iambiguous wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 2:30 pm
On the other hand, he has no capacity I have seen here to demonstrate that the Christian God trumps Aristotle's when the question posed is "which one"?
You seem to be labouring under the delusion you have an audience other than me. If anybody's paying attention to us, I suspect it's few, and often none.
There's pretty much just me here, I would think. So I can't imagine who you think you're calling to your side...
In any case, Aristotle was wrong about God. He was right about the rules of logic, though. And the rules of logic -- which are as indifferent to agendas as the laws of mathematics are -- say that not more than one view of God can be correct.
Anybody who says otherwise does not simply have a problem with my attitude...he has a problem understanding the rules of logic itself. The Law of Non-Contradiction is non-partisan.
And that's before we get all of the many, many additional Gods that have come down the pike historically. Not to mention all of the No God religious paths.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 8:33 pm You seem very impressed by the fact that people have different gods. I can't really see why. Maybe you can explain what makes you think that these many contradictory accounts imply something.
No...
You can't explain it?
what fascinates me is that, with objective morality at stake on this side of the grave and immortality and salvation at stake on the other side, an omniscient and omnipotent Christian God hasn't been able to bring all of us mere mortals over to the One True Path.
Oh, I see.
Your assumption is that God would want to
make everybody believe in Him, if He exists. Well, that would certainly finish off your free will, and any choice you might make with regard to God.
Is that a price you'd be willing to pay?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 8:33 pm That is precisely what one has to decide freely, for oneself. One must decide if the God described in the Bible is true or not. And the same, of course, could be said for any other "gods" people offer one. Or one could simply refuse, and declare Atheism, and never know.
Either way, that task is our task here, on Earth: to decide if God has spoken, and if so, how, and what you and I are going to do about it.
I don't have any problem with that. I merely suggest that "decisions" here are rooted existentially in dasein.
No. They're "rooted" in who God is. One's mere "dasein" or existential imaginings about God can be wrong. And you know that's true, precisely because there are so many contradictory views on tap.
...this alleged omnipotent God seems woefully deficient in making it crystal clear which path it is.
Quite the contrary. I think it's very clear.
And if Christians are at all right, God has, in fact, sent His Son to tell the world exactly how things are. One cannot imagine anything stronger He could have done, without so overwhelming any possibility of doubt that free will itself would become impossible.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am Like "existing," my claim is either true or its false...and in that, it resembles every other claim a person can make about God.
Oh, it resembles it alright. In fact it's exactly the same: faith based.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 8:33 pm No, actually...it would be a
factual matter. It would be a matter of whether or not your particular view of God was true or false, not of how much belief you invested in it.
What facts?
The facts of who God is.
If God is a Person, as Christianity says He is, then He has a character, an identity, intentions, purposes, and so on, just as you do. And to worship God, one must know who He is...really is...in fact.
What evidence that this Christian God of yours [and not all the other ones] really does exist?
I keep trying to get to that. But so far, you won't tell me what evidence you would even accept on that score.
The problem is, if you will accept nothing, nothing can be done for you. But if you will set the bar in some sensible place, I can attempt to provide what you will believe.
So what would you accept as
evidence of God?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am Here are the three possible views on God.
1. Atheism -- there are no gods.
2. Polytheism -- there are plural or many gods.
3. Monotheism -- there is only one God.
Now, we could discuss what
kind of gods or God there might be..what their/His nature might be, what their/His moral intentions might be, and so on. But those are secondary questions, because if there are no gods, then those questions cannot even be asked; so for now, we'll leave them aside.
We have, above, the three possible views of the question of whether god(s) exists. There are no possible answers that do not fall into one of these three categories, as you can see.
Logic tells us that one of them has to be true. Why? Because there are no possibilities not covered by the three claims, right? Take you time, plug in any religion or ideology you know, and it will fit into one of the three. So there are no other answers possible.
What else can you deduce? Well, logically, not only is one of them guaranteed to be true, but two of the three are guaranteed to be false. Why? Because they directly contradict one another. If there is one or many gods, Atheism is false. If there are no gods, then the last two are false. If there is one God, then both Atheism and Polytheism are false; and if there are many gods, then both Atheism and Monotheism are false.
So what you end up with is that
every person believes that most of the world is wrong. There are no exceptions to that, except a person who cannot do logic and so can't even understand or unravel the trilemma above.
So, if you share his definitions and deductions here, his distinctions are "logically" true.
No. They'll be true, whether or not a person decides to believe in them -- you, me, or anybody else. They'll be true because of logic.
And if you don't and prefer actual hard evidence that it is his Christian God that is the one true path?
Then I'll give that to you, too. But you'll need to say what you'll accept.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am Yes. In those three positions, you have all possible positions summed up.
Right, positions.
Give me the fourth alternative, if you think there's one. Prove me wrong, decisively.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am If you think otherwise, it's easy to prove me wrong. Just say what the fourth option would be.
It's not options that count here,
Yes, it is.
If I've covered all the
possible options, then one has no option but to believe one of the three.
Instead, any number of them will try to turn it all around and insist, "let the atheists demonstrate that they don't exist. As though that is the more logical approach here.
Atheists are responsible only for what they claim. They claim there's no God. If they claim that, they owe us to show us why they believe that, and why they insist we should.
If they claim nothing at all, they owe us nothing; but then they have no reason for being Atheists.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am Oh. So your assumption is that if God were real, he wouldn't let anybody disbelieve in Him?
My assumption is that with so much at stake here -- immortality, salvation, Judgment Day, Heaven and Hell -- God's Word would be such that no one with half a brain could ever possibly
not believe in Him.
So God would
compel people to believe in Him? He would have no reason for wanting us to have a choice, you think?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am If he showed Himself physically, that might well be true. For the Supreme Being to manifest Himself within the universe would overwhelm all people, all debate, all thought, all possibility of objection, for sure. The Bible certainly describes it that way.
But what would then happen to the free choice to enter into a relationship with Him or to refuse? It would then be gone. How can one even possiblly choose not to believe in the ovewhelming presence of the Supreme Being?
And if, perhaps, the time has come for that to happen, then it would indeed do all that. But are you sure enough people have had the opportunity to make their own free choice, uncoerced by the overwhelming presence and certainty of God?
God knows, of course, if enough have.
Many Christians keep promising us that "one day" the "time will come" and JC will return and usher in precisely that indisputable evidence. But in the interim there are the many that will be "left behind" because they found one of the other Gods more believable. Maybe they are children and were indoctrinated to be Shintos or Hindus. Maybe they never heard of Jesus Christ. Maybe they were raised by atheists.
How would free will be denied just because the choice was made clearer?
Okay, let's check that: what do you think God should have done, that He has not done, and would still allow people to have a free will to accept or reject his offer of relationship with Him?
Again, with the stakes revolving literally here around immortality and salvation, around Heaven and Hell!!
You are exactly right.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am Bottom line: think about it. If God values human freedom to choose, how can He make that possible if His own immediate presence is utterly overwhelming of all doubt and resistance? What would he have to do, in order to allow a time for free choice?
Okay, He's given me that time. But the game is rigged. Of my own free will [reconciled with an omniscient God in IC's head] I have thought it through deeply, introspectively over many years; and it makes more sense to think as I do about God and religion. So, I get to "choose" but God help me if it's not the
right choice.
You're right: God's given you time. And he's given His Word for you to read and consider, and He's personally come in His Son and died for you, in order to convince you. He's been raised from the dead to prove that God's offer is sincere, and also that the time is not infinite: the Judge is coming. Moreoever, at this moment, He's sent somebody who knows Him into your "dasein," your existential sphere, to speak to you about your need of salvation.
He now owes you no more. And you have a decision to make.
And, again, all those who are entirely sincere in choosing another God or who are never even aware of Christianity. Or does that qualify them for a "get out of Hell free" card?
You can leave that with God. He can make Himself known many ways, as Romans 1 will tell you.
What's clear, for sure, is
they are not you.

Unlike the people you are imagining, you have been told, and told multiple ways, and now have a choice to make for yourself.
All I can advise you is that you make it wisely: for when you see Him, as you surely will, there will be no possibility of you saying to Him, "You did not do enough for me." You've been told. What you do with it...well, that's now up to you.
...all of us are indoctrinated as children,
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am Did you have a bad childhood, then? I didn't.
I wasn't indoctrinated. There were things I learned from my upbringing, things I did not learn, things I chose to believe and things I refused to believe. It was far from the case that my childhood says brought an end to my learning and choosing, too. I had a lot of freedom.
He comes into the world at this juncture historically, in a particular culture and community and family that for years inculcated him to understand the world around him just as they did. Whether that childhood was good or bad or in between doesn't change that. Some children are more preconscious than others, sure, but to speak of having "a lot of freedom" as a
kid to view the world as we might as adults is ludicrous.
Well, if Cultural / Environmental Determinism, which is what you're invoking here, were true, then it would be utterly impossible for anybody to believe anything not programmed into them. But since people quite routinely depart the traditions and cultures in which they were raised, that's clearly not the case.
For many they are well into their teen years before they bump into someone or something that makes them pull back and question their reality more critically, more comprehensively. For me it was Reverend Deerdorff at the Protestant Community Church. But then I met the Vietnam War and Danny and Mac. And everything changed dramatically again.
So you admit to having had "conversion" experiences, such as from Protestantism to Atheism, and that you've abandoned whatever you were taught in your youth and had more mature views since, yet you insist others
cannot?

That seems more than a little unlikely.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am I did not have such an experience. I'm sorry if yours was not like that.
That's not the point.
It should be.
The point is what can I really know about IC's experiences and what can he really know about mine?
Well, right: you don't know me at all. It's amazing to me that you feel qualified to decide I'm "indoctrinated," based on no evidence at all.
And that's my point: given this, where is the hard evidence to close the gap between what we believe about God "in our head" and what we are able to demonstrate to others that [as rational human beings] they are obligated to believe in turn.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am As I say, we haven't gotten to it yet, because you continue to doubt the groundwork we need to establish so I can present you with such evidence. So I keep having to go back and deal with the basics.
I know, I know: "shortly".
Yes. Tell me what you'll accept, and I'll see what I can give you.
The Christian God and Yellowstone.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am Volcanoes? Shall we go with volcanoes?
Okay, but pick one that did some damage. Yellowstone is pretty benign. What about Pompeii or Mt. St. Helen's?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am I'll let you pick. To make the case tough for me, pick one with a really nasty death toll, not one that erupted without hurting anyone. It would be all the better if it's one you also know something about, so you can press me on the particulars, maybe.
The one at the top of the list works for me.
Mount Tambora, Indonesia? You know that one?
Okay, let's go. What's your question about the Tambora tragedy? What do you want to ask, with regard to it, or what challenge would you like to put to me because of it?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am Do you know Susan Neiman's book,
Evil In Modern Thought? She begins with the earthquake in Portugal. She's asking the same questions, namely, if God exists, why would he allow a disaster to happen?
Indeed, Harold Kushner asked the same question regarding many, many "acts of God". And lots of other things as well. In fact his book starts by laying out all of the excruciating pain and suffering mere mortals have endured...prompting him to conclude that the God of Abraham was indeed in over His head in setting into motion a world He was not all-powerful enough to contain or control.
Although my own reading of the OT led me to a different conclusion. How is that God not to be construed as anything other than a sadistic monster? Just imagine our reaction if one of us today were to do what He did back then.
Anyway, what's her explanation? Is his explanation the same?
Neiman's Jewish by birth, as is Kushner. And she thrashes around quite a bit. In the end, she opts simply to argue that we have to keep asking the question, and not to ask the question is not an option; but she also kind of despairs of an answer. She partly accepts that human-caused tragedies like the Holocaust are human-caused, but she never manages to solve things like Tambora.
If the answer's in Judaism, then like Kushner, Neiman's not sure where.
For our purposes, what's most useful in her analysis is the intelligent division between human-caused and what she calls "natural evils," which includes things like Tambora.