Logic and Christianity

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Replies

  • Azdak
    Azdak Posts: 8,281 Member
    orpheus:

    I put this comment in the affirmative action topic as well:


    The insertion of "quote boxes" is not difficult at all (proof: I can do it).

    You just set off the text you want to put it a "box" by inserting the following commands:

    (bracket key)quote(bracket key) at the beginning of the cited text, and

    (bracket key) /quote (bracket key) at the end

    I had to spell out "bracket key" or else it puts the text between the commands in a blue box.
  • castadiva
    castadiva Posts: 2,016 Member
    orpheus:

    I put this comment in the affirmative action topic as well:

    Thank you!


    The insertion of "quote boxes" is not difficult at all (proof: I can do it).

    You just set off the text you want to put it a "box" by inserting the following commands:

    (bracket key)quote(bracket key) at the beginning of the cited text, and

    (bracket key) /quote (bracket key) at the end

    Experimental attempt - hope it works!

    I had to spell out "bracket key" or else it puts the text between the commands in a blue box.

    Did it?

    It did! Square brackets instead of round on my keyboard - thank you very much, Azdak! I shall be able respond in future without multiple *** and other things of that nature :laugh:
  • lovejoydavid
    lovejoydavid Posts: 395 Member
    Finally! Something useful has happened in a thread!!!!
  • LuckyLeprechaun
    LuckyLeprechaun Posts: 6,296 Member
    Interesting words 'rejoin' and 're-embraced'. I understood you to say that you believed in transmigration and reincarnation, do you also believe in the pre-existence of souls?
    Sort of. I kind of think about it in this way: the thing people are referring to as a "soul" is the non-physical part of ourselves...our thoughts, emotions, inner monologue, memories, etc, right? When we die, I think that part of ourselves rejoins with the rest of everyone else's and God's. We're all made of the same non-physical stuff, and I think about it like a blob of mercury rejoining the big blob....if that crude description suffices, you're psychic, because I'm sure I am not describing it very elegantly. When a fresh new baby is born, some of that blob of God-essence-mercury-soul-material becomes that new person.
    Gosh, I am not that sure how to approach this. I have heard the argument that a perfect designer cannot make a creature that will fail in its purpose, but you stated that we do act in ways that do not represent who we are, so that is not your assertion. I hesitate to interpret this as saying that God has made His will permissive to the extent that it covers such behaviour, as that sounds like a perfect God compromising Himself.

    I know. But the part you're struggling with is because you still think God has an opinion of "right" and "wrong". He hasn't compromised himself if he has already pre-approved all possible choices we can make. You're allowed to be a "sinner" or a "saint" and those labels are only a part of this physical world (and exist only in our minds). God has no preference or opinion about how we behave. I told you it's the hardest part....
    As such, I assume that it is a straightforward assertion of the irresistability of Sovereign Will.
    it's more of an assertion that God has no desires or preference about how you carry out your life. It truly is up to you. The consequences you will experience here in this physical life will include the reactions and opinions of others, and your own opinion of yourself.
    However, I struggle with how to reconcile that with radical freedom? It makes God radically free (in terms of agency), but seems to make us only free in terms of moral accountability. If we cannot freely reject Him, and have that choice honored after our deaths, where is our freedom?
    We are free to experience this physical world however we choose. But we still have to play by its rules. I can't actually reject God because I am made of the same stuff and there is no other destiniation for our "soul-mercury" than "heaven". I believe we will come to understand more fully after death and nobody who had a human understanding and desire to reject will want to do so after being rejoined with God.

    Incidentally, I also don't think "reincarnation" is compulsive. I think it is a choice to experience the physical world, or not, and to stay in 'heaven'.

    I have freedom of choice about my actions, but I cannot violate who I really am....a creative powerful being who is made of the same stuff as God. Just as I can't flap my arms hard enough and fly like a bird, I can't overcome through any behaviors or choices or attitudes Who I Really Am....
  • macpatti
    macpatti Posts: 4,280 Member
    I know for a fact that I don't take the Bible as seriously as you do. I think it is inspiring, and can be instructive in some areas of life, but I don't see it as the end-all authority. I'm curious about the concept of "Best Possible World". That isn't a Biblical idea, so where did it come from? It's interesting to think about, but I think it's a bit of a cop-out. For one, it kind of strips God of his omnipotence, huh? Even He wasn't capable of creating a world without all this suffering? If you take the Bible very seriously, the predictions in Revelation depict a paradise earth with us all living in peaceful harmonious happiness forever....if that can/will be achieved, why didn't we just start out that way instead of the big cosmic "game" ('let's see if they'll eat the apple' sort of seems like entrapment to me.)
    Concerning the “best of all possible worlds,” without checking, I think this expression was coined by Leibniz in the 17th century. I think he deduced from the idea that God is “perfect” that he must do the very best possible in every instance. This is not the more traditional theological understanding. When you are dealing with finite things, it is always possible to make something a little greater, better, etc. In traditionally Christian theology the main concern is that we support the conclusion that God made a truly good world. The evils in the world must then be understood as things allowed for the sake of something greater. In any case, as a Christian, I don’t think we have to argue for this world being the “best possible” one, we only need to argue that it is a good one and that God making this world is no more “necessary” that God choosing not to make any world.

    Concerning why God didn’t make the world already perfect, I suppose the answer has to do with the value of the journey to the goal. You know how people who have everything from the start rarely appreciate what they have while those who work hard and through great difficulty often more fully appreciate something. Think of how enormously popular stories of journeys are (Lord of the Rings, Aeneid, Illiad, Oddysey, etc.). Human beings like to think of ourselves as “on a journey.” Even sporting events have an element of “drama” and uncertainty that holds our interest. Human life is characterized by the need to make a series of choices that then define a person’s destiny. A fortune cookie I got yesterday said something like, “As a person’s character is, so is his destiny.” Our lives (and, more broadly, world history), are a series of choices and reactions that define our future, whether that be good or bad. I suppose God made a world “on a journey” rather than already in a final and perfect state because the journey shapes the characters in the story and gives them a chance to freely direct themselves to a perfect conclusion or destiny rather than lack the power of participation and self-direction. God must have thought this better than making creatures with no such choice and involvement.
    Also, I have a major problem with the story of Job. In it, God seems to be playing chicken with the Devil, using poor Job and all his family as the game pieces. Do you see Job as a parable or a historical account? Either way, the story itself is disturbing to me in a huge way. I'd never engage in any such activities that would do so much harm to my child, yet God who loves us more completely than any other is willing to torture Job almost to death, and does let his whole family get killed. If Satan is the one "doing" all these things to Job, but (omnipotent) God isn't stopping them, then He's kind of an accomplice, right?
    People disagree about the literary genre of the book of Job. I’m not sure myself. Either way, the major points of the book seem to be: (a) we don’t really know why bad things happen to good people, (b) we often unfairly judge others, not truly understanding what they are experiencing, (c) God has bigger plans than what we can comprehend at present, and (d) often things that seem purely evil can be turned to serve a higher good purpose. Job’s story certainly emphasizes his faithfulness to God but also illustrates that the whole journey is a path of growth for Job.
  • lovejoydavid
    lovejoydavid Posts: 395 Member
    Sort of. I kind of think about it in this way: the thing people are referring to as a "soul" is the non-physical part of ourselves...our thoughts, emotions, inner monologue, memories, etc, right? When we die, I think that part of ourselves rejoins with the rest of everyone else's and God's. We're all made of the same non-physical stuff, and I think about it like a blob of mercury rejoining the big blob....if that crude description suffices, you're psychic, because I'm sure I am not describing it very elegantly. When a fresh new baby is born, some of that blob of God-essence-mercury-soul-material becomes that new person......
    I will get back to this, I am a little short on time today. However, this sounds so much akin to Whitehead's process theology and panentheism, that it would serve the discussion if I reread some of that work!
  • adrian_indy
    adrian_indy Posts: 1,444 Member
    I love how the modern enlightened Christian now thinks that the Old Testament is just parables. Why not just take the next step and realize that the fairytales in the new Testament our parables as well? It's funny that in a thread about logic, no one has made the logical conclusion that if the bible was wrong about how long it took to create the universe, how two people cannot beings cannot build a whole species (nullifying Adam and Eve and Noahs Ark), that two of every species can't fit on a boat, that plagues and disease and natural disasters are scientifically explainable, not a curse of god, that man originated in Africa, not the Middle East, that the earth is billions, not thousands of years old, that evolution is happening, that again and again and again and again the bible and religion is proven wrong, obsolete, and ridiculous,....maybe it's logical to assume that trying to equate the belief in a god, let alone a christian god, is best left to faith and wishful thinking and left out of the arena when it comes to logic. Seems to me that logically speaking, faith is supposed to be illogical.
  • macpatti
    macpatti Posts: 4,280 Member
    I love how the modern enlightened atheist thinks that only modern Christians realize the bible is not meant to be taken literally.
  • adrian_indy
    adrian_indy Posts: 1,444 Member
    I love how the modern enlightened atheist thinks that only modern Christians realize the bible is not meant to be taken literally.

    ???? Oh, yeah, that's right, Christians always thought the bible was parables. How silly of me. How much more revisionist history shall we try today? Then again, I don't expect much since this is now the 4th time you have said you will no longer debate with me....and then debate with me.
  • macpatti
    macpatti Posts: 4,280 Member
    David~ I'll leave you to reply to adrian_indy. I didn't quote him on purpose because I didn't want to address my statement to him. My statement was to you regarding the comment he made. You will not be able to talk logic about Christianity to some people. I believe you will be able to do justice to the claim of revisionist history. :smile:
  • adrian_indy
    adrian_indy Posts: 1,444 Member
    David~ I'll leave you to reply to adrian_indy. I didn't quote him on purpose because I didn't want to address my statement to him. My statement was to you regarding the comment he made. You will not be able to talk logic about Christianity to some people. I believe you will be able to do justice to the claim of revisionist history. :smile:

    Do not not allude to what I said and then debate me via third person. Either debate me or ignore my posts, you can not do both.
  • lovejoydavid
    lovejoydavid Posts: 395 Member
    I love how the modern enlightened Christian now thinks that the Old Testament is just parables.
    I am not claiming that the OT is parables, merely that the book of Genesis is not intended for a literalistic explanation of creation. Even Origen, amongst other church fathers, felt that way. What you are debating is 20th fundamentalism, not church history.
    Why not just take the next step and realize that the fairytales in the new Testament our parables as well?

    Moses wrote Genesis just a touch after the fact. The NT is either contemporary (as in the form of personal letters) or recent to the event from eye witnesses. So, for that matter, is much of the OT, sans Genesis, Job, Noah.
    It's funny that in a thread about logic, no one has made the logical conclusion that if the bible was wrong about how long it took to create the universe,

    In what way? The book is quite correct, at the least, in that the universe had a beginning, and was created from nothing. EVERYONE else was wrong about that until the 20th century.
    how two people cannot beings cannot build a whole species (nullifying Adam and Eve and Noahs Ark), that two of every species can't fit on a boat,

    I agree with those. Stories, apparently with some iota of truth. A local flood, perhaps? I don't know, but who knows everything?
    that plagues and disease and natural disasters are scientifically explainable, not a curse of god,
    And then could have been used by their creator for any purpose He chooses.
    that man originated in Africa, not the Middle East,
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qesem_Cave
    Try to keep up.
    that the earth is billions, not thousands of years old,
    Everyone was wrong about that one as well. The bible never expressly states it, we assumed it. It happens.
    that evolution is happening,

    Evolution is not happening the way we assumed, though. We all assume a gradual increase in complexity with species dying off regularly. That does conflict, somewhat, with the creation account. However, that is not what happens. Rather, punctuated equilibrium is the norm. That is, a huge, seemingly spontaneous appearance of a great number of life forms, a long period (even for geological purposes) of stasis, and then they dissapear. That is not so very much in conflict.
    that again and again and again and again the bible and religion is proven wrong, obsolete, and ridiculous,....maybe it's logical to assume that trying to equate the belief in a god, let alone a christian god, is best left to faith and wishful thinking and left out of the arena when it comes to logic. Seems to me that logically speaking, faith is supposed to be illogical.
    Is this really an attempt to engage in the thread, or any kind of actual discussion, or just an opportunity to mock people?

    Once again, that is not what the word 'logic' means.
  • poisongirl6485
    poisongirl6485 Posts: 1,487 Member
    David~ I'll leave you to reply to adrian_indy. I didn't quote him on purpose because I didn't want to address my statement to him. My statement was to you regarding the comment he made. You will not be able to talk logic about Christianity to some people. I believe you will be able to do justice to the claim of revisionist history. :smile:

    Do not not allude to what I said and then debate me via third person. Either debate me or ignore my posts, you can not do both.

    I'm going to have to agree with this, Patti. Either debate with Adrian or don't. Don't ask a third party to do it for you.
  • adrian_indy
    adrian_indy Posts: 1,444 Member
    I love how the modern enlightened Christian now thinks that the Old Testament is just parables.
    I am not claiming that the OT is parables, merely that the book of Genesis is not intended for a literalistic explanation of creation. Even Origen, amongst other church fathers, felt that way. What you are debating is 20th fundamentalism, not church history.
    Why not just take the next step and realize that the fairytales in the new Testament our parables as well?

    Moses wrote Genesis just a touch after the fact. The NT is either contemporary (as in the form of personal letters) or recent to the event from eye witnesses. So, for that matter, is much of the OT, sans Genesis, Job, Noah.
    It's funny that in a thread about logic, no one has made the logical conclusion that if the bible was wrong about how long it took to create the universe,

    In what way? The book is quite correct, at the least, in that the universe had a beginning, and was created from nothing. EVERYONE else was wrong about that until the 20th century.
    how two people cannot beings cannot build a whole species (nullifying Adam and Eve and Noahs Ark), that two of every species can't fit on a boat,

    I agree with those. Stories, apparently with some iota of truth. A local flood, perhaps? I don't know, but who knows everything?
    that plagues and disease and natural disasters are scientifically explainable, not a curse of god,
    And then could have been used by their creator for any purpose He chooses.
    that man originated in Africa, not the Middle East,
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qesem_Cave
    Try to keep up.
    that the earth is billions, not thousands of years old,
    Everyone was wrong about that one as well. The bible never expressly states it, we assumed it. It happens.
    that evolution is happening,

    Evolution is not happening the way we assumed, though. We all assume a gradual increase in complexity with species dying off regularly. That does conflict, somewhat, with the creation account. However, that is not what happens. Rather, punctuated equilibrium is the norm. That is, a huge, seemingly spontaneous appearance of a great number of life forms, a long period (even for geological purposes) of stasis, and then they dissapear. That is not so very much in conflict.
    that again and again and again and again the bible and religion is proven wrong, obsolete, and ridiculous,....maybe it's logical to assume that trying to equate the belief in a god, let alone a christian god, is best left to faith and wishful thinking and left out of the arena when it comes to logic. Seems to me that logically speaking, faith is supposed to be illogical.
    Is this really an attempt to engage in the thread, or any kind of actual discussion, or just an opportunity to mock people?

    Once again, that is not what the word 'logic' means.

    The book is quite correct because it said the universe had a beginning? You just validated every other religion on the planet, so I guess you must be a pagan. And sorry, it is not logical to state in short, since we exist, there must be a god. What we see is people who want to believe in something having their biblical stories soundly crushed and instead of moving on trying to revise the outdated hebrew holy books to fit modern times.

    So God uses natural disasters for his own purpose? We really need to get this guys a good cell phone plan because his messages to humanity seem to kill a lot of innocent people indiscrimately.

    The world wide flood in the Bible is actually one of the things I find to probably be accurate, just maybe no the time frame peope have presented it to have happened in. Almost every ancient culture has an ancient flood myth of biblical proportion, even predating the hebrews. Some of these were completely independent of the middle east and had no knowable contact with the hebrews meaning they witnesssed it as well. We will probably never know because sadly enough, many scientists can be as close minded and stubborn as any clergy and any evidence of world wide floods would have met with resistance from people afraid to validate the bible.

    Once again, as logical as an argument that since we exist and the universe had a beginning means we must have a creator seems, it's not. You are basically taking things that science hasn'd discovered yet and attributing that absence of discovery as proof of god. Saying that since the Universe had a beginning therefore we had a creator is no different than cavemen assuming that lighting strikes was a thunder god yelling. It's just more sophisticated.

    One day, a decade, a century, a millenia from now (if we have nuked ourselves) we will know how the universe started. We've figured out so much so far, it's a reasonable bet. And guess what, two people like us will be debating what happened BEFORE the universe, and before that, and before that, and before that. And we will keep discovering. But what we will never find is tangible proof of a god, therefore it is not logical to assume that God is the reason for all of this.
  • lovejoydavid
    lovejoydavid Posts: 395 Member


    The book is quite correct because it said the universe had a beginning? You just validated every other religion on the planet, so I guess you must be a pagan. And sorry, it is not logical to state in short, since we exist, there must be a god. What we see is people who want to believe in something having their biblical stories soundly crushed and instead of moving on trying to revise the outdated hebrew holy books to fit modern times.

    So God uses natural disasters for his own purpose? We really need to get this guys a good cell phone plan because his messages to humanity seem to kill a lot of innocent people indiscrimately.

    The world wide flood in the Bible is actually one of the things I find to probably be accurate, just maybe no the time frame peope have presented it to have happened in. Almost every ancient culture has an ancient flood myth of biblical proportion, even predating the hebrews. Some of these were completely independent of the middle east and had no knowable contact with the hebrews meaning they witnesssed it as well. We will probably never know because sadly enough, many scientists can be as close minded and stubborn as any clergy and any evidence of world wide floods would have met with resistance from people afraid to validate the bible.

    Once again, as logical as an argument that since we exist and the universe had a beginning means we must have a creator seems, it's not. You are basically taking things that science hasn'd discovered yet and attributing that absence of discovery as proof of god. Saying that since the Universe had a beginning therefore we had a creator is no different than cavemen assuming that lighting strikes was a thunder god yelling. It's just more sophisticated.

    One day, a decade, a century, a millenia from now (if we have nuked ourselves) we will know how the universe started. We've figured out so much so far, it's a reasonable bet. And guess what, two people like us will be debating what happened BEFORE the universe, and before that, and before that, and before that. And we will keep discovering. But what we will never find is tangible proof of a god, therefore it is not logical to assume that God is the reason for all of this.

    Thank you, this is a thoughtful post, and one that I will engage with! It is near the kids bedtime, and the wife is out, so I will have to sign off for the time (and I owe Lucky a response). But I will be back!
  • adrian_indy
    adrian_indy Posts: 1,444 Member


    The book is quite correct because it said the universe had a beginning? You just validated every other religion on the planet, so I guess you must be a pagan. And sorry, it is not logical to state in short, since we exist, there must be a god. What we see is people who want to believe in something having their biblical stories soundly crushed and instead of moving on trying to revise the outdated hebrew holy books to fit modern times.

    So God uses natural disasters for his own purpose? We really need to get this guys a good cell phone plan because his messages to humanity seem to kill a lot of innocent people indiscrimately.

    The world wide flood in the Bible is actually one of the things I find to probably be accurate, just maybe no the time frame peope have presented it to have happened in. Almost every ancient culture has an ancient flood myth of biblical proportion, even predating the hebrews. Some of these were completely independent of the middle east and had no knowable contact with the hebrews meaning they witnesssed it as well. We will probably never know because sadly enough, many scientists can be as close minded and stubborn as any clergy and any evidence of world wide floods would have met with resistance from people afraid to validate the bible.

    Once again, as logical as an argument that since we exist and the universe had a beginning means we must have a creator seems, it's not. You are basically taking things that science hasn'd discovered yet and attributing that absence of discovery as proof of god. Saying that since the Universe had a beginning therefore we had a creator is no different than cavemen assuming that lighting strikes was a thunder god yelling. It's just more sophisticated.

    One day, a decade, a century, a millenia from now (if we have nuked ourselves) we will know how the universe started. We've figured out so much so far, it's a reasonable bet. And guess what, two people like us will be debating what happened BEFORE the universe, and before that, and before that, and before that. And we will keep discovering. But what we will never find is tangible proof of a god, therefore it is not logical to assume that God is the reason for all of this.

    Thank you, this is a thoughtful post, and one that I will engage with! It is near the kids bedtime, and the wife is out, so I will have to sign off for the time (and I owe Lucky a response). But I will be back!

    I'm out as well, you are cutting into my Star Wars Old Republic time.
  • lovejoydavid
    lovejoydavid Posts: 395 Member

    I'm out as well, you are cutting into my Star Wars Old Republic time.
    For that alone, your opinion of religion is justified!!! Aghast, I am, at such affrontery by me.
  • macpatti
    macpatti Posts: 4,280 Member
    I'm going to have to agree with this, Patti. Either debate with Adrian or don't. Don't ask a third party to do it for you.
    I can make a statement regarding his comment without debating with him. That's why I didn't quote him. I left it to the OP because he's been doing a good job in this debate. I wasn't wanting a third party to debate FOR me, just leaving it to him to continue. I will refrain from commenting on anything Adrian posts again, even if it wasn't my intent to debate with him directly. I got you.
  • poisongirl6485
    poisongirl6485 Posts: 1,487 Member
    I'm going to have to agree with this, Patti. Either debate with Adrian or don't. Don't ask a third party to do it for you.
    I can make a statement regarding his comment without debating with him. That's why I didn't quote him. I left it to the OP because he's been doing a good job in this debate. I wasn't wanting a third party to debate FOR me, just leaving it to him to continue. I will refrain from commenting on anything Adrian posts again, even if it wasn't my intent to debate with him directly. I got you.

    *sigh* I just want people to be able to debate without being outright nasty to each other. And since I had to 'mod' a reported post, that is how I was attempting to handle the issue.
  • lovejoydavid
    lovejoydavid Posts: 395 Member

    *sigh* I just want people to be able to debate without being outright nasty to each other. And since I had to 'mod' a reported post, that is how I was attempting to handle the issue.

    Is mine the first thread to have a reported post? That would be so cool...
  • poisongirl6485
    poisongirl6485 Posts: 1,487 Member

    *sigh* I just want people to be able to debate without being outright nasty to each other. And since I had to 'mod' a reported post, that is how I was attempting to handle the issue.

    Is mine the first thread to have a reported post? That would be so cool...

    Sorry to burst your bubble, but no. ;)
  • lovejoydavid
    lovejoydavid Posts: 395 Member
    The book is quite correct because it said the universe had a beginning? You just validated every other religion on the planet, so I guess you must be a pagan. And sorry, it is not logical to state in short, since we exist, there must be a god. What we see is people who want to believe in something having their biblical stories soundly crushed and instead of moving on trying to revise the outdated hebrew holy books to fit modern times.
    For all the anthropological effort to fit any number of beliefs into the ‘ex nihilo’ box, I have rarely seen one that came even moderately close to the concept. They all have extensive pre-existent worlds, activities, some use “rivers of chaos”, etc. Genesis starts with “in the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.” It even uses a word for ‘create’ that only God ever uses.
    As to the “we are here, so God must exist,” a reverse objection (called the anthropic principle) is used by physicists and materialist philosophers. I think both are legitimate statements, consistent with logic, and must be examined by the merits of their individual premises.
    So God uses natural disasters for his own purpose? We really need to get this guys a good cell phone plan because his messages to humanity seem to kill a lot of innocent people indiscrimately.
    I believe I said “could have been,” and was clearly referring to the circumstances in which they appear in Scripture as God’s special will. To see “could have been” and assume “must always happen for the same reasons” shows, I think, a blind spot.
    The world wide flood in the Bible is actually one of the things I find to probably be accurate, just maybe no the time frame peope have presented it to have happened in. Almost every ancient culture has an ancient flood myth of biblical proportion, even predating the hebrews. Some of these were completely independent of the middle east and had no knowable contact with the hebrews meaning they witnesssed it as well. We will probably never know because sadly enough, many scientists can be as close minded and stubborn as any clergy and any evidence of world wide floods would have met with resistance from people afraid to validate the bible.
    Interesting! I have heard a few different things about global floods in other beliefs, but have never done anything thorough work on it. Who outside of the near east mentions it?
    Once again, as logical as an argument that since we exist and the universe had a beginning means we must have a creator seems, it's not. You are basically taking things that science hasn'd discovered yet and attributing that absence of discovery as proof of god. Saying that since the Universe had a beginning therefore we had a creator is no different than cavemen assuming that lighting strikes was a thunder god yelling. It's just more sophisticated.
    You presume an argument from ignorance, where indeed it is an argument for epistemic honesty. To assume that whatever data is left unknown must fall into line with one’s personal beliefs is not a valid position.
    A Paleolithic man and a modern man meet in the deserts of Nevada. At just that moment, lightning strikes the ground between them. Stunned, the paleo man thinks to himself (with whatever version of propositional concepts he had), “I don’t understand this thing, it is caused by the Gods”. Modern man, however, who did not take enough science to describe lightning, thinks “ At least I understand this better than paleo man, who likely thinks this was caused by a God! I know it to be merely natural phenomenon.”
    Who is right? As it happens, paleo has the edge this time. It just so happens that they had stumbled into the desert at just the moment that researchers were using a Teramobile to hit clouds with a terawatt laser, with the intent of generating lightning strikes (this is a real device). Paleo man is right that A) he does not understand the phenomenon B) that it is caused by a will, but he misapprehends whose will. Modern man, however, is wrong in assuming that, because science has described situation in which nature can do a thing, that the phenomenon must always be caused in that fashion. As such, he utterly misapprehends this situation, but grants himself a superior grasp that his companion.
    As such, I submit that my arguments (at the beginning of the thread), are positions of what might be, consistent with logic and evidence. I think they are strong, but not certain. I do not think that you can say the same about your assertions, or your presumptions.
    One day, a decade, a century, a millenia from now (if we have nuked ourselves) we will know how the universe started. We've figured out so much so far, it's a reasonable bet. And guess what, two people like us will be debating what happened BEFORE the universe, and before that, and before that, and before that. And we will keep discovering. But what we will never find is tangible proof of a god, therefore it is not logical to assume that God is the reason for all of this.
    I will take this one point at a time:
    1) The debate is, more or less, what happened before the universe began. That is, as time is supposed to have started at the beginning of the universe, it is about what was causally prior to the first event (if anything), and what was capable of initiating a first event. I don’t happen to care how far they drag back the first event (as an infinite series of prior events is impossible, they will eventually find a limit as to how far back they can speculate), the question is about what is capable, from outside a causally bound universe, to be a first cause.
    2) It is helpful to remember that science never speculates about design or guidance. That is, science cannot look at a thing (like evolution), as say “this is entirely and completely unguided.” That is naturalism, not science, and is a metaphysical or philosophical add on. Neither the theory of evolution nor of current cosmology can say “these are completely attributable to blind forces.” My prior example is an extreme version of why, but let us just say that it is beyond the purview of science, and is an issue of metaphysics.
    3) My presentations were not “assumptions.” They followed the clear rules of formal logic, and the conclusions followed the premises. As you have not undermined the premises (none of the premises have to be sure, just possible), the arguments stand. To assert that only science can provide evidence for a premise is to misunderstand science, and logic. Most of the assertions of atheists, in dealing with science and religion, are actually assumptions of naturalism. That is, they require metaphysical (and unproveable, but logically defensible) add-ons, though atheists are often utterly ignorant of that fact. As such, unless you can cope with the use of formal logic (not used in the colloquial sense), you will struggle to make your points, at least beyond bombast.
  • adrian_indy
    adrian_indy Posts: 1,444 Member
    The book is quite correct because it said the universe had a beginning? You just validated every other religion on the planet, so I guess you must be a pagan. And sorry, it is not logical to state in short, since we exist, there must be a god. What we see is people who want to believe in something having their biblical stories soundly crushed and instead of moving on trying to revise the outdated hebrew holy books to fit modern times.
    For all the anthropological effort to fit any number of beliefs into the ‘ex nihilo’ box, I have rarely seen one that came even moderately close to the concept. They all have extensive pre-existent worlds, activities, some use “rivers of chaos”, etc. Genesis starts with “in the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.” It even uses a word for ‘create’ that only God ever uses.
    As to the “we are here, so God must exist,” a reverse objection (called the anthropic principle) is used by physicists and materialist philosophers. I think both are legitimate statements, consistent with logic, and must be examined by the merits of their individual premises.
    So God uses natural disasters for his own purpose? We really need to get this guys a good cell phone plan because his messages to humanity seem to kill a lot of innocent people indiscrimately.
    I believe I said “could have been,” and was clearly referring to the circumstances in which they appear in Scripture as God’s special will. To see “could have been” and assume “must always happen for the same reasons” shows, I think, a blind spot.
    The world wide flood in the Bible is actually one of the things I find to probably be accurate, just maybe no the time frame peope have presented it to have happened in. Almost every ancient culture has an ancient flood myth of biblical proportion, even predating the hebrews. Some of these were completely independent of the middle east and had no knowable contact with the hebrews meaning they witnesssed it as well. We will probably never know because sadly enough, many scientists can be as close minded and stubborn as any clergy and any evidence of world wide floods would have met with resistance from people afraid to validate the bible.
    Interesting! I have heard a few different things about global floods in other beliefs, but have never done anything thorough work on it. Who outside of the near east mentions it?
    Once again, as logical as an argument that since we exist and the universe had a beginning means we must have a creator seems, it's not. You are basically taking things that science hasn'd discovered yet and attributing that absence of discovery as proof of god. Saying that since the Universe had a beginning therefore we had a creator is no different than cavemen assuming that lighting strikes was a thunder god yelling. It's just more sophisticated.
    You presume an argument from ignorance, where indeed it is an argument for epistemic honesty. To assume that whatever data is left unknown must fall into line with one’s personal beliefs is not a valid position.
    A Paleolithic man and a modern man meet in the deserts of Nevada. At just that moment, lightning strikes the ground between them. Stunned, the paleo man thinks to himself (with whatever version of propositional concepts he had), “I don’t understand this thing, it is caused by the Gods”. Modern man, however, who did not take enough science to describe lightning, thinks “ At least I understand this better than paleo man, who likely thinks this was caused by a God! I know it to be merely natural phenomenon.”
    Who is right? As it happens, paleo has the edge this time. It just so happens that they had stumbled into the desert at just the moment that researchers were using a Teramobile to hit clouds with a terawatt laser, with the intent of generating lightning strikes (this is a real device). Paleo man is right that A) he does not understand the phenomenon B) that it is caused by a will, but he misapprehends whose will. Modern man, however, is wrong in assuming that, because science has described situation in which nature can do a thing, that the phenomenon must always be caused in that fashion. As such, he utterly misapprehends this situation, but grants himself a superior grasp that his companion.
    As such, I submit that my arguments (at the beginning of the thread), are positions of what might be, consistent with logic and evidence. I think they are strong, but not certain. I do not think that you can say the same about your assertions, or your presumptions.
    One day, a decade, a century, a millenia from now (if we have nuked ourselves) we will know how the universe started. We've figured out so much so far, it's a reasonable bet. And guess what, two people like us will be debating what happened BEFORE the universe, and before that, and before that, and before that. And we will keep discovering. But what we will never find is tangible proof of a god, therefore it is not logical to assume that God is the reason for all of this.
    I will take this one point at a time:
    1) The debate is, more or less, what happened before the universe began. That is, as time is supposed to have started at the beginning of the universe, it is about what was causally prior to the first event (if anything), and what was capable of initiating a first event. I don’t happen to care how far they drag back the first event (as an infinite series of prior events is impossible, they will eventually find a limit as to how far back they can speculate), the question is about what is capable, from outside a causally bound universe, to be a first cause.
    2) It is helpful to remember that science never speculates about design or guidance. That is, science cannot look at a thing (like evolution), as say “this is entirely and completely unguided.” That is naturalism, not science, and is a metaphysical or philosophical add on. Neither the theory of evolution nor of current cosmology can say “these are completely attributable to blind forces.” My prior example is an extreme version of why, but let us just say that it is beyond the purview of science, and is an issue of metaphysics.
    3) My presentations were not “assumptions.” They followed the clear rules of formal logic, and the conclusions followed the premises. As you have not undermined the premises (none of the premises have to be sure, just possible), the arguments stand. To assert that only science can provide evidence for a premise is to misunderstand science, and logic. Most of the assertions of atheists, in dealing with science and religion, are actually assumptions of naturalism. That is, they require metaphysical (and unproveable, but logically defensible) add-ons, though atheists are often utterly ignorant of that fact. As such, unless you can cope with the use of formal logic (not used in the colloquial sense), you will struggle to make your points, at least beyond bombast.

    I don't have the time to go through all this right now, but as far as the flood myths go....

    http://www.nwcreation.net/noahlegends.html

    This isn't where I I got my info, I can't remember what book it was in, I read it a couple years ago. But if I remember right (and these numbers, although close, are just relying on memory) was that there were something like 72 different flood myths around the world and at least 20 were from cultures with no access to trade, therefore independent. I'll look through my books tonight and try to figure out which one it was out of.
  • lovejoydavid
    lovejoydavid Posts: 395 Member
    Sort of. I kind of think about it in this way: the thing people are referring to as a "soul" is the non-physical part of ourselves...our thoughts, emotions, inner monologue, memories, etc, right? When we die, I think that part of ourselves rejoins with the rest of everyone else's and God's. We're all made of the same non-physical stuff, and I think about it like a blob of mercury rejoining the big blob....if that crude description suffices, you're psychic, because I'm sure I am not describing it very elegantly. When a fresh new baby is born, some of that blob of God-essence-mercury-soul-material becomes that new person.
    This does, indeed, hold some commonalities with panentheism, or the notion that while God is not everything, everything is in God. It is a bit in the face of aseity, and the notion of transcendence.
    I know. But the part you're struggling with is because you still think God has an opinion of "right" and "wrong". He hasn't compromised himself if he has already pre-approved all possible choices we can make. You're allowed to be a "sinner" or a "saint" and those labels are only a part of this physical world (and exist only in our minds). God has no preference or opinion about how we behave. I told you it's the hardest part....

    it's more of an assertion that God has no desires or preference about how you carry out your life. It truly is up to you. The consequences you will experience here in this physical life will include the reactions and opinions of others, and your own opinion of yourself.

    It is not that I think God sits on His throne and writes opinionated reviews of our every action. For one, He is the source of Love. His nature is the basis of all morality, and there are no "opinions" in Him, only reality. As the Holy one, it was up to Him to bridge the gulf between Himself and mankind, and that with grace. We can respond to grace, or not. Our actions, loving or otherwise, are not really the issue, at least in terms of Godly work of salvation. However, I also strongly believe in an ideal plan for every life, and that as one that can only be fulfilled by living a life of love, and consistent with the works God has put before us. I still think we can defy that plan.

    I don't think that God choosing to uphold all secondary causes (our actions) as being synonomous with approving of them. That is, I find it rather like choosing to uphold certain first ammendment rights, even if you find the statements of a person disgusting. He honors our right to choose, but does not honor all the choices.
    We are free to experience this physical world however we choose. But we still have to play by its rules. I can't actually reject God because I am made of the same stuff and there is no other destiniation for our "soul-mercury" than "heaven". I believe we will come to understand more fully after death and nobody who had a human understanding and desire to reject will want to do so after being rejoined with God.
    I happen to think you are right, in that we all experience the resurrection, and all stand before God. However, it is that spirit that is the creature of free choice, not just the physical person. I think that we remain individuals, and ones with choice. Even when we rise as immortal beings, we will stand by our choices. Hell is, in my opinion, nothing more than an immortal being standing in the light of the shekinah glory of God (which will fill the universe, in whatever form that takes), knowing that it did not choose grace. God, I think, stands as an individual, and so do we, unless we join Christ as the bridgegroom. Then, we have the benefit of a union with God.
    Incidentally, I also don't think "reincarnation" is compulsive. I think it is a choice to experience the physical world, or not, and to stay in 'heaven'.

    I have freedom of choice about my actions, but I cannot violate who I really am....a creative powerful being who is made of the same stuff as God. Just as I can't flap my arms hard enough and fly like a bird, I can't overcome through any behaviors or choices or attitudes Who I Really Am....
    I can't help but still see that as the automatons in the hands of a deistic God (with apologies to Jonathan Edwards). However, I also of the opinion that we are the image of God, and we cannot change that. We can never be the image of Satan, as it were. However, I don't count that as evidence that we are reconciled to God.

    I tend to see three ways to approach belief: A) the world is so varied that there cannot possibly be an exlusive truth B) the world is so similar that there must be a singular truth holding it together C) the world is so perverse and awful there can't possibly be truth. Obviously, I tend towards B, but reference the other two as needed. I think atheists tend towards B as well, but come to a different conclusion. I think, think, you are more of the A variety, in that while there may be a singular God, He is not exclusive in His expression.
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