I propose that in noticing the shenanigan that Immanuel pulls, that we can in that notice one fundamental, and I believe ‘sickly’ element in the metaphysical structure of Christian belief.
It is that, time and again, Immanuel resorts to the power-play based around the threat that soon enough those who do not accept the Savior, and Immanuel’s argument, will end up in hell.
At every juncture Immanuel ‘plays the Devil card’.
It is the “ultimate close” (speaking of salesmanship) and the ultimate conversation winner. In the face of it you are given the option of submission or of rebellion, with the most terrible consequences portended for you if you choose 1) a different way of seeing metaphysical truths (if indeed you believe they exist), or 2) if you simply cannot go along with the entire proposition surrounding “salvation”.
Once you see into this sickly power-dynamic, and as long as you are compelled to remain in a civil conversation with the apologist, you are forced to present alternatives. But in the final analysis and for that Christian working these “Calvin-like” metaphysical arguments, there is no “alternative”. At that point — I say this realistically — that Christian becomes a psychological terrorist or blackmailer. It becomes an insidious game of psychological mind control.
Naturally, in any free-spirit, resistance to the power-play
must arise. But two things need to be mentioned:
One is that this Christian in his manoeuvre of control,
creates the rebel. This establishes an unbreachable division and polarity in which “the good” present themselves as “the Lord’s” own children, and those who cannot go along as servants of the demonic. It is that crude.
Two is that an intelligent, thoughtful person can and I think should avoid falling into this idea-trap and into the dynamic of a power-play. Why? First, our very intellectual system is based on strict polarities: the excluded middle. It either is, or it is not — it cannot be both. In math, I admit, the middle is excluded.
In life it is not. The strict polarity is actually an enormous mistake.
I remember years ago discussing an Indian view (Jaina) where
seven predicates are recognized:
Wiki wrote:Jaina seven-valued logic is a system of argumentation developed by Jaina philosophers and thinkers in ancient India to support and substantiate their theory of pluralism. This argumentation system has seven distinct semantic predicates which may be thought of as seven different truth values.
These seven claims are the following:
Arguably, it (that is, some object) exists (syad asty eva).
Arguably, it does not exist (syan nasty eva).
Arguably, it exists; arguably, it doesn't exist (syad asty eva syan nasty eva).
Arguably, it is non-assertible (syad avaktavyam eva).
Arguably, it exists; arguably, it is non-assertible (syad asty eva syad avaktavyam eva).
Arguably, it doesn't exist; arguably, it is non-assertible (syan nasty eva syad avaktavyam eva).
Arguably, it exists; arguably, it doesn't exist; arguably it is non-assertible (syad asty eva syan nasty eva syad avaktavyam eva).