Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
08-09-2005, 07:43 PM | #61 | |||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: baton rouge
Posts: 1,126
|
Quote:
perhaps you could state why you feel my previous responses have been insufficient instead of just accusing me of not answering the question and then restating the question. in other words, tell me why you feel my response didn't pass muster. Quote:
1. in order for us to have freewill, we must have choices (i.e. to accept or reject God). we continually reject God. concordantly, evil is perpetuated. the reason God continues to allow evil is because He continues to allow us to have freewill and we continue to exercise it. our choices not only affect us, but others as well (including the innocent which, btw, we have been warned about). consequences to our choices must exist otherwise freewill would be innocuous and God would be unjust. 2. what is suffering? what is evil? why do you continue to assert that God enjoys suffering? you accused me of not answering questions but quote my response thus vilifying the claim. what's worse is that i now ask the same question twice. Quote:
|
|||
08-09-2005, 07:56 PM | #62 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Hawaii
Posts: 6,629
|
Quote:
Some how you keep bringing up free will over and over again. Just keep in mind that the overwhelming majority of conceptions never go to term and that babies don't have free will--or do they? Let's settle that first and then get back to the discussion. OK? |
|
08-09-2005, 10:13 PM | #63 | |
Banned
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Florida
Posts: 19,796
|
Quote:
Now what would have happened if Eve had sinned and Adam not sinned? Would sin have entered the world? |
|
08-10-2005, 01:14 AM | #64 | |
Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: outraged about the stiffling of free speech here
Posts: 10,987
|
Quote:
Apart from this, biology so far has not shown such a barrier to exist, but on the other hand has shown striking relatedness between such diverse groups as fish and mammals, reptiles and birds, even bacteria and humans. I have no idea why do you think such a barrier exists if the only "evidence" you have against it is a text about which you can not be sure which parts are allegorical and which parts are not. |
|
08-10-2005, 03:37 AM | #65 | ||||||||||||||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: UK
Posts: 5,815
|
Quote:
Name one. I see why you would prefer another interpretation, but I haven't yet seen actual evidence that your interpretation is correct. Quote:
Of course, Israel no longer exists either, according to your own criteria: the kingdom of David is no more. Quote:
Quote:
Much of the Bible directly contradicts this notion. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
...And so it goes. Over and over again, the Bible confirms that God punishes innocents for the crimes of others (even though the Bible says that this is wrong), you cannot argue otherwise without ignoring the text, and the surrounding verses do NOT change the context. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Furthermore, they were thrown out of Eden to stop them becoming gods themselves. They had gained godlike knowledge, and were about to become immortal too: God stopped them. Why do you continue to pretend otherwise, when Genesis says this so clearly? Quote:
You choose to believe otherwise because later Christians concocted an entirely different "meaning" for this story. Quote:
The Hebrews were polytheistic, worshipping the Caananite pantheon. YHWH was one of the 70 sons of EL, and had a consort (Asherah). This is what REAL scholars, who study the history and aracheology of the region, know. There are passing references to this in the Old Testament, such as Deuteronomy 32:8-9, where El (the Most High) splits up humanity into tribes and gives the Israelites to YHWH (the Lord) as his inheritance. And, of course, other gods are mentioned as beings with real power (the Egyptian deities reproduced several of the Plagues of Egypt). On human sacrifice: the Hebrews originally sacrificed their firstborn children, as was the Caanaite custom (ref. Exodus 22:29, Leviticus 27:28-29). Later they abandoned this habit (and Ezekiel refers back to this period in Ezekiel 20:25-26), but continued to honor YHWH with the sacrifice of captives taken in battle, such as the Midianite virgins sacrificed in Numbers 31. Nowadays, Jews and Christians prefer to believe that their deity would never have accepted human sacrifice of any sort, even though the Bible doesn't say this. And, of course, fundamentalists reject the scholarly claim that the Book of Daniel was written in the 2nd century BC rather than the 6th, and that Isaiah was written by three different authors over a period of about 250 years IIRC. I suspect there is material for several new threads there... |
||||||||||||||||
08-10-2005, 04:52 AM | #66 | ||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: UK
Posts: 5,815
|
Quote:
The closest you came is citing your apparently poor map-reading skills as evidence for Tyre's non-existence, and your statement that Tyre was "never the same again" after Alexander. The Tyre thread contains numerous maps and aerial photographs, and Tyre remained a prosperous town long after Alexander. ...And I almost missed this: Quote:
How consistently do you hold this view? Would YOU like to be thrown in jail if your neighbor commits armed robbery, or is it only "appealing" if (for instance) some guy from another town gets thrown in jail instead? |
||
08-10-2005, 05:13 AM | #67 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: The Blue planet
Posts: 2,250
|
Quote:
An alien is has discovered how to create life. It will be intelligent life capable of reason and making choices. This alien then gets from the local wizard a crystal ball that allows him to see into the future. Before he creates this life form he peers into the future (which has not happened and is paradoxial but lets pretend.) and he sees suffering and death and the creature doing evil acts by his own admission from his own diary and moral book. The world he is about to create is not anything like he imagined it to be yet he creates it anyways. Omniscience is quite paradoxial and therefore does not exist and even if it did exist the position would then be fatalism with no free will what so ever. When the alien peers into the crystal ball and sees the future then it has happened already. An omniscient being does not see the future per se because the future is unknowable and a being with omniscience knows all. Therefore everything to the omniscient being is present tense. If an omniscient being that is also omnipotent creates he creates in the present tense everything is the present tense which means there is no choice at all. If at 5 o'clock I am supposed to take a shower there is no way I can change it it has already been seen and known by the omniscient being. For there to be a possiblility for change that means something is then not knowable which means the being is not omniscient. If there is a god and it is omniscient then the world is fatalistic which mean that god has done all this including evil which it allegedly denouncing in many holy books allegedly written from its own mouth transfered to humans. If there is a god that is omniscienct it loves human suffering or it is inconsistent with its own creation and dislikes what it creates itself. |
|
08-10-2005, 06:53 PM | #68 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: baton rouge
Posts: 1,126
|
Quote:
i believe you are trying to argue from the evidential aspect. i will do my best to respond to what i think you are asking. i assume you are thinking that babies dying prematurely is evil. i will also assume you would say yes. there are several reponses to this. the issue is not so much that there are different kinds or amounts of evil, but that people experience it (suffering in your example). if God is omnipotent, He can certainly prevent the innocent (babies in your example) from suffering a permanent, soulful suffering. wouldn't you agree? in other words, the physical suffering we experience as well as the evil in the world are temporary. therefore, it is not so much that the "innocent" suffer physically, but that God can redeem them and prevent permanent suffering. additionally, in order to assume that suffering of the innocent is somehow evil, one must presuppose that there is an expectation that it should not be that way. where does such an expectation come from? furthermore, certain good can come from such suffering. therefore, what human system is to be employed to discern which evil/good paradigms are acceptable and which ones aren't? to do so would be smuggled-in authority. |
|
08-10-2005, 07:01 PM | #69 | ||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: baton rouge
Posts: 1,126
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
||
08-10-2005, 07:09 PM | #70 | ||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: baton rouge
Posts: 1,126
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
i realize evolution is really getting off the subject, but i was asked so i responded. |
||||
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|