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Bob Barr - ACLU and Privacy 1

Her is the full text of an article about Bob Barr's legislation (2004) concerning the privacy issues the government must observe when handling personal information:

Privacy Concerns Pushed to Front Lines
Feds must explore, explain any effect on privacy by new policies or practices, under pending legislation.

Michelle Madigan, Medill News Service

WASHINGTON--Government agencies are accustomed to assessing the environmental impact of actions when appropriate; soon, they may have to assess the impact of new policies and requirements on privacy.

Federal agencies must publish a "privacy impact analysis" when introducing new regulations, under a measure that passed the House on Monday. The bill, approved on a voice vote, would require federal agencies to conduct a fair and objective evaluation of the proposed rule's impact on personal privacy, assessing how the government would collect, maintain, and protect personal information.

The requirement will "force the government to consider privacy and the ramifications of its policy before privacy is breached," says Katie Korrigan, legislative counsel to the American Civil Liberties Union. "Once you disclose personal information, it's hard to turn the clock back."

The legislation, introduced by Representative Bob Barr (R-Georgia), still must gain Senate approval before Congress adjourns this month to become law. A similar bill, introduced in May by Senator Max Cleland (D-Georgia), is already pending in the Senate, and is being considered by the Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs.
Broad Application

Barr's legislation applies to any agency that engages in surveillance, and to any government agency that maintains databases of personal information. It imposes the privacy assessment on agencies that use tracking devices to monitor online activity; it also applies to the use of other surveillance technology, such as facial recognition software, video cameras in public places, and cameras that monitor traffic intersections.

"Too often privacy is an afterthought in the development of policy," says the ACLU's Korrigan, calling the bill "a moderate and balanced approach to address the issue."

In addition, the bill would apply to global position satellite technologies that can be used to monitor a range of personal public and private activity.

"We need to be concerned about the impact of these technologies on privacy," says Lee Tien, senior counsel at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Agencies need to "step back and take a count of the privacy costs they are inflicting on people."
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Possible Candidates for a Conservative Leadership

I haven't done a whole lot of research today about who conservatives might rally around, but here's a preliminary list:
Charles Baldwin, Presidential nominee of the Constitutional Party
Amb. Alan Keyes
Rep. Jeff Flake-R, Arizona
Rep. Ron Paul-R, Texas (Republican candidate)
Sen. Mike Gravel-R, Alaska (Libertarian candidate)
Rep. Robert Barr-R, Georgia (Libertarian candidate)
Rep. Duncan Hunter-R, California
Gov. Sarah Palin-R, Alaska
Sen. James Inhofe-R, Oklahoma

In addition, I have discovered a little known (at least to me) caucus, the Republican Liberty Caucus, which on first glance seems to be a collection of conservative/libertarians in all levels of government, from the Congress down to state legislators.
http://www.rlc.org/

This is just a starting point from which we might discuss the relative merits and demerits of the above, in addition to any others people here may suggest.

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Bob Barr '08???


I was impressed with Bob Barr when he was a congress-critter from Georgia, and am leaning strongly toward him, should he get the Libertarian Party nod.  As a “three-leg” conservative, I am bothered by the Libertarian Party’s lack of a consistent social philosophy, and by the “head-in-the-sand” neo-isolationist stance taken by some (though certainly not all) Libertarians with respect to national security.  On fiscal matters, though, I can’t say that I’ve ever met a Libertarian I didn’t like, and Barr strikes me as strong on the social and national security elements.

Here’s my problem: Since leaving office, he has worked with the ACLU. Extensively. 

This bothers me a great deal, and gives me real pause. I honestly don’t know whether to trust this guy or not, JUST because of the ACLU connection.

Any thoughts on Bob Barr’s reliability as a conservative, in light of his ACLU ties, would be greatly appreciated. 

Thanks, ya’ll.  

Tags: election  
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A New Mission: Third Party in '08


The Blogatorium has a new mission: To serve as a forum for disenchanted conservatives who cannot in good conscience support John McCain, and want to use their vote wisely and effectively in November.

This endeavor is predicated on the following assumptions:

1. That the GOP has abandoned conservatism, and that conservatives are consequently under no moral, ethical, or other obligation to support the so-called “lesser of two evils.”

2.  That no true conservative would willingly and enthusiastically support John McCain.

3. That the basic tenets of conservatism are accurately reflected in the “three-legs” model (social, fiscal, and national security), and that a true conservative will embrace all three.

4. That conservatives may, however, differ on the application of each “leg,” particularly with respect to questions of faith, and should respect each others’ right to do so.

5. That with unprecedented turmoil in both major parties, there has never been a better time to galvanize and mobilize conservative support for a viable, third-party candidate.

6. That compromise is often necessary in politics, but that there comes a time when compromise becomes counterproductive and even suicidal.

7. That the GOP, in making an abusive and manipulative “case” for John McCain, is asking conservatives to put party over principle and to help the GOP destroy the conservative movement.

8. That, in consequence of the aforementioned, a forum should exist wherein conservatives may discuss, debate, and compare the various third-party candidates.

9. That conservatives should, as much as possible, throw their support to ONE third-party candidate, en masse, in order to facilitate a strong showing in November, and future election victories.

Anyone who agrees with at least numbers one through four is welcome to participate. I’ll then do my best to explain why I believe you embrace all nine. (Unlike the GOP of late, which has grown into an oversized schoolyard bully, I will do so with respect for both the person and intellect of all concerned.) 

Since there are any number of fora in which liberals and others can voice their opinions, I will be frank in stating that it is not their input which is here being solicited. I respect the opinions of those who disagree, and over at TH I’m glad to debate and discuss virtually any issue with them.

The purpose of this forum, however, is to allow conservatives a place to choose a party and candidate, and then go forth to campaign on that candidate’s behalf.

Think of this as the Conservatives’ Nominating Convention. Here we can discuss, debate, and decide—and then focus our efforts to make sure that our votes in November have the greatest possible impact on this and future elections.

Anyone interested in becoming a full contributor to the Blogatorium should email me at normanloquendiATyahoo.com. I think it would be great to have as many people as possible posting at length, rather than being limited to the 2,000 character comment limit.

I warmly welcome and encourage the fullest possible input of all articulate, thoughtful, true conservatives.

Together, we can reclaim our country. 

I hope that you’ll join us.

Tags: election  
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Back to our Regular Programming . . .

Little Pig and I have concluded our series of exchanges on the whole God business.  I have thanked him privately, but wish to extend my appreciation publicly for his willingness to debate a difficult and important topic. 

We now return to our regularly scheduled programming . . .

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Pay no attention to that turtle behind the curtain!

After giving your post a couple of reads, Norman, I can't help but think I've already sufficiently addressed your concerns and that now we are circling on the same propositions and starting to repeat ourselves.  Repeating the same questions is not the same as rebutting the answers.  But I will try to clarify a couple of things.

"Math Problem: If a turtle runs the length of an infinitely long racetrack in 7 days, how fast was he traveling?" or "The Devil is in the details."

Norman, you say my concentration on the chronology of turtles is a distraction.  However, I have to respectfully disagree.  We are comparing turtles to see which one provides the most logical explanation of our universe.  The chronology of the turtles is a major element to that explanation.  It would be a turtle of another color if God came into being, and especially if God came into being AFTER matter came into being.  You say that your first principle is 'God did it.'  If you think about that a little more carefully, I think you will see that your first principle is actually that 'God eternally is.'  THEN God 'did it,' apparently after an infinite sequence of other things.  So the chronology is a significant element to your presupposition, one that needs to be considered, not ignored.

Theists do not explicitly say that God performed an infinitely long list of acts prior to creating our universe.  But that is the implication of saying that God is and has existed forever, unless you mean that 'forever' to be a single, timeless moment prior to creating us.  And the latter option is not one that theists I have spoken with feel comfortable in asserting.  Although this infinite regression is a feature of theism, it is one that theists often ignore or quickly dismiss out of frustration when it is recognized by children in Sunday school.  It is a problem of infinite regression of serial 'moments,' not a regression of turtles or a shifting set of first principles.

There are ways to avoid the infinite regression of past, sequential events, both with a god and with material as the first principle or turtle.  If you need me to be clearer about that, I can.  If necessary, I can present a material explanation or turtle that avoids the regression, is more elegant, AND is more logical than a god turtle.  It would probably take one small post to do so.

You also mention that my first principle 'that's just how it is' is essenitally content-free, the Diet Coke of turtles.  That's because the statement 'that's just how it is' is itself simply an acknowledgment that ultimately some turtle does not require further explanation, and from a non-theist view it would be the material of this universe.  So the content of my turtle is some construction of material process.  Saying that 'material just is' would be no more vacuous than 'God just is.'  I have not yet actually described a particular turtle to compete with God.  There are many possibilities, and God seems to be the least workable of all of them.  I personally see no reason to promote any of the other turtles as the Truth since they are all constructed solely from human imagination, are not specifically required by anything humans experience, and so are not necessarily THE actual explanation.  So my turtle isn't exactly content-free.  I simply make room for a variety of contenders.

So not only is the chronology issue NOT a distraction, it is probably the biggest stumbling block your turtle could ever encounter, self-contradiction.  Infinities cannot be numbered, and the 'days' of the past are numbered, else we wouldn't have finished them to move on into the 'present.'  Another way to say it is that you can't finish a journey you don't actually start.  The God you propose, your first principle, cannot be infinitely old AND in the present.  Let me know if you need me to clarify this.

"I AM who I AM, uhm... who AM I?" or "God can do it anyway it likes"

The attributes often attributed to God by theists provide, at best, only a very WEAK explanation for the nature of our universe.  This is in part because those attributes are not well defined and are often presented in contradictory ways (God is immutable but has temporal experiences, God is loving but will kill most of humanity, God is logical/reasonable but is itself one and three at the same time, etc., etc., etc....mysteries, paradoxes, not clear first principles).  Theologians over the centuries have quibbled endlessly about the actual atributes of God and how those attributes play out together.  You object to shifting scientific notions as a basis for knowledge while cherry-picking a single definition for God from the many in a long line of shifting definitions. 

And you have to be careful about cherry-picking match-ups between God and the universe (correlating some attributes and not others as 'meaningful' or 'informative') because other people can do it too.  Is the universe a place of Justice or Injustice?  Is our universe a place of Love or Violence?  You see, this game can work both ways.  You can argue for or against God as the creator solely from its attributes.  You can even arrive at the conclusion that God is an evil monster because the universe seems cold and monstrous.

Not only are the attributes vague and contradictory, they are causally disconnected from the creation of the universe.  The attributes don't determine the shape of our universe, God's arbitrary preferences do that.  You could say that God's attributes influence its preferences, but that doesn't lead us to a particular universe prediction, much like the characteristics of our universe do not help us back-track to a particular God prediction (which is the point of using presuppositional models in the first place). There are many ways God could have chosen to make the universe.  This particular creation is not an identifiable 'signature' of a particular set of God attributes.  The claim that it is borders on being a full-blown non sequitur. Who knows the mind of God, eh?

You might say that a weak explanation is better than none at all.  For example, the Bible says that the reason we have female human beings is because God saw that Adam needed a companion.  What that actually means, I'll leave to the theologians.  But you could argue that God is the best explanation for our universe since the larger theory of God and creation provides an explanation for why there are women.  And that is supposedly better than having no theory at all, right?  It fills a hole in our worldview, so it should be accepted, right?  That sounds a little silly, especially considering the rather powerful explanation that has only come in recent times: humans evolved from other sexual reproducers, and sexual reproduction probably evolved and was selected because it allowed for more genetic variation and adaptation in a population.  Or will any old story do?

IMO it is a sloppy argument, not a cogent one, that says contradictory and vague definitions of a God of inscrutable will REQUIRE that a universe come in a particular form when it could have come in any form.  And a weak explanation is not necessarily 'good enough.'

"She's got her daddy's eyes" and "God is bigger than words"

Norman, you say that I misrepresent Theism by claiming that the theist's notion of God is anthropomorphic, but (surpise, surpise) I'm going to have to disagree with you.

I myself used to be a 'card-carrying' theist who held to such anthropomorphic notions.  Not only did I grow up in the Protestant tradition, I was a missionary for some time in Mexico.  My wife is from the Catholic tradition, and I have talked to Mormons and Muslims and Jews and Greek Orthodoxers, so I think I've been exposed to most of Christendom and even a broader range of theists and have listened to their thinking about God.

I do not propose anything so crude as to say that most theists today see God as the ancient Greeks did.  Nor am I saying that God is necessarily man's invention (though this is what I think).  The similarities between God and humans may be from God making man in its own image and not vice versa. But theists clearly describe God in terms of having a mind, personality, and motivations very similar to humans.  Statements to that effect litter the pages of the Bible, and sometimes God even literally takes human form. 

Typically theists, when pressed, will claim that these attributes are merely metaphors to explain an unexplainable God.  This is understandable, and it avoids a lot of the absurdities that come from truly trying to imagine God as literally described.  But remember that your argument for God being the best turtle assumes that these attributes are accurate descriptions of God, at least to the degree that you can make predictions from them.  Your arguments are based on anthropomorphic qualities of God.  The more they are metaphor, the less reliable they are as literal descriptions.  I personally would feel a little queasy making arguments about the origin of the universe from over-analyzed metaphors.

Anyway, I think that covers the important stuff.  If we need another round of posts to clarify other details, let me know.

Cheers and beers.

- L.Pig.
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Ultimate Turtle 3: The God Factor


I don’t see the usefulness of this source/chronology distinction.  It strikes me as a distraction (although I do not at all believe that Little Pig intended it as such--quite the contrary, I'm sure).  The question at hand involves each side’s identifying its presuppositions.  I do not see that this distinction, or what follows in Little Pig's post, in any way clarifies the discussion. (In addition, the description of God provided by Little Pig is not one that I endorse; I am not aware of theists—certainly not Christians—who hold to an anthropomorphic conception of God.  The ancient Greeks certainly did this, but that was some time ago.  That is common misconception among non-theists, but it is certainly not the view advanced by Christian Scripture.  Since Little Pig has here begun from a false conception of what theists believe, what follows in his disquisition is largely erroneous.  I don't doubt that he was arguing in good faith, but advancing a debate based on a false premise is rarely advisable.  So, I can either spend a few blog entries correcting such misconceptions, or I can remain focused on the issue—which is, again, whose presuppositions are more defensible? I choose the latter.)

The theist’s first principle, aka his answer to ultimate questions, is “God did it.”  That is my position.

Little Pig’s first principle, aka hi answer to ultimate questions, is “That’s just the way it is.”

So, the only relevant issue is to determine which of these is the more logically defensible.

Although, due to the misconceptions inherent in Little Pig’s casting of the theistic worldview, providing a blow-by-blow response would divert us from the topic at issue, I do want to make specific reference to Little Pig’s 1A.Cons, in which he claims that the theist view “[r]uns into the logical problem of infinite regression.”

This is precisely and exactly the opposite of the truth.  Even if one does not believe in God, it remains nonetheless true that asserting the existence of an all-powerful, all-knowing, and all-good God, who created literally everything, is not subject to this particular objection.  As matter of fact, Little Pig has mislabeled one of the theistic worldviews greatest STRENGTH’S as a weakness. 

The problem of infinite regression, as understood in both philosophy and science, is precisely the problem of “first principles” or “answers to ultimate questions” that we’ve been talking about all along. A system or method that suffers from infinite regression is one in which the starting point for an inquiry keeps changing, where each foundational presupposition requires another, and another, and another, ad infinitum.

This is precisely the case for “that’s just the way it is,” for any number of reasons. First, who’s to say that things are this way or that way? Light waves vs. light beams. Gravity vs. relativity. Second, “that’s just the way it is” is what is called an “empty conception.” There is not “there” there. It is a sufficiently vacuous statement as to have inspired a popular song that I used to listen to on construction sites in upstate New York (“That’s just the way it is.” FILL IN). 

Lest this appear to be some sort of ad hominem or straw man argument, allow me to stress the more substantive point that because “that’s just the way it is” is explicitly and necessarily devoid of content (no matter how strongly Little Pig may wish it were otherwise) it’s a cosmological Rorschach Test; it validates every viewpoint, and hence none.  It is thus fundamentally at odds with inquiry of any sort.  It may sound appealing in its ecumenical pragmatism, but like a sports car with a Yugo engine, it’s not going to do much once the proverbial rubber hits the road.

Furthermore, it is the “that’s just the way it is” view that suffers from infinite regression.  “That’s just the way it is” will always unavoidably base its inquiries on the latest bit of information or (hopefully informed) opinion, be it scientific, moral, aesthetic, or what have you.  There is no way around this. No matter how sophisticated the latest, greatest starting point may seem, it will remain precisely the “latest, greatest” thing. Does this make it right? Hardly. “Moving target” would be more like it.

So what is it that give this “moving target” substance?  Why does the non-theist even believe in the reality of his own inquiries?  Why does he assume that he is living in a real world, rather than in a dream? How does he know that he is not, in Hilary Putnam’s famous Cartesian one-liner, “a brain in a vat” (think “The Matrix” except the pods have only brains in them, rather than comatose bodies).

Why does the non-theist bother to study natural phenomena, such as light and sound, without any assurance that they will not change?  Even my favorite atheist philosopher, David Hume, claimed that reason could provide nothing like assurance in such questions, and that the belief—e.g.—that the sun would rise tomorrow is simply a habit, derived from experience.  There is no rational basis for the belief at all.

Thus, I submit that the reason is that the non-theist piggybacks (speaking of turtles) on the theist’s worldview.  

The non-theist cannot explain the consistency and uniformity of the world, yet uses it as a presupposition.  This is an illegitimate inference born of an illicit assumption. The illicit assumption is that the future will resemble the past, and illegitimate inference which issues from it is that simply accepting the world as it appears (aka “that’s just the way it is”).

To sum up, “that’s just the way it is” suffers from both infinite regression and its illicit assumption that the future will resemble the past.  The former invalidates it as a suitable starting point, and the latter reveals the non-theist’s reliance on the assumptions of a theistic worldview. To put this another way, God is the condition for the possibility of knowledge. To put it still another way, “that’s just the way it is” is a good 20-30 “turtles” up the pile from the ultimate turtle on which it stands.

That ultimate turtle (may He forgive me to saying so!) is, of course, God. The non-theistic turtle stands on a turtle who stands on a turtle who stands on a turtle . . . who stands on God.

Little Pig was right that ultimate you simply have to assume a starting point and get going. The question at issue here is whether “God did it” or “that’s just the way it is” offers the more logical foundation. As I have tried to show here, not only does “God did it” offer the more logical foundation, “God did it” offers the foundation for “that’s just the way it is,” some 20-30 turtles up the pile.
 
*********************************
 
Now, per previous agreement between me and Little Pig, Little Pig will have the final word on this particular topic. 
 
I'll then move on to the next part of Little Pig's original blog entry, on which he will then have the final word, and so on.  There haven't been any comments so far, to the best of my knowledge, which may be due either to everyone's paying rapt attention or due to the fact that no one is reading.  Either way, a comment or two would be appreciated (if only to assure the "gladiators" that they are not shedding their blood, sweat, and tears before an empty Colosseum.)
 
I will be on the road for the next week or so, but will try to keep the conversation going while I'm gone.  Cheers!
 
Thanks again to Little Pig for agreeing to take part.
 
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Oh waiter, there's a fly in my turtle soup...

Norman's objections to my objection #1: "My Turtle Can Beat Up Your Turtle" or "The Unsatisfying Ultimate Answer"

~ Norman ~
"So, my summary reply to Objection One is that the non-theist's "that's just how it is" is profoundly unsatisfying as either a basis of inquiry, or as an answer to ultimate questions.  Furthermore, the non-theist surrepticiously (and often unconsciously) borrows from the theist's worldview, without acknowledging the debt."


That's a pretty broad judgment, and I think much of it comes down to a subjective, almost aesthetic evalutation.  But let's take a look at each of those parts a bit closer.  I'll start with the unsatisfying ultimate answer and then go to the basis of inquiry.  The 'debt to theists' objection seems to really belong to the next big objection on abstractions which I'll try and deal with further down.

For starters, when I say 'that's just how it is,' I don't mean to be simplistic and dismissive of the ultimate questions.  But at some point there seems to be a need for a final turtle, and whichever one it is, well that's just how it is, whether that be material or God or whatever.  At some point something requires no further 'explanation' (mapping of causes).  Something IS, and that's that.  It is also possible that EVERYTHING IS (all possible scenarios somewhere), and that's that.  And that's just how it is.  IMO anyway.

So let's start comparing these turtles and see how they stack up.

As I see it, in the context of this discussion, there is a simple matrix of ultimate answers to the ultimate cosmological question of where IT all came from.  One dimension would be the actual source (God/Spirit/Mind vs Material) and the other dimension would be the chronology (eternal vs temporal).  And each answer can come in a variety of sub-flavors with ample support for turtles of all kinds.  There are probably more complete ways of representing all the options available, but I think focusing on these two aspects of possible scenarios and not others is useful for the purpose of theism vs non-theism.

1A. God/s (spirit/mind?) has always been and created everything.
This would be the traditional theist position.  Typically the god in question is defined in a very anthropomorphic way and is at least as complicated in nature as a human, but in most scenarios seems to be of such vast intellect, wisdom, power, etc. as to make it unimaginably complex.

PROS
Provides a causative label that can be applied to everything (material AND abstractions). 
CONS
Runs into the logical problem of infinite regression.  This causes God to act as container idea for another turtle problem, but one that would seem to forever trap God in the past due to the impossible (?) task of completing an infinite series of past 'moments.'  Sometimes this idea is camoflouged by the attempt to claim that God exists 'outside' of Time, but that is a very problematic notion in its own right.


1B. God/s (spirit/mind?) came into being (no prior cause) and created everything.


PROS
Provides a causative label that can be applied to everything (material AND abstractions).  It also avoids the infinite regression problem.
CONS
The intuitive discomfort around something coming from nothing only increases as the 'something' becomes more complex.  The jump from 'nothing' becomes a bigger one, and the jump from 'nothing' to something of infinite(?) complexity feels like a yawning chasm.


2A. Something (material) has always been and is the source of all that now is.

PROS
Provides a causative label that can be applied to everything (material - the source of abstractions).
CONS
Runs into the same logical problem of infinite regression that God does.  However, it is much easier to contrive 'out-of-Time' solutions to this problem than with a God whose anthropomorphic nature seems to forbid an exit from serial infinity.


2B. Something (material) came into being (no prior cause) and is the source of all that now is.

PROS
Provides a causative label that can be applied to everything (material - the source of abstractions).  It avoids the infinite regression problem.
CONS
Something coming from nothing will always give us a tingle of discomfort, no matter how small the 'something.'  But the something in question here (energy, maybe taking 'shape' as 'strings' with a few variable attributes allowing near infinite recombinations leading to humongous amounts of complexity all by its lonesome) is quite small, almost invisibly so, compared to the ginormously complex something called 'God.'  And there is no Law that I know of that would preclude something ULTIMATELY coming 'from' nothing.  It is simply an idea that feels very...weird.  But, as physics continues to suggest, weird is not necessarily wrong.


If I had to rank the turtles at this point, my favorite is 2A (with a little 'finagling,' all turtle discomfort can be avoided), then 2B (only a small amount of weirdness), followed by 1B (weirdness to the power of 'infinity'), and 1A bringing up the rear (illogical, Captain...).

So let's move on to the 'unsatisfying as a basis of inquiry' objection.  Honestly, I'm not exactly sure what is meant by that statement.  Rather than address the wrong objection in a case of mistaken strawman identity, I figure the best way to proceed is to answer some of your other related statements in a 'scattergun' approach.

~ Norman ~
"This position has overarching cosmological implications; it explains life, the universe, and everything in one fell swoop (or "one swell foop" as Dr. Spooner would say).  The existence of an omnipotent God makes everything fall into place from the scientific perspective.  It does not preclude rational discussion, but rather provides the best possible framework for it, since it provides a common point of reference, an entire 'worldview.'"


As noted before, the proposition of God does not so much 'explain' (map the causes of) the origin of the universe as it assigns a causative label to it.  For example, you could ask how life came to be.  A darwinist could say, 'It evolved.'  If that statement is the extent of his evolutionary theory, with no more detail than that, then no satisfying explanation has been given because there would seem to be many sub-level steps/causes involved.  Similarly, to explain the origin of 'all that is' simply by saying God created it is not to supply an explanation.  That is simply supplying a causative label.  We leave the conversation no wiser as to how any of this was done or how the 'supernatural' (whatever that is really supposed to mean) interacts with the 'natural.'

I'm not sure how God is supposed to provide a framework for the scientific perspective.  If that is a reference to the problem of abstractions, I'll get to that later.  If a fully fleshed out worldview is needed for scientific investigation, I think we may all be in trouble.  All our worldviews are incomplete, and I don't see how choosing one turtle over another will make any difference as to what 'laws' of nature we perceive.  And I don't see how a theistic position would alter or enhance any of our current science.  In the Christian version of theism, the Bible is regularly defended as a NON-scientific text.  And theism is regularly combined with Evolution without altering the Evolution side whatsoever.  In that scenario, God isn't always even directly necessary for Life.  If there is anything Christianity would change about science, it would be that there is another class of phenomena called 'miracles' or 'the supernatural' which have a relationship with natural phenomena that is not yet understood.  And I don't see anyone pursuing that angle with any seriousness.

The scientific method seems to be a good approach to discovering truths of limited scope about the universe.  These truths can be expanded as our ability to examine ever larger contexts improves.  Although knowing that ultimate turtle would give us the biggest context of all, giving that turtle a name and, at most, a vague description doesn't seem to affect what scientists do or what they find.

~ Norman ~
Conversely, the claim that "that's just how it is" is NOT a cosmological one.  Not only does it not provide an overarching framework, it indeed leaves anyone inquiring into the nature of things at an impasse.  If one is content with the proposition "things just are the way they are," one has already adopted a radically "pragmatic" standpoint, inherently antithetical (and perhaps even antipathetical) to theory of any sort.


Actually "that's just how it is" is not meant to be the actual turtle, only the floor that the final turtle stands on.  Although we would all like to know what that final turtle is, it doesn't make sense (IMO) to claim it is one thing or another without some observation/experience that requires such a claim.  IMO there are many possibilities.  I have some favorites, but I don't have to place faith in any one in particular to continue a cosmological investigation.  However, we may indeed be at an impasse on that last turtle.  I personally think we always will be at an impasse because all our tools of observation and measurement require something which may prevent us from poking our heads out of some particular turtle in the stack: Time.  This may indeed be a pragmatic observation, but it does not seem 'inherently antithetical (and perhaps even antipathetical) to theory of any sort.'  Arbitrarily inventing a final turtle without any good reason seems, if anything, 'antipathetical to theory' since it establishes a turtle as truth without verification or support of any kind.

~ Norman ~
Perhaps I am over-stating things, though.  Perhaps the intent is for "that's just how it is" to be a reply only to "ultimate" questions such as "Why is there morality?" or "What is the source of the laws of logic?"  Indeed, that is probably a better (and certainly more charitable) way of reading it.  Even then, this is ultimately unworkable because, as already noted, it provides no grand framework, no means of unifying diverse disciplines under anything like "universal" knowledge.  Indeed, the "crisis of reason" that Western intellectuals have been discussing for over a century coincides almost precisely with the collapse of widespread religious belief among the intelligensia.  God is, among other things (indeed, EVERYthing) the source of reason, so this should come as no surprise.


I don't see how God makes diverse disciplines any more unified than they would be without God.  If the material universe is unified/harmonious in its composition, that in itself would be a source of unity in the disciplines that study it.  And placing God in one's worldview doesn't seem to help us out of whatever epistemological pit that perceptually limited subjectivity creates for us.  Many leaps of faith must be launched to land on the shore of Christian theism even after one accepts a god into their worldview.  And once that landing is made, the view of the heavens is only further clouded by many mysterious wings of angels and other personalities.  Christianity thrives more on mystery than explanation, more on fog than clarity (IMO, of course).

~ Norman ~
Additionally, I don't think that any scientist actually thinks this way (although, as a non-scientist, I may be wrong about that).  Scientists are always looking for the next "turtle" on which the one they already know about is "standing."


Exaclty.  And I don't think they find that next turtle by choosing what it will be before they have any clue what it is.  The closest they come to that is through modeling complex systems, a process similar to your presuppositional apologetics where 'best fit' is meant to win.

~ Norman ~
There is nothing objectionable about this, of course, and one of the creation myths I've ever read is "The Big Bang."  It may be true, but even The Big Bang is nothing more than the ultimate "turtle," one that can stand on itself.  Here again, the non-theist view fails cosmologically, as it cannot give any further answer, other than "that's just how it is."  It seems quite pragmatic, but is not an effective foundation for anything.


There's no reason to think the Big Bang is the last turtle.  There has actually been some suggestion that we may be able to 'look' at conditions that led up to it.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/07/070702084231.htm

The ultimate explanation does not serve as the foundation for science.  Empirical observation is that foundation, as I believe it is for all human understanding, even all the subjective claims of 'relationships' with God.  When it comes to God, theists can give no further answer because God is 'just how it is.'  The last turtle is where the buck stops, and it serves as the ultimate explanation (assuming we understand it or have enough information to actually understand something).  Nothing more is necessary.  But science starts at the other end and works its way out toward that ultimate turtle.  It doesn't start with the ultimate turtle and come back around full circle.

~ Norman ~
But there's a lot more to it than just that.  The Christian understanding of these fields also permits an explanation for the regularity and predictability of each of them.  I have yet to hear a thorough, persuasive, non-theistic explanation for why laws of logic and mathematics exhibit such amazing precision and regularity.  Saying "that's just how it is" may seem good enough to explain today, but what about tomorrow, or yesterday?  Why do these laws not change?  After all, just about everything else does.  Apply this to the laws of physics.  Why should we not have "heavy" gravity days--when even a walk to the corner store is an ordeal--and "light" days--when we all feel like Carl Lewis (showing my age there, eh?)?  Some days are rainy, and some are sunny.  The weather changes.  Why not gravity, or the laws of thermodynamics?


I have yet to hear a thorough, persuasive, THEISTIC explanation for why laws of logic and mathematics exhibit such amazing precision and regularity. I don't see a connection between these and the Christian God other than a claimed connection.  If anything, the universe seems to be founded upon a different logic than that of the proposed God who can either have an infinite past or act while 'frozen' in a time-less state, both of which seem to defy our logic.  I'll go into detail more on the abstraction objection below.

Why do our laws do not change on a regular basis?  Well, if things behave the way they do (follow such-and-such law) because of WHAT they are, then doing something different or random would require that the object in question change into something different or constantly change in a random fashion.  In a causal system, this would require a great many more causes than not changing at all which would essentially require no cause.  I don't think it requires a God to keep things from changing randomly all by themselves.  Now maybe if we lived in a universe created by a God who brought itself into existence or suddenly started its own Time clock or continued to change itself randomly, we would expect the universe it created to go around changing itself since theists correlate the characteristics of this universe with those of the creator.  This question assumes that effects regularly cause themselves in this universe (which is contrary to experience).  If such is the case, it might be that no god is needed to explain this material effect we see today.

That is:

if (no God = anti-persistence [not to be confused with anti-perspirant])
and if (anti-persistence = auto-causation [and these admittedly may not be fully equivalent terms])
then (no God = viable and most elegant turtle of all)

~ Norman ~
The point is that the theist has a basis not merely for explaining why the world is the way it is; he can also has a basis for projecting his knowledge into the future.  Since the laws of logic, mathematics, and physics--among others--have their basis in God's very nature, the theist's knowledge of God's unchanging nature explains why these laws are immutable.  The non-theist can really use these laws, but when he assumes that they will be the same tomorrow as they are today, he is at best projecting from past (limited) human experience into the future.  In so doing, he is borrowing from the theist's worldview, and in this case from the Christian worldview specifically.


Claiming that the universe has the characteristics it has because God has those same characteristics seems something of a non sequitur.  However, claiming that God chose to create the universe that way for whatever reason would not be.  However, it would merely be a claim.  I think the theist should be careful about claiming that God could not have created the universe in any other way because that impacts later discussions of Free Will, and it almost reduces God to 'nature.'  If anything the Christian God seems anti-mathematical (a 3-person godhead = 1 God and is a monotheistic concept), anti-logical (already addressed), and anti-physical in its supernatural nature, whatever that is.  So holding to a concept of God seems to be of no help in these disciplines that non-theists supposedly can't practice on their own.

~ Norman ~
There has never been a society of non-theists.  There is a good reason for this.  Human beings are cosmological by nature, which is to say that we want, indeed NEED, answers to ultimate questions.  We need to know who we are, where we came from, and why we are.  No society will long endure without a sense of self born of a common identity.  Everyone has a "god," or perhaps "totem" is a better word.  A person who does not worship God will worship something else, most often himself in one form or another.  As science fragments into innumerable sub-disciplines, under the pressure of both specialization and the ongoing crisis of reason, there is less and less binding knowledge together.  Knowledge is sought for the sake of knowledge, and ultimately becomes a game--a species of "turf protection." ....


There is more that follows, but it didn't seem to be an argument I needed to address.  I half expect you aren't really meaning what this argument sounds like.  What we emotionally NEED as humans is hardly a good way to determine what that last turtle is.  Humans have historically shown some poor tendencies in their thinking, and that's why we struggle to master rule systems (logic) to clean up our thinking.  We are terribly prone to magical thinking, and I suspect that sort of sloppy cause-effect connecting has led to the creation of many superstitions.  This also happens in animals who, like us, will tend to associate things by chronological immediacy rather than reasoned causality.  Human beings also tend to explain things based on what they already know.  This is something that artists do all the time when they use metaphors.  In the attempt to satisfy our curiosity about the world and establish a narrative and context for our lives, we have created many interesting and obviously metaphorical explanations based on what we know best, ourselves.  I suspect that is why we anthropomorphize everything, and it might be why our gods are all 'people' or 'animal-people.'

So my summary reply to your objections toward non-theist turtles is that you are claiming answers to unnecessary questions and not properly evaluating real isues surrounding the theist turtle.  In some circles this might be called 'padding your resume.'

Norman's objections to my objection #2: "But for the will of God, turtles would be hares, dogs and cats would be living together... mass hysteria!" or "Without God, Chaos would reign." or something like that...

~ Norman ~
It is true that "law" is a name applied to observed phenomenon, but I think that this is more a linguistic squabble than a substantive one.  One can easily reframe the issue to ask how it is that a non-theist can explain why light, e.g., behaves in a certain way, or why the denial of a false proposition is always true (law of the excluded middle).  As noted in the previous objection, the non-theist can also not explain why these laws persist, rather than changing (like the weather or the seasons).


I did say it was a subtle argument, and I think it is much more than linguistic.  But now you aren't requiring an explanation for the existence of Laws and abstractions.  You are asking for an explanation of consistency in 'that which is' from one moment to the next (persistence).  We have switched the question from why ALL light behaves similarly to why all light CONTINUES to behave similarly.  I've already addressed this basic question above with the solution that 'inconsistency' requires more causality and 'consistency' requires no causality.

~ Norman ~
I actually agree with Little Pig's claim that 'stuff' and 'law' in this case mean very much the same thing.  Consequently, I believe that this objection falls short for the same reason as the first objection, viz. that the non-theist can give a best a descriptive, rather than a normative, account for the things that are.  Heck, the non-theist doesn't even have any theoretical basis to trust his senses.  How can the non-theist know that he is really seeing what he is seeing?  What reason does he have to believe that the world around him has any basis in "reality' at all?  For that matter, what is "reality"?


As noted above, the theist causative label does not give a better normative account than non-theist labels.  Attributing the characteristics of this universe to the Christian God is, at best, a non sequitur and, at worst, contradictory.

And non-theists do have a 'theoretical' basis for trusting their senses, for the most part anyway.  There are theories that explain the non-supernatural workings of our senses and how they relate to the physical world around us.  Of course, trusting our senses and empirical observation in general is axiomatic and beyond full substantiation for everyone. This is another turtle game for everybody, theists included. I have often heard theists claim that this 'world' is not real, or at least as real as God's reality.  This would seem to suggest that some theists very much believe they cannot trust their senses, at least not when it contradicts dogma.

I promised to address abstractions a bit more, so I'll try and do that here. 

Math.  I hate math.  But it's awfully useful because it helps us to understand our universe. It helps us because it describes the relationships of quantities, i.e. abstractions (rules) about abstractions (groups/sets) that correspond to many facets of the interaction of multiple, discrete objects in our universe.  Like other laws and abstractions, math flows from objects themselves.  If there was no apparent discreteness at some level of our reality, would we have discovered the math that we now have?  Is a god required for us to have math?  Well, not unless a god is required for the existence of 'stuff.'  Math, like logic, is constructed from axioms that cannot be proven.  We have axioms because they are 'observed' empirically.  a=b, b=c, a=c. A cannot be A and not-A. From axioms come theorems.  We can change the axioms and build self-consistent systems of theorems, but when the axioms no longer match observation, I think the theorems also get out of whack.

So laws, abstractions, math, logic, physics, etc. are actually our efforts to describe things and their interactions.  They do not exist in and of themselves and require no extra explanation.  What requires explanation is 'stuff.'

Norman's objections to my objection #3: "Romancing the Infinity" or "Humans are only able to perceive infinity because God made it to be so."

~ Norman ~
Infinity is a tough one.  It's possible that man got the idea of infinity from staring at the ocean, but I don't think so.  Animals stare at the ocean, too, but when they do so, they're usually looking for food.  Why do WE look at the ocean differently?  I believe that the most reasonable explanation is that our longing for infinity comes from our innate intuition of divinity.


That may be so, but I'm not sure how you arrive at that particular conclusion or why you would preclude the possibility that humans, when looking at something inconceivably vast (i.e. the ocean, sands on the seashore, the stars) could develop a concept of something uncountable, unlimited, beyond the imagination.  That seems a very reasonable explanation needing nothing supernatural.  You imply that there is some significance in the difference between our own imaginations and that of other animals.  I agree that our imaginations are much more powerful than other animals and that we use abstractions in a much more complicated way, but I don't see how that means we intuit divinity.

Personally, I don't even 'believe' in infinities.  It is a concept useful in math, but I think that infinity represents unbounded POTENTIAL and not the ACTUAL.  'Everything that is' (IMO) is actually finite.  If any THING in our universe was infinite, it would infinitely overwhelm all of that which is finite when interacting with it.  Infinities are just too infinite to play nice.

~ Norman ~
Here the case is not nearly as strong as in the first two cases, but only because the evidence there was more objective.  Here, some subjectivity in required, as this question touches the very essence of what it means to be a human being.  What is the source of the "tingle" we feel when we stare at the heavens on a cloudless night, far the lights and bustle of the madding crowd.  Why do we yearn (for what, though?  we know not) when staring at the vastness of the sea?  Is it Darwin calling us back to our "home"?  Perhaps.  Is that what it FEELS like, though?  Or does it feel like you're faced with something, an apparent--though not actual--infinity, that reminds you of something you can't quite place, the vaguest sort of deja vu, where not only are you not sure you're seen it before--you're not even sure what it is that you're seeing.


I'm going to pass on trying to 'divine' what turtles may exist based on tingles inspired by the ocean.  We feel many things for many reasons, most of which are probably unexamined and poorly understood.

~ Norman ~
Immanuel Kant tried to wrap his very respectable, very decent, very atheistic, and very Prussian head around this very question in the 18th century.  In what is probably the best known portion of his third masterwork, The Critique of Judgment, tried to explain our intuition of infinity as related to our aethetic reaction to something--like the seemingly limitless ocean--that does violence to the imagination by exceeding its grandest limits.  Even this brilliant "analytic of the sublime" fails to get to the heart of things, though.  WHY do we have this reaction?  Even Kant was forced to conclude, in effect, that "that's just the way it is" or, to put the same thought somewhat differently, "it's turtles all the way down."


Actually, my intuition and reason tell me it's not turtles all the way down.  The notion of infinity is indeed mind-blowing.  It doesn't take much to put a hurt on the head.  But a million of anything also hurts my head, and a million is 'nothing' compared to infinity.  I think the feeling of the sublime is the same feeling that 'a million' has (if a number could have feelings) when it compares itself to infinity, or even 963 billion.  It is the feeling of being as nothing, of being absolutely dwarfed.  It is the vertigo of being on the small end of magnitudes and scale.

Thanks for the interesting thoughts, Norman.  As you can see, they inspired me to try and put a lot of my own into somewhat clear words.  Philosophers and infinities work together to maintain a price floor on Tylenol.

- L.Pig


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We Interrupt Your Regularly Scheduled Blog for the Following "Important" Announcement . . .

 
 
Top Ten Winners of the "McCain '08 Slogan Contest" broken down by target demographic:
 
 
10.  For Liberals:  "McCain '08--Limbaugh Hates Him.  That's Not Enough?"
 
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3.  Jeremiah Wright Parishoners:  "McCain '08--He's as Angry as You Are!"
 
2.  DNC Members:  "McCain '08--'Crossing the Aisle' Since South Carolina 2000!"
 
*****
 
And the WINNER of the McCain '08 Slogan Contest, targeting conservatives, is:
 
1.  "What the Hell?  You're Screw*d Anyway . . ."
 
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Defending the Faith, 2 1/2: Objections Answered, "The Last Turtle"

 
From http://renaud.waldura.org/turtles.txtIn A Brief History of Time (Bantam Books, 1988), Stephen Hawking tells
the story of an elderly woman who confronted Bertrand Russell at the end of a lecture on orbital mechanics, claiming she had a theory superior to his. "We don't live on a ball revolving around the Sun," she said, "we live on a crust of earth on the back of a giant turtle." Wishing to humor the woman Russell asked, "And what does this turtle stand on?" "On the back of a second, still larger turtle," was her confident answer. "But what holds up the second turtle?" he persisted, now in a slightly exasperated tone. "It's no use, young man," the old woman replied, "it's turtles all the way down."
 
(Since Russell's authorship includes, among many other works, Why I Am Not a Christian, it strikes me as somewhat ironic that I feel a kinship with him when making the presuppositional case for the reasonableness of theism.  More on that later, though.)
 
************************************** 
Last time, I described, in outline form, the presuppositionalist case for theism.  In summary, I maintained that since the theist's sole foundational presupposition, "God," was rationally defensible while the various possible non-theist presuppositions were not.  There are basically two grounds on which the non-theist's presuppositions may be invalidated.  First, they may covertly rely on assumptions that belong to the theist's worldview, but which are logically excluded from the non-theist's, such as "the human spirit" (and, thus, ultimately any non-materialist conception of human nature).  Second, they may simply lack foundation.  If the non-theist is forced to say, for example, that morality exists "just because it does," and leave it at that, he has simply set his presuppositions chasing one another, and is no longer engaging in rational discourse.
 
My newest new best friend, "Little Pig," has raised some reasonable objections to my position in the comments section of "Defending the Faith, Part Deux."  (Note to Little Pig:  If you want me to add you as a contributor to the blog, so that you can post any replies here--rather than in the the comments sections, just send me your email address at normanloquendi@yahoo.com.  I'd be glad to do that.  It would be no trouble at all.)  My intention is not to "take on" my newest new best friend, or to start a formal debate (which would be fine, but is not my aim here).  It's just that they're good objections, and any fair-minded thinker should show opposing viewpoints the respect of a (hopefully) thoughtful reply.
 
I will do my best to summarize my understanding of Little Pig's objections (subject, quite naturally, to Little Pig's correction and/or clarification).
 
 
1.  THEIST'S CLAIM:  The theist accuses the non-theist of being unable to account for abstract law.  This could be accurately rephrased as the question (put to the non-theist by the theist), "Why does the universe display order?"
 
NON-THEIST'S OBJECTION:  "God did it" is no more satisfying as a first principle than the explanation, "That's just how it is."  The theist is, after all, doing this in slightly different language, since he can provide no account for God's coming to be.  If the theist can invoke an unprovable divinity as the source of everything, why is the atheist precluded from doing what is essentially the same thing, by making the less intellectually-encumbered and opaque claim that things exist just because they do. 
 
Little Pig put the matter quite nicely in writing that the non-theist's explanation is made simpler than the theist's "by eliminating the God detail and pushing 'that which is' up one level and assigning it the 'just happens to be' attribute. . . . If elegance says anything for a theory, the latter wins.  Both label a 'cause,' but both are also mysteries which do not truly explain anything."
 
 
2.  THEIST'S CLAIM:  The non-theist cannot explain the existence of such abstractions as laws of nature, mathematics, and logic, since he can give no account of their origin.  The theist claims that these exist as a reflection of God's nature, of His manner of thought.  The non-theist has no explanation at all for any of them.  Thus, the theist's account is superior to that of the non-theist.
 
NON-THEIST'S OBJECTION (using Little Pig's own words):  "Laws are not exterior to objects. In one sense they are the objects themselves that we think they describe. In another sense they are formulations of the brain which organizes and groups via abstractions and so would be actual neural patterns if we had to get literal. For example, light does not travel at the speed of light because a law says so. Light travels at the speed it travels because that's what light is, and we formulate a law which describes that behavior. Laws and abstractions are a recognition of consistencies among disparate elements, in other words, they are descriptions of harmonies in a system. Where do such consistencies come from? They come from the common origin of 'that which is.' If everything is made of the same thing (energy?), then everything will display harmonies to various degrees as it combines and interacts with itself in myriad ways according to what it is, not what a law tells it to do. Order (consistency) comes from unity.

"So asking 'Where do laws come from?' is the same question as 'Where does stuff come from?'. 'Stuff' and 'Law' is the same thing. So if there is nothing 'extra' requiring explanation, there is no needle for bubble popping."


3.  THEIST'S CLAIM.  The non-theist cannot explain the origin of the concept of "infinity."

NON-THEIST'S OBJECTION (again using Little Pig's words):  "If you need an explanation for how humans first thought up infinities, take a swim in the ocean."  (Norman here:  In other words, exposure to something that either is--or appears to be--endless would be sufficient to generate the concept of infinity, which is essentially the mathematical concept of addition taken to the farther imaginable degree.)
 
 
These are all quite good.  There is a reply to each of them, of course.
 
 
REPLY TO OBJECTION ONE:  "God did it" is in fact a quite substantial claim.  This position has overarching cosmological implications; it explains life, the universe, and everything in one fell swoop (or "one swell foop" as Dr. Spooner would say).  The existence of an omnipotent God makes everything fall into place from the scientific perspective.  It does not preclude rational discussion, but rather provides the best possible framework for it, since it provides a common point of reference, an entire "worldview."
 
Conversely, the claim that "that's just how it is" is NOT a cosmological one.  Not only does it not provide an overarching framework, it indeed leaves anyone inquiring into the nature of things at an impasse.  If one is content with the proposition "things just are the way they are," one has already adopted a radically "pragmatic" standpoint, inherently antithetical (and perhaps even antipathetical) to theory of any sort.
 
Perhaps I am over-stating things, though.  Perhaps the intent is for "that's just how it is" to be a reply only to "ultimate" questions such as "Why is there morality?" or "What is the source of the laws of logic?"  Indeed, that is probably a better (and certainly more charitable) way of reading it.  Even then, this is ultimately unworkable because, as already noted, it provides no grand framework, no means of unifying diverse disciplines under anything like "universal" knowledge.  Indeed, the "crisis of reason" that Western intellectuals have been discussing for over a century coincides almost precisely with the collapse of widespread religious belief among the intelligensia.  God is, among other things (indeed, EVERYthing) the source of reason, so this should come as no surprise.
 
Additionally, I don't think that any scientist actually thinks this way (although, as a non-scientist, I may be wrong about that).  Scientists are always looking for the next "turtle" on which the one they already know about is "standing." 
 
There is nothing objectionable about this, of course, and one of the creation myths I've ever read is "The Big Bang."  It may be true, but even The Big Bang is nothing more than the ultimate "turtle," one that can stand on itself.  Here again, the non-theist view fails cosmologically, as it cannot give any further answer, other than "that's just how it is."  It seems quite pragmatic, but is not an effective foundation for anything.
 
Finally, since "that's just how it is" is explicitly atheoretical (with respect at least to ultimate questions), it cannot speak to the "why" of anything, and is forced to borrow from the theist's worldview even to get itself going.  Perhaps the most fundamental issue here is reason itself.  The Christian is given an account of the origin of reason at the beginning of the Gospel of John--another variant of "God did it" (of course).  From that comes the Christian accounts of mathematics, logic, and related disciplines.  "God did it."
 
But there's a lot more to it than just that.  The Christian understanding of these fields also permits an explanation for the regularity and predictability of each of them.  I have yet to hear a thorough, persuasive, non-theistic explanation for why laws of logic and mathematics exhibit such amazing precision and regularity.  Saying "that's just how it is" may seem good enough to explain today, but what about tomorrow, or yesterday?  Why do these laws not change?  After all, just about everything else does.  Apply this to the laws of physics.  Why should we not have "heavy" gravity days--when even a walk to the corner store is an ordeal--and "light" days--when we all feel like Carl Lewis (showing my age there, eh?)?  Some days are rainy, and some are sunny.  The weather changes.  Why not gravity, or the laws of thermodynamics?
 
The point is that the theist has a basis not merely for explaining why the world is the way it is; he can also has a basis for projecting his knowledge into the future.  Since the laws of logic, mathematics, and physics--among others--have their basis in God's very nature, the theist's knowledge of God's unchanging nature explains why these laws are immutable.  The non-theist can really use these laws, but when he assumes that they will be the same tomorrow as they are today, he is at best projecting from past (limited) human experience into the future.  In so doing, he is borrowing from the theist's worldview, and in this case from the Christian worldview specifically. 
 
There has never been a society of non-theists.  There is a good reason for this.  Human beings are cosmological by nature, which is to say that we want, indeed NEED, answers to ultimate questions.  We need to know who we are, where we came from, and why we are.  No society will long endure without a sense of self born of a common identity.  Everyone has a "god," or perhaps "totem" is a better word.  A person who does not worship God will worship something else, most often himself in one form or another.  As science fragments into innumerable sub-disciplines, under the pressure of both specialization and the ongoing crisis of reason, there is less and less binding knowledge together.  Knowledge is sought for the sake of knowledge, and ultimately becomes a game--a species of "turf protection."  One of the most acrimonious exchanges in which I every took part as a professor was with a committed, world-class Darwinist on the faculty.  My sincere, though skeptical, questions regarding his field's ability to answer ultimate questions were met with, first, the discussion-killing "sit in on my class," then with "because I said so, and I'm an expert (which he was)" and finally with "you're a muddle-headed creationist."
 
Even this brilliant, world-class mind either would not or could not defend his views to an intelligent, open-minded layperson.  Whether this was due to arrogance, impatience, sloth, or something else entirely I do not know.  What I do know is that this attitude is poison to true science.  When the researcher comes to regard a field of knowledge as "his," the issue degenerates from truth to "turf."  A mind in love with God (or even the ancient Greek conception of "the good") would not do this.  He would not regard truth as belonging to him; he would regard himself as belonging to truth, and indeed as subordinate to it.  Where God is absent, knowledge splinters, and wisdom fades.
 
 
So, my summary reply to Objection One is that the non-theist's "that's just how it is" is profoundly unsatisfying as either a basis of inquiry, or as an answer to ultimate questions.  Furthermore, the non-theist surrepticiously (and often unconsciously) borrows from the theist's worldview, without acknowledging the debt.
 
 
 
REPLY TO OBJECTION TWO:  It is true that "law" is a name applied to observed phenomena, but I think that this is more a linguistic squabble than a substantive one.  One can easily reframe the issue to ask how it is that a non-theist can explain why light, e.g., behaves in a certain way, or why the denial of a false proposition is always true (law of the excluded middle).  As noted in the previous objection, the non-theist can also not explain why these laws persist, rather than changing (like the weather or the seasons).
 
I actually agree with Little Pig's claim that 'stuff' and 'law' in this case mean very much the same thing.  Consequently, I believe that this objection falls short for the same reason as the first objection, viz. that the non-theist can give a best a descriptive, rather than a normative, account for the things that are.  Heck, the non-theist doesn't even have any theoretical basis to trust his senses.  How can the non-theist know that he is really seeing what he is seeing?  What reason does he have to believe that the world around him has any basis in "reality' at all?  For that matter, what is "reality"? 
 
The point here is that any non-theistic worldview begs more questions than you can shake a stick at.  Saying "that's just how it is" is not a satisfactory response to all of these questions.
 
 
REPLY TO OBJECTION THREE:  Infinity is a tough one.  It's possible that man got the idea of infinity from staring at the ocean, but I don't think so.  Animals stare at the ocean, too, but when they do so, they're usually looking for food.  Why do WE look at the ocean differently?  I believe that the most reasonable explanation is that our longing for infinity comes from our innate intuition of divinity.
 
Here the case is not nearly as strong as in the first two cases, but only because the evidence there was more objective.  Here, some subjectivity in required, as this question touches the very essence of what it means to be a human being.  What is the source of the "tingle" we feel when we stare at the heavens on a cloudless night, far the lights and bustle of the madding crowd.  Why do we yearn (for what, though?  we know not) when staring at the vastness of the sea?  Is it Darwin calling us back to our "home"?  Perhaps.  Is that what it FEELS like, though?  Or does it feel like you're faced with something, an apparent--though not actual--infinity, that reminds you of something you can't quite place, the vaguest sort of deja vu, where not only are you not sure you're seen it before--you're not even sure what it is that you're seeing.
 
Immanuel Kant tried to wrap his very respectable, very decent, very atheistic, and very Prussian head around this very question in the 18th century.  In what is probably the best known portion of his third masterwork, The Critique of Judgment, tried to explain our intuition of infinity as related to our aethetic reaction to something--like the seemingly limitless ocean--that does violence to the imagination by exceeding its grandest limits.  Even this brilliant "analytic of the sublime" fails to get to the heart of things, though.  WHY do we have this reaction?  Even Kant was forced to conclude, in effect, that "that's just the way it is" or, to put the same thought somewhat differently, "it's turtles all the way down."
 
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Please forgive the numerous typos.  Your indulgence in accepting these as the result of spastic fingers, rather than slow wittedness, is greatly appreciated!
 
My compliments once again to Little Pig, and also my thanks--for making me think through these different issues.  I'm truly grateful, and hope that I have done justice here to both Little Pig's person and positions (while also mounting what I aimed to make a respectful defense).
 
Coming up Next(???):  "Defending the Faith, 33 1/3:  Why CHRISTIAN Theism?"  (Thought I was going to get to that today, but Little Pig's stuff was too good to pass up.  His/her(???) questions and challenges were really quite helpful in forcing me to think through these issues more deeply than I otherwise would have.  (So, once again, thanks Little Pig!)
 
Cheers and Best Wishes to All!
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