01-08-2007, 04:02 AM | #131 | |
Argus Agony
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Furthermore, is it cool to believe that maybe what we would consider "God" is neither good nor evil, just a neutral, organized force that keeps the entire scope of existance from falling into total entropy? You know, and maybe that this God doesn't value one form of life over another, so it's totally cool that a virus pretty much destroys everything around it in order to grow and reproduce, in a manner similar to, say, humankind. I don't really get why, in order to believe in a higher being such as God, you have to subscribe to every single tenet of a specific organized religion. Furthermore, I don't understand why the obvious recourse to so many people here is to blame a spiritual idea for the actions of the manmade organization that, more often than not, manipulates that idea to suit their less-than-altruistic goals. But I digress. To answer your question, Tydeus, I believe there are viruses in existance because they have as much right to exist as we do. Should medical science find a way to eradicate any or all strains of viruses from the face of the planet, then I guess viruskind is SOL. It's conflict, you see, a motivating force. The constant need to sustain one's own survival and the survival of the species promotes growth and advancement. Why, if we didn't have microscopic organisms trying to kill us from within, we'd have no reason to create technology allowing us to look at not only the virulent kinds of microbes, but the countless other forms of microscopic life out there. We learn more, get smarter, pass on the knowledge, develop it into new and wondrous things. If it weren't for that sort of challenge, we'd be sitting naked in caves banging rocks together or something.
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01-08-2007, 04:19 AM | #132 | ||||||||
Niqo Niqo Nii~
Join Date: Mar 2004
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Obviously, this forum has gone a long, long time without disscussing this subject, and almost everyone is coming out of the wood-work with an axe to grind. It's like they just slipped a pack of exploding Mentos into the Diet Coke bottle that is our forum.
We need some kind of moderation in this disscussion. Not a ban-hammer, but someone to lead the disscussion. I'm not volunteering for this 'position', but I'm going to try and break these plethora of disscussions down so that we can get newcomers caught up and no one get's lost. Essentially, I'm instigating a fresh start. That doesn't mean you shouldn't reply to what's been posted before this, but it's an invitation to revisit your arguments, or start posting on certain aspects of this topic if you haven't already without feeling obligated to reply directly to past postings. Firstly, I think I'm obligated to get some social grace out of the way; Quote:
While I am continually baffled by the insistance of using words like 'fine tuned' and 'directed' and even 'created' by a community laregly attempting to disregard such notions, I do understand why it seems preferable for scientists to leave God out of the picture. Practically, it doesn't lead to advancement to chalk the unknown up to the 'mystery of God'. The scientists that are religiously inclined don't seem to have that problem though... Quote:
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You'll notice a crud de-mucking operation happening right below you! I'm hoping to create a bookmark of sorts with this post Quote:
And I do understand what you mean about dissonance. But I'm not sure it's really prudent to any disscussion asking whether or not God exisists. This may be hard to swallow, but try to think of religious differances like differances between scientific theory. Each venure has subscribers to paticular 'doctrines', each member no doubt beliveing that their doctrine/theory is the correct one, with the underlying assumption that, eventually, time will tell there can only be one truth. This is not a comparision of science and religion as complete systems of learning, but merely in this limited aspect. Quote:
Example; My religious 'authorities' I respect and will follow without question to certain points, but if I was ever told to start taking up arms against non-belivers, I would probably not be a part of that religious organization anymore. There's a bit about following what I know about God and not men that is crucial to me. Quote:
I don't think this is something you're conciously doing - So don't think me to be imputing bad motive onto you. I will try to make sure I don't do anything similar. I just don't think it promotes an honest discourse. And, yes, of course there is room in the disscussion for the (in)validity of religious teachings in the modern world... But let's not bypass that disscussion with assumptions that make our respective arguments look good. And now, for something really fun! ~~~~~ Now, we've got several issues going. I'm trying to list these in an organized way, but bare with me. (Again, these are just some basic seperations between the overall disscussion... obviously, some of these are going to overlap. I'm not trying to moderate... Just provide an option that I think lends to a possibly more organized disscussion. 1. The Atheist Disscussion: Is beliving in 'God(s)' irrational? What is the logical basis for belife in God? Should religious faith have applied such logic, or is it merely unknowable in the sense of empirical understanding? If so, should it be that way? Are these world-views to be viewed as equally correct? 2. The Science Behind Theist and Atheist Belifes: Is creation mutually exclusive to the scientific view of origins? What specifics of current facts and theories regarding physics and study of the universe, space-time itself, lend to or discredit either viewpoint? 3. Nature of God: We assume, for the purpose of this argument, that God(s) exsist. Philosophical viewpoints on God's allowance of 'evil' in the world. Does God care? Are his standards arbitrary, or should we assume that they reach some purpose beneficial to either us personally or to 'existance' itself? Is God how he portrays himself, or how religion's portray him in regards to omniscience etc? 4. Differance Between Religious Belifes: Are some belifes 'more' correct? Based on what? Do differances between religions matter, or are all leading to the same place? How accurate are 'Holy Books', or even just the Bible? Is critisism of it valid, or merely popular? 5. Nature of Religion: Is religion as a concept, harmful, neutral, or beneficial? Is it moreso (either) than any other system of organized belife like political organizations? Should religions be able to share their message with people publicly? What effects, good and bad, can religion have on society? Is religion a motivator for altruism, or does it bely a lack of sincerity? ~~~~~ Now, one or more of those items brought YOU to this thread. Some people are more interested in being apologists for religion or agnostisism and will lean more on subjects 4 and 5. Others are looking to re-visit belife in a higher power as a valid, logical, conclusion, or to discredit it entirely, respectivly, and will no doubt focus on subjects 1 and 2. Hopefully this 'compression' helps you organize your thoughts. So far, this thread has been a great excercise. I ask all posting members to continue to keep to such elevated levels of civility and to literally ignore anything counter-productive to that.
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01-08-2007, 08:05 AM | #133 | ||||||||
An Animal I Have Become
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Second of all, you just compared giving homeless people food and shelter with molesting children. I can't even imagine how you rationalize that in your head. Quote:
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However, I could also use water in my analogy... which is a source of life as well as a destroyer of life. So oh well. And just to point out my earlier statement was right, you're entire reply was very emotionally heavy. How can one practice complete logic with emotions clouding their judgment? Quote:
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You hard nose on religion a lot... but nothing done by the less desirable religious individuals is anything more than done by anybody else. I COULD judge all Americans based on the more prominent ones in the media, but that wouldn't be very fair to the rest of you, would it? Same deal.
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:fighter: "Buds 4-eva!!!" :bmage: "No hugs for you." Quote:
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01-08-2007, 08:36 AM | #134 | |
There is no Toph, only Melon Lord!
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You can't pick and choose what parts of the Bible you follow, when Christianity is following The Bible, not just the new testament. Otherwise Christianity has no ten commandments. If you're going to follow the bible, fine. Don't just pick the parts you like, since this is all the word of God. Hell, the Bible itself is one of the biggest reasons I can't believe this 'god' is all loving in any sense.
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01-08-2007, 09:39 AM | #135 | ||
An Animal I Have Become
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:fighter: "Buds 4-eva!!!" :bmage: "No hugs for you." Quote:
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01-08-2007, 09:44 AM | #136 | |
There is no Toph, only Melon Lord!
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01-08-2007, 09:54 AM | #137 |
Intercourse the Penguins!
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: The Land of Wuz
Posts: 326
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I believe in one God,
the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth and of all things visible and invisible. And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only-begotten Son of God, begotten of His Father before all worlds, God of God, Light of Light, very God of very God, begotten, not made, being of one substance with the Father; by whom all things were made; who for us men and for our salvation came down from heaven, and was incarnate by the Holy Spirit of the virgin Mary and was made man; and was crucified also for us under Pontius Pilate. He suffered and was buried. And the third day He rose again according to the Scriptures and ascended into heaven and sits at the right hand of the Father. And He will come again with glory to judge both the living and the dead, whose kingdom will have no end. And I believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord and giver of life, who proceeds from the Father and the Son, who with the Father and the Son together is worshiped and glorified, who spoke by the prophets. And I believe in one holy Christian and apostolic Church. I acknowledge one Baptism for the remission of sins, and I look for the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come. Amen. That about summarizes what I believe about God and religion. Oh, and as for the Ten Commandments and Christianity. I know it's a big thing in a lot of churches these days to say that we don't have to worry about them, because Jesus died for us. I refer to these churches as "Jump for Jesus!" churches. My opinion is this: if we didn't have the commandments to show our sins, we wouldn't need a savior.
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At the end of the day there's another day dawning And the sun in the morning is waiting to rise Like the waves crash on the sand Like a storm that'll break any second There's a hunger in the land There's a reckoning still to be reckoned and There's gonna be hell to pay At the end of the day! Les Miserables
Last edited by Gascmark de Leone; 01-08-2007 at 09:59 AM. |
01-08-2007, 09:59 AM | #138 | ||
An Animal I Have Become
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So for this, I'll use an argument similar to what I've heard from many atheists. We don't know what the world was like back then when the Old Testament was written, only from what we read. But we do know that the world was very harsh, and that many nations (much like today, ironically) would have liked to see Israel destroyed. Sometimes harsh rules are in place in order to protect people from harsher consequences. Those rules put in place way back in 3000 B.C. enabled Judaism (God's chosen people) to survive more trials and near destructions, so I can't dismiss them as being invalid for that era. Also, for a more theological argument, at that point in time there had been no retribution for sin (Christ dying on the cross), therefore the system was different, and harsher. However, the world has changed. Don't you think God would be capable of being flexible enough to recognized the dynamic world he created wouldn't always be able to fall under the same set of rules? Christ died. Retribution was accomplished. That changed the rules, whether you like it or not. It doesn't mean the Old Testament wasn't valid for the time it was written, but so much has changed since then much of it is not applicable for today. God gave humanity a standard to live by. It failed and grew in a different direction. Therefore, God loved us enough to give us another way to live within the direction we chose. Why is that so hard to accept? Chrisitianity is not complicated. Humans suck. Every single one of us screw up sometimes. Yet we're worth a lot... we're invaluable. Therefore, to give us a way not to screw ourselves over, God died for us, so that we could go to heaven. And what do you do to get to heaven? Accept it. How complicated is that? Then people ask "Well if I don't accept it, why should I go to hell?". I ask, "Why wouldn't you just accept it? Why is it so hard?". And when getting into heaven is so ridiculously easy, people still blame God/religion for everything bad. Well guess what? It's not God or religion... its people that cause bad things, and there's only people to blame. Krylo said religion was an ideology that caused wars, therefore it was a bad ideology. Democracy, freedom, independance, equality, antiterrorism, animal rights, and environmentalism has also caused wars and violence for the sake of an ideology, yet most of us would consider them good ideologies. The fact that people abuse it and use it for selfish purposes doesn't make it bad... it makes us human. Anyway, I'm done with this thread. Personally I think it was a mistake for it to be opened, since everybody on this forum tends to be one extreme or the other (and to be honest I like most of you and I'd rather not have a big huge division over one thing). Happy debating, but I doubt you'll come up with anything that nobody else has said dozens of times over the centuries.
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:fighter: "Buds 4-eva!!!" :bmage: "No hugs for you." Quote:
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01-08-2007, 10:20 AM | #139 | ||||
There is no Toph, only Melon Lord!
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That's not the point -- why should we accept it? If it sounds so wrong to us, so abhorrently discontent and mismatching, why should we place our energy into something that just isn't right to us? It's not so hard -- no, choosing entirely how my life shall be lived based on this, this whole organization is hard when I see it my way. Quote:
You can't really distinguish when it's the institution's fault and when it's the person's fault. I am quite certain that in the days of the Old Testament, girls were sold into slavery and children were stoned to death for disobedience. That was a problem with the Religion. It's just not that simple, like you said it was. It can't be, unless you just opt to not think about it. Personally -- I put a lot of thought into a massive pivot of my life. Quote:
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I can tell you're lying. Last edited by Mesden; 01-08-2007 at 11:21 AM. |
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01-08-2007, 11:22 AM | #140 | |
helloooo!
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noooo! why are you doing that?! |
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