01-11-2007, 10:00 PM | #311 |
Worth every yenny
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: not my mind that's for sure!
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I've only read the first two intros. Looking at the size of this thing, if the intros are any indication of how the whole thing goes, we could spend a couple of pages pointing out parts that don't quite make sense, and then at least 10 more pages arguing about it. *shrugs*
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01-11-2007, 10:02 PM | #312 | |
Bob Dole
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Bob Dole |
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01-11-2007, 10:03 PM | #313 | ||
An Animal I Have Become
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You might have noticed that for my participation in this thread I've never really focused on the omnipotence and omniscience of God. To be quite frank, much like yourself, my opinion on it has changed over time (before this thread, but due to many of the reasons voiced). And having studied, I'll promote a shocking conclusion. The Bible doesn't submit that God is capable of doing absolutely everything. If anything else, by reading it one could conclude that God has a nature, a behavioral pattern, a set of emotions, limitations. As Genesis so eloquently put it, God made man in his own image. The image here is not referring merely to appearance, we're basically little replicas. Some scholars would contend that we are more like God in nature than even the angels are. Instead, the Bible contends that God is the Supreme Being. Who is like God? Who can compare with God? Nobody, clearly, but supreme and omnipotent are two different things. God could easily be by far the Creator of the universe, infinite, and the most powerful being in existance without conforming to our definition of omnipotent. For instance, God can't lie. God can't do evil. God can change his mind. God can be angry. God can be jealous. God can be happy. There are things God hates. There are things he loves. Certain characters in the Bible have been called God's friend. There's even a contradiction in omnipotence and omniscience, because an omniscient being would have no free will... which God clearly would have. For God's knowledge, I see him look at things on a spectrum. Instead of viewing time as a "roller coaster" he might instead view time as a tree with many branches. He might see the consequences of any choice we could make, but he gives us the free will to choose. You see, like Tydeus, I take my worldview and then I tweak it by removing the things that don't make sense. Trust me, my view tends to be unpopular with both Christians and athiests alike. God is a Supreme Being. He is beyond challenging by any other being. But I think careful examination of the Bible reveals he does have limitations. Now to the heaven versus hell thing I mentioned which Tydeus commented on. If God indeed has a certain nature, and must abide by his own rules (In fact you could say the rules are a part of who and what he is rather than he created them, because I would think the rules would exist simply by God existing. I can't imagine him existing before the rules). Therefore he does what he can do without messing with free will, even finds loopholes (like Jesus dying on the cross), and makes every effort he can to extend to humanity. Why would he make humanity? Man is in God's image much the way children are in the image of their parents. If christianity is right, we are all descendants of God (he was by definition the father of Adam and Eve). Parents take pride in their children, want to have children, yet a good parent also allows the child to face consequences for the bad decisions the child makes. It hurts a parent when they see their child go to jail for a crime, and they still love their child. Yet the law says their child must go, and the Good parent obeys the law. Now I'm rambling because I'm getting sleepy. It's very difficult to place my entire worldview into words, and I disagree with my denomination on several points. Hopefully I came across as more of a rational thinker than a blind faith follower, because even the Bible tells me to be as wise as a serpent and as wary as a dove.
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:fighter: "Buds 4-eva!!!" :bmage: "No hugs for you." Quote:
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01-11-2007, 10:12 PM | #314 | |||||||||||
The Straightest Shota
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: It's a secret to everybody.
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Calmly backing out like a gentleman does not mean turning your back on those people later on. That's what storming out like a child and throwing a temper tantrum is like. I mean, there are plenty of better ways to absolve God from that, even without claiming his inexistence. I mean, fuck, just blame it on satan. It's what they do with everything else. Or call it a test. Yeah, it's a test of our faith. Whatever. Quote:
I'm also pretty sure that school shootings started when teachers couldn't be bothered to deal with the mental health of their students or stopping bullies from pushing youths to sucide, and when those youths made the decision to not ONLY kill themselves, but as many of their tormentors as possible. I mean, I'm just saying that the absence of religion is FAR from the defining factor in these things. They rather have much more easily identifiable factors. FURTHER, talk to your grandparents in frank terms about what they did when they were kids in school. I mean, grandaddy may not have had access to a gun, but I know my grandpa at least got into knife fights and was in a gang in elementary school that bullied adults. This isn't something new. It's just something only recently being reported. Quote:
FURTHER, reading the bible in school is FAR from illegal. The only thing illegal is teaching the bible as fact in public schools, as it should be. It's not that we live in an athiestic country (nice as that would be), but rather that we live in a religiously free country, and as such teaching any religion as fact in public schools severely impedes upon the religious freedoms of everyone not of that religion. Teaching the bible as literature, however, is far from illegal, and is still done AND useful on the basis that many other works of literature draw from and to it. Quote:
The ones who are immoral and corrupt are the newscasters who have brought the knowledge and glamorization to things that have been happening since... well... forever, to higher degrees than they are now. Resource A: http://www.crimereduction.gov.uk/sta...atistics35.htm Note the chart at the bottom that shows the crime rates in the US dropping steadily since the 80s. Most of the rest of the world is also dropping, as well, with the notable exception of austria. Resource B: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/glance/viort.htm In fact, if you look the only violent crime that has really gone up is rape from the 1920s, however that's one of the ones that 'doesn't really count' so far as this is concerned, as that in the 1920s rape was like, two laughs short of legal, and the overall awareness of rape has increased resulting in a greater crackdown and fewer people getting off. Which is to say, there was probably more rape in the 1920s as well, just that hardly anyone went to jail for it. Indeed... the sharpest fall in violent crime rates was in the mid-1980s to mid-1990s, which would be about the time when the whole "Religion outta government/school/everywhere else" really reached critical mass. I mean, if we want to draw connections between violent crime and the proliferation of religion in public life. I don't particularily think that is necessarily connected, just saying that if you're going to make THAT connection, it doesn't go the way this guy says. (Fun fact, it also started falling really sharp around the time FF7 came out, and video games became really popular... these two things also happened at around the same time.) MOVING ON! From Bob's site: Quote:
The gods of olympus, again, allowed very few men, regardless of their moral caliber to escape sin. The prime gods of ancient Egypt were seen as perfectly and untouchable-y holy (and, indeed, being but the distant relative of one of them made you perfectly holy and unquestionable), AND allowed only the most absolutely righteous and pious men into the favorable afterlife. Your soul had to be so light of sin as to be able to nearly float. In other words--no one passed the test to get into the underworld fairly. FURTHER, the idea of a god that is absolutely perfectly moral and all powerful is quite possibly the most comforting idea one can think of. No matter what happens in this world we can believe it is for the greater good, as that it is the will of a perfectly good and all powerful god. How could anything that happens not be good in the end? It may seem bad now but 'God works in mysterious ways' and 'God has a plan' and his plan will work out in the end, right? I see no reason that this should be harder to believe in, than, say, Zeus. Quote:
This arguement is patently ridiculous. Honestly it even equally validates Zeus/Jupiter et. al. After all, thousands of Greeks believed in them well into adulthood. The only way it would make any sense is if either there was only one religion in the world, or every god could coexist. As that neither of these things are true, it's completely invalid. Quote:
Without that 100% knowledge, they are not violating their belief of truth by believing in God because they don't know that God isn't real. Just like if someone were to say, leave a heavy camera on the edge of a railing on the empire state building, and someone was tripped, stumbled, and their back knocked the camera without them ever noticing. Then that camera killed someone. Well, that person didn't just violate their belief that killing is wrong, because they had no idea they were killing someone, or even that someone is dead at the end of it. The belief is intact. Again, this arguement does not hold. Quote:
This guy sucks at this. Quote:
ALSO! Quote:
There IS no fine tuning. The idea that the universe was created in such a way that life could survive here is ridiculous. It's EXACTY THE OPPOSITE WAY AROUND! Life came about in such a way that was capable of surviving in this universe. If we lived in a world that had slightly different levels of gravity, or warped space time, or whatever, we'd be sitting here having this same discussion. Only we'd think that our universe, which nothing from THIS universe could survive in, was the one in ten to the power of one-hundred-thirty-two chance. I mean, even supposing the idea of a god, it would be far more efficient for him to create the universe and then create life capable of existing in that universe, rather than creating a universe around the idea of a certain type of life being able to exist there. Honestly, guys, stop posting poorly created arguements from elsewhere. You're ALL much better at this. MUCH better. At this point I see no reason to read the rest of the site, as the part I did read (fully) was had more logic holes than swiss cheese. Not that swiss cheese has logic holes. Swiss cheese has cheese holes... but if we were to assume that the cheese holes were logic holes, then the guy has more logic holes than swiss cheese does.
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01-11-2007, 10:16 PM | #315 | |
Worth every yenny
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: not my mind that's for sure!
Posts: 1,299
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I've read a bit more of that large site. Yeah, it seems to become much less convincing when it tries to explain Christianity as opposed to vague creation. More later!
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To refer to the site, it says that God didn't actually make you because you came from your parents and not God directly. Well, if God can know what at least his original people thought, as well as how this universe it designed works, then it should easily have been able to predict exactly what would happen, everywhere, at any point in time. No cop-outs; God made everything. God can be blamed for everything. |
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01-11-2007, 10:35 PM | #316 |
Bob Dole
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Well, I'm happy to have participated in this, and it's been a fun discussion, but that was my last bullet in a chamber full of duds, apparently. I have nothing else to offer thaat would be of any use, and I'm exhausted (reading the retorts have actually helped put me to sleep, not insinuating that they've been boring).
Who knows, maybe this entire faith thing stems from the fact that I can't stand thinking that some people won't be able to see their loved ones again, and a lot of them never got to say goodbye. I'll check back in here from time to time, but as of now, I'm spent. You're all excellent debaters, by the way, not that I'm one to rank anyone else. It's what puts this forum above others. And this thread was a great idea, fifth.
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Bob Dole |
01-11-2007, 10:46 PM | #317 | ||
helloooo!
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I'm looking at the site that Bob linked to. Most of the stuff looks pretty valid, but right now I'm taking a look at one of the arguements (Why would god create a person predestined for hell) because we had talked about it in this thread. The arguement seemed pretty weak as much as I'v read.
Here's the part that's supposed to prove that we all have free will. Quote:
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I'd love to read the rest of the article, and analyze it too, but frankly, it's lights out on campus, and I have to go. I hope I don't miss too much tonight.
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noooo! why are you doing that?! |
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01-11-2007, 10:47 PM | #318 | ||||||||||
Data is Turned On
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Bob_the_Mercenary,
I'm not going to go through that whole website. In fact, I'm not going to read any more than I've already read. That is, the article about "Who created God?", because I thought it would be illuminating to see how they tackle that question. They don't. "God has always existed because he's outside of time as normally conceived, where cause and effect don't apply" Questions of time and space are a little beyond my depth, but since I suspect it's beyond whoever wrote this too, I'll take a shot at it. That "cause and effect don't apply" means that effect doesn't follow cause, but, to me, it doesn't mean that you can have an effect without a cause. It just means that that cause can be located at points in time that you would, in normal time, not expect it to be. But in all fairness, nothing is impossible, and they don't even have to posit some vague woo about things out of time to be able to get away with the notion that God always existed. It's conceivable that there's something eternal about the universe: to me, it's more plausible than something out of nothing. Here's the rub: I've always heard theists of all stripes go against this idea. Watches must have watchmakers, ect. Normally, they're consciously blind to the notion that their religion, be it disguised as philosophy or science, hasn't got the high ground on this at all. If the universe must have a creator, than so does the creator. If the universe must have an origin, the origin... well... it hardly makes sense to stop there because it fits an ancient dogma. That's why I was interested in this section so particularly. It was a rather unpleasant surprise. Quote:
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Intelligence implies structures, patterns, ideas. Intelligence evokes a brain or Skynet. Non-intelligence evokes a lump of mud or a pile of rock. In conclusion: Quote:
From Krylo's post: Quote:
This seems to be compatible with the theocratic nature of the most ancient governments, and the fact that their gods were the reflection of temporal governments.
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6201 Reasons to Support Electoral Reform. Last edited by Archbio; 01-11-2007 at 10:56 PM. |
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01-11-2007, 10:56 PM | #319 | |
The Obfuscated One
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This is probably going to get torn apart by both sides within ten minutes of me posting it, but whatever. I'm bored.
Suppose that, perhaps, God is a game developer who has come up with an advanced AI system and is testing it out. For the purposes of this jaunt into madness, let us come up with methods of rationalizing the omni-s. Omni-present: God has the debug codes to get to anywhere He wants to be. Omni-potent: Again, debug codes. He simply changes the code and something is. Omni-scient: God programmed everything himself, didn't He? Of course He would know all about it. Omni-bonum(dunno if that's the right word but it sounds about right): The world is in Beta and God is still weeding out the bad.
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01-12-2007, 07:28 AM | #320 | |||
An Animal I Have Become
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Now for a biology lesson... an amino acid is the smallest possible unit of a protein. One protein generally contains anywhere from 500 to 2000 amino acids. A cell, the smallest form of life, contains hundreds of different kinds of proteins, carbohydrates, nucleic acids, and lipids. An amino acid is not life, nor anywhere close to it. But its not really much of a surprise that if you mix all the required materials for a compound and blast them with energy, you might get a compound with those materials in them. Life is far more complicated than that. Consider the evolving from a common ancestor with the apes thing. We're 98% genetically similar. Again that makes sense considering we have many of the same physical features. I mean, we're 60% genetically similar with a mouse. So 2% difference. Thats 60 million base pairs in the genome. So in the run of 4 million years we would have incurred 60 million mutations, and EVERY SINGLE ONE OF THEM would had to have provided a competitive advantage. Considering higher level mammals have backup mechanisms, so mutations are rare, and beneficial mutations are like gold, diamonds, and platinum, you might consider that the odds of it happening on its own are slim to none. Much like the creation of life. We have yet to prove spontaneous generation is even possible, yet its consistently put in science textbooks. Experiments at spontaneous generation have failed miserably every time yet, but science clings to it. That sounds like blind faith to me. How unscientific. To illustrate my point: This is an amino acid. Real complicated stuff there. This is a protein. Its made of thousands of amino acids, all in the proper order, and with the proper charge to give it an active site, a water soluble region, and a lipid soluble region. One wrong amino acid can cause a bad mutation (this is hemoglobin, so a wrong amino acid causes sickle cell anemia). This is a cell. The is what the first life would have looked like. I used a bacteria cell, because animal cells are far more complicated but didn't come first. Even so, this thing is made of hundreds of thousands of proteins, lipids, nucleic acids, and carbohydrates. Each one has a particular function. So according to scientists, they're able to make an amino acid (picture one), so therefore spontaneous generation of a cell (picture three) is possible. Yeah, no leap in logic there. It's like saying that the materials that make bricks can form naturally, so therefore given enough time a house could spontaneously generate.
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