Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Apr 14, 2020 6:15 pm
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Tue Apr 14, 2020 5:27 am
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 13, 2020 4:39 pm
Above. You said that one God says "Do not kill," and the other says "Kill non-Muslims upon the slightest threat..." If you believe that, you do not believe they are talking about the same "god." They are talking about two different ones.
That is the point, theism is full of contradictions, thus false.
You mean that if one person says that VA is a tall male, and one says that VA is a short female, then logically, you think that means there can be no VA?
I'm sorry you don't exist, then. My apologies for banishing you from existence by my error.
The above reflect your lack of intelligence.
Note the definition of God as accepted by theists;
In monotheistic thought, God is conceived of as the supreme being, creator deity, and principal object of faith.[1] God is usually conceived as being omniscient (all-knowing), omnipotent (all-powerful), omnipresent (all-present) and as having an eternal and necessary existence.
-wiki
Thus different theists can make additional claims to their God as defined above, the differences are merely their own and not imply God do not exists because of the different claims.
You cannot prove your God is true while the Muslim God is false.
Sure you can. To prove which one is the real VA, all somebody would have to do is to know the real VA.
Yes, the real can be verified empirically and scientifically by anyone to be a real person.
But there is no real God to be verified empirically, scientifically and philosophically.
Theistic morality is grounded on
a generally accepted God [as defined above] which cannot be verified as real.
It's just as if I said, "VA is a tall male," and "VA is a short female." The logical and inevitable conclusion to such a contradiction is that we are talking about two different people called "VA."
As far a VA is concerned this can be easily verifying the person empirically.
Now you've got it!
It's exactly the same procedure in reference to God. Views which conform to how God actually is, are true. Those that do not conform to the true nature of who God is are false. It's that simple.
Not relevant, there is no comparison between verifying a real empirical person and an illusory God.
Allah the God of Islam conform to the
a generally accepted God [as defined].
...there is only one same absolute God for the Christians, Muslims, Jews, Hindus [Brahman] and other monotheistic beliefs.
So many things wrong with this idea...where does one start?
How about first with the fact that Hinduism isn't a "monotheism"? It's a
Pantheism, or even a polytheism. Why do you think they call India, "the land of a million gods?"
Whilst Hinduism is polytheistic at one level, these many gods are overruled by the ultimate monotheistic God, i.e. Brahman.
Secondly, if someone gets the description of God wrong, then it's quite obviously not the real God they're worshipping. Instead, at best, it's a wrong guess, and at worst, it's a fiction they or others, have created. And not only do I think so, but so does every other religion.
Same with VA. If I've never met VA (as indeed I have not) and I insist that you are a ten-foot-tall bird, then the logical conclusion is not that there is no such thing as a VA, but that I don't actually know anything about VA at all.
Easy again.
There is no real-God in the first place.
As I had stated, theistic morality is grounded on a
a generally accepted God [as defined] which is not real but illusory.
On top of being grounded on an illusory, theistic morality are very subjective to the specific group of theistic religion[group]. Theistic morality is also laden with evil elements* and enforced with the threat of Hell, thus very conditional.
Whilst Islam has loads of evil element, Christianity also has evil elements among others, e.g. 'slavery' [fundamentally is evil] is not condemned absolutely.
As such, theistic morality is pseudo-morality in contrast to secular morality which strives toward the ideal [highest good] without conditions, thus absolute.