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04-10-2003, 07:52 AM | #21 | |
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Hedge your bets
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Remember, Pascal, you are an atheist as regards all gods except the one you worship. According to your logic, you have the burden of proof against all gods except yours, which I'll take a wild guess is the christian jehovah one. Rene, betting on reality and against theistic protection racket. |
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04-12-2003, 08:05 AM | #22 | |||||
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04-12-2003, 09:32 AM | #23 | |||||
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Wyrdsmyth:
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Realistically, you have been in situations where your friends or children or spouses did not trust you at your word and you took it as an insult, just like anybody else. Being overly-suspicious is generally recognized as a defect of character, not a virtue. Would you like someone who was always suspicious of your every word and who always checked behind you to verify your statements? A person who continued to do so even after his previous attempts have repeatedly proved you to be trustworthy? This, I think , is what Jesus was chastising Thomas about. He had seen enough of Jesus keeping his word so that he should not have doubted him this last time. Quote:
There is some middle ground that maybe we can agree upon. I would agree that being overly-credulous is probably a character defect, but so is being overly-suspicious. There is a point at which the constant requirement for evidence and proof is no longer prudence, it is insecurity and suspicion. At a certain point in personal relationships, the request for evidential support is ungrounded. Thus it is in the relationship with God, once you have been in a relationship with Him long enough. If you ask around, you'll find that most Christians who underwent a conversion experience found that the evidential, spiritual, and emotional support for God's presence communicated through prayer and scripture reading at the begining of their relationship with God is much greater than it is later in the relationship. After a certain point of God proving Himself to be trustworthy, He withdraws many of the evidential support and expects us to simply trust Him. Most of us expect the same thing from our spouses and friends. After we have proven ourselves to be faithful and trustworthy, we don't expect to be required to constantly provide evidence for it on a daily basis. We would consider this insulting, and suggestive that we lacked in character, and so does God. Quote:
Thomas was essentially being cynical about Jesus' CHARACTER, since Jesus told them repeatedly that he would rise from the dead and he had never lied to them, nor demonstrated a lack of abillity to do just what He said He was going to do. If you want to be cynical about the claims of Christ, that is certainly fine. But if you accept Christ as a personal friend and Lord, then you sort of forfeit the right to require proof of Him at every step of your relationship. I think that is all Jesus was saying at that point. I think he was saying of people who already have a relationship with Him (as Thomas did) blessed is He who maintains His trust in me without the neccesity of immediate sensory confirmation. Quote:
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04-12-2003, 10:55 AM | #24 | ||||
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However, the “power” you attribute to God is something we can say no more about. It’s magic. We can’t detect it. It doesn’t work in predictable, repeatable ways. It has not known attributes or properties such that we can distinguish it from any other thing. So we can't really talk about it. Assigning a name to it just gives the illusion that we can. In one sense, you can claim that we don’t know what anything is really. But when you adopt that position, you can’t really even discuss anything. It would be like not accepting that our senses give us accurate information, or that the basic axioms of logic are not necessarily true. Quote:
Consider two questions that one can ask. You may be asked “do you have the belief that a god exists?” to which you may answer yes or no. However, you may also be asked “do you have the belief that no gods exist?” I believe that your answer to the second question is irrelevant and that if you answer “no” to the first question, then you are an atheist. I think the trouble with the second question is due to an implied assumption that the person answering has spent some time to consider evidence and arguments for and against, and that the answer one gives is based on that. Therefore, people who don’t feel they have spent such effort don’t want to answer “yes” to the second question. But still they will answer “no” to the first. Quote:
If you mean God himself, I have no experience of God. |
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04-12-2003, 11:33 AM | #25 | |||||
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sandlewood:
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B) No one, not pascal or anyone since, suggests that the amount to be gained or lost makes the claim more true. It simply justifies the gamble on the more beneficial/least costly proposition. Quote:
But the larger point is that incoherence cannot be established simply via the incomprehensibility of an entity's attributes, which is what Nielson tries to do. Quote:
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04-12-2003, 01:13 PM | #26 | |||||||||||
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04-12-2003, 04:57 PM | #27 | ||||
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I won’t continue with any of the other points because I think it would degenerate into a tit-for-tat discussion and would not be of interest to anyone else. |
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04-13-2003, 09:27 AM | #28 | |
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04-13-2003, 10:15 AM | #29 |
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Anywho, guys, I don't wanna talk about that stuff anymore. We're way off topic. Is there anybody here willing to defend the notion that the concept of God is incoherent, or are we agreed that this notion is problematic?
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04-13-2003, 12:37 PM | #30 |
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Regarding your original post...
If we can derive a contradiction from the qualities allegedly possessed by some proposed object, in conjunction with the state of the world, then we can say that object does not exist. That is, I take it, the use of the word 'incoherent' in this context. Asking us to defend this is like asking if anyone is willing to defend modus tollens. One can derive a contradiction from the typical omnigod such as posited by Judaism/Christianity/Islam, conjoined with the existence of evil (unnecessary suffering), and therefore conclude that a god with such qualities does not exist. However, one could put forth other conceptions of deity -- a god that lacks in one or more of the omniqualities, for example, or one that has ceased existing at some point -- and thereby evade logical contradiction. If you try to twist the meaning of the word 'incoherent' around to say there are things we just don't understand, or things about which we may be mistaken, then I don't think you are using it in the original context. |
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