iambiguous wrote: ↑Tue Jun 17, 2025 3:04 amSurely, those Deists who do believe in an afterlife, who do believe in immortality and salvation are not going to agree with that. It would be like particular Christians claiming that how you interpret the teachings of Christ, or what you say and believe about Him doesn't matter come Judgement Day. Or so it seems to me.
Unless, perhaps, I am misunderstanding what you mean by "none".
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 17, 2025 12:39 am No, you got it. In the absence of proof everyone accepts, there will be disagreement. As I say:
people who share a belief, can, often do, disagree on the details of that belief. Even between strains of Christianity there's disagreement. The whole
saved by faith alone vs
saved by works thing is an example. So, it really does make no difference except to the folks invested in the argument.
Once again, let me remind you of what is at stake here for most religionists and for some Deists:
1] moral commandments here and now
2] immortality and salvation there and then
Are you telling me though it's perfectly okay for these folks --
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_r ... traditions -- to disagree about God?
If so, do you [or anyone else here] happen to know where the lines are drawn? What's more or less okay to have disagreements about, and what's not? What behaviors are more or less okay, and what behaviors are not? Either the part about being "saved" is something mere mortals invented to comfort and console themselves in the face of death/oblivion, or one or another rendition of Judgment day is the real deal and mere mortals had better be able to cut the mustard...or else.
Same, in my view, regarding free will. Only at least the brain scientists have actual brains in which to explore this using the scientific method. Still, there is no consensus or resolution regarding human autonomy among them. Or none that I'm aware of. And philosophers by and large "establish" [its] existence in "worlds of words".
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 17, 2025 12:39 amIn other words:
What difference does it make how you interpret free will, what you say about it and/or what you believe about it if you cannot establish its actual existence beyond a leap of faith?
None. It makes no difference at all.
That would only make sense, in my view, if scientists and philosophers continue to be stumped regarding both the human brain's capacity and its limitations. In fact, that is why so many religionists come back to a God, the God, their God in the first place. That is their own explanation for free will. Though, sure, others take a leap of faith [philosophically] to free will. We don't know if we have it but we live our lives acting as though we do. Because, in fact, that may well be the case.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 17, 2025 12:39 amWhich is why it
does makes sense to say
It makes no difference at all. Scientists and philosophers
are stumped and neither seem to be movin' forward in their investigations. So, we're all left with our leaps of faith.
We'll, not counting those like Immanuel Can, right? He seems adamant that unless you and I come to accept Jesus Christ as our personal savior, it's burn baby burn. Me, I've tried in vain to get him to discuss the part where WLC and the RF folks insist one can abandon the leap of faith [and even the Bible] and actually
know that the Christian God does in fact exist. Why? Because the scientific and historical facts are there to nail this down.
In other words, if a God, the God does in fact exist, it's still got to be the...right God?
In fact, given this...
"Different Deists had different beliefs about the immortality of the soul, about the existence of Hell and damnation to punish the wicked, and the existence of Heaven to reward the virtuous." wiki
"Deists hold varying beliefs about the afterlife. Some Deists, like Thomas Paine, believed in the 'probability' of an immortal soul, while others, like Anthony Collins, doubted or denied it. Deists who believe in an afterlife generally believe that all humanity can achieve eternal life through virtuous behavior, essentially advocating a 'works-righteousness' approach." A.I.
...what on Earth is in fact true about Him?
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 17, 2025 12:39 am As fact: no one can say.
And yet with so much at stake on both sides of the grave, that's just not good enough for those like IC. On the contrary, he [and so many others] seem adamant that only True Christians can interpret, say and believe what they do about God/Jesus Christ and expect to actually be saved rather than left behind.
Okay? No parts at all above not okay?
Also, from AI:
"Deism, with its emphasis on reason and natural law, doesn't offer a single answer to the gun control debate. Deists would likely approach the issue based on their individual interpretations of reason and natural law, potentially leading to diverse perspectives."
Then this part:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_deism
"Christian deism is a standpoint in the philosophy of religion stemming from Christianity and Deism. It can often refer to Deists who believe in the moral teachings—but not the divinity—of Jesus." wiki
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 17, 2025 12:39 amYes, people who share a belief, can, often do, disagree on the details of that belief.
It just seems to me that if the Deist God did create men and women to "follow the dictates of Reason and Nature" that would not -- could not? -- be interpreted reasonably as meaning whatever each of us as individuals comes to believe is reasonable and natural. In other words, the part I root existentially in dasein given a No God world.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Jun 17, 2025 12:39 amAnd still interpreting is what we do, deists I mean. Proofs about God's nature and purpose are not accessible today, and the evidences are subject to interpretation. Nature is not fully understood and reason is finite and sometimes flawed.[/b]
All I can say is if interpretation revolves around those "dangling conversations" like "what did the movie mean?" or "Is Trump a good president?" or "Is modern art really art at all?" that's one thing...but if it revolves around which God has the capacity to save our souls...?