From: Brian Holtz [brian@holtz.org] Sent: Thursday, January 31, 2002 4:40 PM To: alt.atheism.moderated Cc: Brian Holtz Subject: Re: JH: The Design Argument "Paul Filseth" wrote > > Paul's apparent conviction that he has > > figured out what they missed -- that supernaturality is an > > oxymoron. > > [..] Nor am I convinced supernaturality is an > oxymoron. That depends on how it's defined; and as I have yet to see > a definition that convincingly matches common usage, it's premature > to judge whether the concept itself is self-contradictory. As I understand it, you claim to know of no definition of 'supernatural' that doesn't make its use oxymoronic in the philosophical literature I've cited. To me, that sounds like a presumption that it's an oxymoron. However, I recall that last summer you wrote > c) definable but you've never seen an acceptable definition? I try to give those who use ['supernatural'] the benefit of the doubt, and assume (c). So you apparently imagine that a non-oxymoronic definition of 'supernatural' is possible. Can you share with us what your reasoning for this is, what (if anything) you imagine such a definition might be like, and how it would differ from mine? -- brian@holtz.org http://humanknowledge.net