory.
This argument from my opponent seems to be centered more on personal experience than what is going on in the world. The world's religious demographics are shifting- indicating there are still battles being fought. This is not solely due to growing secularism and birth rates from various groups, as seen in the section of my source about switching [3]. While most religious groups are declining due to switching-out, all groups experience switching-in from various groups, indicating there are still battles going on.
For every individual who converts, a battle has been won or lost. This includes battles of opposing religions. For example, Iran's Christian percentage seems to be growing [4, 5]. So I ask the question: How is it that all battles have been fought, when such demographic shifts are occurring? While some of these changes may seem small, they build up over time, and are thus worth noting.
However, lets assume for the sake of argument, that we really are in a stalemate. It is important to note that the current trends do not necessarily indicate future trends. As history shows us, the popularity of religions ebb and flow over time, occasionally being reignited by a period of revival. This does NOT mean a reversal of the current situation is not guaranteed, or becoming more likely. It simply means that the possibility should not be discarded.
This presents a logical problem for my opponent: How can we assume no future battles will be fought, with such complex variables in play? This is a gambler's fallacy (known as the "hot hand" fallacy) [6] from my opponent. Not in the traditional sense, that a "rebound" is due, but in the assumption that a rebound will never happen. By no means am I asserting that a rebound will happen. I will assert, however, that it is prudent for theists and atheists to engage freely with each other- both internally and externally, given the uncertainty of the future.
4. This lack of an epistemological framework among theist is a good argument for atheism itself.
5. Secularism bypasses this by forcing non-religious arguments. This is the way.
These points are pretty similar, I'll stick them together. They reveal the biggest sins of my opponent's argument. As the argument goes, since theists cannot all agree on a specific brand of theism, the idea of theism must be invalid. This is two fallacies combined into one bad argument.
As established, theists do have an established epistemology- it is found in arguments for intelligent design, which theists can agree upon.
Therefore, this point from my opponent is a false equivalency fallacy[7]. While theism includes many subsets (eg. Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, etc.), the subsets do not equate to theism as a whole, given that theism is far broader, and the subsets are more specific.
This is an ad hominem attack [8], for my opponent has asked the audience to disregard the arguments of theists, on the basis that they are in internal conflict. Again, the disagreements between theists do not logically invalidate theism itself. Worse yet, this ad hominem is the primary point of my opponent's argument.
To demonstrate this, I will provide examples of my opponent's entire argument used in other situations.
A. There are many factions within the Republican Party, all of which are in some disagreement. Their lack of unity indicates a lack of epistemology among them. Therefore, we should all vote for Democrats. Or Libertarians. Or X party, whatever I want to suggest. The Republicans keep eating their own!
B. There are many different types of individualist philosophies, therefore collectivism is more valid. And vice versa. The Xtivists keep eating their own, no need to pay them any attention!
C. Among truck supporters, there are many factions. You have the mudders, the lowriders, the lifted pavement princesses, and the appreciators of smaller trucks normally found in Europe. Therefore, the lack of consistent epistemology of what makes a truck better than a sedan among the various factions indicates that it is preferable to own a sedan, for truck owners are an "eating their own" type of people.
D. There are many different types of non-Christians. Because these groups cannot consistently agree with each other, they do not have a consistent epistemology. This is a strong argument for Christianity.
CITATIONS
Skimming over this, pro doesn't understand their basic BoP, and is instead opting to waste time complaining about such things as you used the word "brand" when they would not. This leaves the debate as barely more than a foregone conclusion.
I would need someone to break down the burdens in this debate to determine that. Pro seems to be shifting the goalposts a bit from what I’d understood them to be in R1. Based on your framing of the debate, which I feel is more accurate, I’d probably vote for you but most of the RFD would be about burdens and what the resolution requires Pro to defend.
If the debate ended right now, who would you give the win to?
I procrastinated. Oh well. I’ll get it in round 5.
Even without I think my opponent is totally lost.
See my R2
> Well saying it is unprovable is a way of saying it isn’t valid… but sure. Maybe you should provide examples of specific things you think are unprovable.
Godel’s incompleteness theorem is unprovable but we know it’s true. And string theory is also unprovable but the model works.
> Cause this far, your case has been that because different factions disagree, no claims are provable.
Again, they don’t just disagree on minor topics but on fundamentals such as who is god and their friends m
> Again, taking that argument and applying it anywhere else, it gets exposed.
Not really, you’re just proving my point.
> I also think it’s stupid that you’re saying that you’re not gonna bet on one side randomly getting it right. It’s not random as each side has different arguments, and even you could probably see that some are more reasonable than others, if God exists.
No religious argument is plausible - it’s why all other religions disbelieve each other.
> The first step is just to ask if the universe appears to be designed by a supreme being.
Ah, the old Paley’s Watchmaker argument. That was debunked as soon as it was published. No, the first step is to ask if the universe has rules that can be modeled. The next step is to understand the mechanisms that cause the universe to operate. Then we can figure out if there is a beginning or a cause that started it.
Maybe after exhausting all those natural questions, we can speculate if there were a sentient cause.
> Only after that do you start asking which god is God.
But there’s no need to expect it to be a single being when it’s far more plausible it’s a race of beings. And no need to invoke terms like “supreme” which have no scientific meaning.
Also, even before invoking “gods”, you have to prove the universe allows for supernatural.
> You skipped the first step entirely, saw the disagreements in the second step, and then decided the first step was never worth it.
Worse for your argument here is that you have to decide which god! And since we know gods are unprovable and worse, there is no epistemological framework to even determine truth, you’re stuck.
> This is because, you really do (specifically, your thought process) confuse theism in general with specific theistic beliefs. And I pointed this out when I called out the false equivalency
I don’t even know what ‘theism in general’ even means. Different religions conclude there is a god through many different methods. Christianity even invented their own gods. But that’s a different argument, you should address my specific argument and not tell me what I should believe and the approach I take. This is not getting anywhere and if you want to debate a totally different topic from what I am raising, I can join you in a debate.
Well saying it is unprovable is a way of saying it isn’t valid… but sure.
Maybe you should provide examples of specific things you think are unprovable.
Cause this far, your case has been that because different factions disagree, no claims are provable.
Again, taking that argument and applying it anywhere else, it gets exposed.
I also think it’s stupid that you’re saying that you’re not gonna bet on one side randomly getting it right. It’s not random as each side has different arguments, and even you could probably see that some are more reasonable than others, if God exists.
The first step is just to ask if the universe appears to be designed by a supreme being. Only after that do you start asking which god is God. You skipped the first step entirely, saw the disagreements in the second step, and then decided the first step was never worth it.
This is because, you really do (specifically, your thought process) confuse theism in general with specific theistic beliefs. And I pointed this out when I called out the false equivalency
I'm not contradicting myself. I am disagreeing with your approach. My point is that theism is provably unprovable. That's not saying it's valid or not since there's still the tiny possibility that one religion got it right.
You're getting into the weeds too much about points about about the atheist angle, whereas I'm trying to focus on the fact that theism is inherently unprovable.
Please address that specific point. Apologies if that wasn't made clear enough. This is my first debate here.
>“As I explained, I'm not specifically talking about whether theism is valid or not here.”
But also…
>“So it's clear that theists themselves have issues, in which case, atheism is the best solution:”
And,
>” 4. This lack of an epistemological framework among theist is a good argument for atheism itself. ”
The fact that you can’t even see how you’re contradicting yourself here is crazy.
I'm arguing about one thing and you are arguing about another thing.
As I explained, I'm not specifically talking about whether theism is valid or not here. And you're ignoring my examples about Christianity's differences of opinions on Jesus. Instead you're arguing about minor doctrinal differences that don't matter.
You're making up your own points rather than addressing my specific examples.
I’m not strawmanning LOL
You just have no idea what ur talking about…I am understanding your points better than you do