Christianity

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seeds
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Re: Christianity

Post by seeds »

seeds wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 5:57 pmWell, right back at you with the shame on you, uwot, me old bean. For in one breath you "completely" agreed with Dubious that God "...existing or not..." doesn't explain anything, while in the very next breath you agreed with me that God's existence "...would explain everything...".

I'm sure you didn't mean it quite the way it sounded, but I'm seeing a bit of a contradiction there, no?
uwot wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 6:11 pm Fair point. The thing is a blanket 'God done it' doesn't explain any individual phenomenon.
Why not?
uwot wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 6:11 pm So while god may be responsible for everything, appealing to him as the explanation for all things doesn't explain any one thing.
Another contradiction.

You know that (right or wrong) I am a strong proponent of a Berkeleyanistic view of reality which holds that the universe is the mind of a higher consciousness, indeed, a mind that represents the fully-fruitioned, "adult" version of our own minds.

In which case, if God's very being is the living foundation of literally everything in this universe,...

(in the exact same way that your very being is the living foundation of everything in your own mind)

...then it is silly for you to suggest that God's existence doesn't explain the existence of all of the individual phenomena that makeup this universe, for if God did not exist, then neither would said phenomena exist.

Again, I am sure that you didn't mean it quite the way it sounded, so please clarify your stance on this issue.
seeds wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 5:57 pm Besides, when a long time ago I asked you the following question,...
seeds wrote: Sun Apr 29, 2018 12:20 am Just out of curiosity, what images rise-up in your mind when you hear the word “God”?
...you stated this...
uwot wrote: Sun Apr 29, 2018 11:02 am Beardy bloke in the clouds...
So my Sistine Chapel reference is not without a good reason.
uwot wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 6:11 pm Ah well, that's "God" with a capital christian G. If that is how the Vatican chooses to present its "God", who am I to argue?
Yeah, well, the point is that it seems to have influenced the way in which you visualize God. I mean, why else would you refer to God as being a "...Beardy bloke in the clouds..."?
_______
Nick_A
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Re: Christianity

Post by Nick_A »

Here is another absurdity for you. But is it really absurd or does it require something beyond binary thought people normally argue with?

John 8:57-58
The people said, “You aren’t even fifty years old. How can you say you have seen Abraham?” Jesus answered, “I tell you the truth before Abraham was even born, I Am!”
Dubious
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Re: Christianity

Post by Dubious »

Dubious wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 7:44 am Trying to calculate the probability for god’s existence is at best a fool’s game. However, since the universe does exist, and possibly many more, your statement gives credence to a high probability of a Grand Architect being responsible for it all.
uwot wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 9:05 amDepends what you mean by high.
...the usual dictionary definition would suffice.
uwot wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 9:05 am Being scientifically useless is not the same as not existing.
That is so obvious both theist and atheist could agree.

...well, wasn't this exciting! :roll:
Dubious
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Re: Christianity

Post by Dubious »

Nick_A wrote: Mon Mar 14, 2022 12:24 am Here is another absurdity for you. But is it really absurd or does it require something beyond binary thought people normally argue with?

John 8:57-58
The people said, “You aren’t even fifty years old. How can you say you have seen Abraham?” Jesus answered, “I tell you the truth before Abraham was even born, I Am!”
That's what John said, Jesus said in the latest of all the included gospels. Amazing he would know what Jesus said so many years before!
uwot
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Re: Christianity

Post by uwot »

seeds wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 7:03 pm
uwot wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 6:11 pmThe thing is a blanket 'God done it' doesn't explain any individual phenomenon.
Why not?
Well if your answer to 'How does that work?' is always 'God does it', then you have no science.
seeds wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 7:03 pm...if God's very being is the living foundation of literally everything in this universe,...

...then it is silly for you to suggest that God's existence doesn't explain the existence of all of the individual phenomena that makeup this universe, for if God did not exist, then neither would said phenomena exist.
If.
seeds wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 7:03 pm...why else would you refer to God as being a "...Beardy bloke in the clouds..."?
I don't believe there is such a thing, but when asked to visualise a god, the first image that comes to mind is usually Michelangelo's or Blake's, but it could be Thor, Osiris or Shiva. If there is a god I'm confident it is none of the above, but if pressed to describe what it looks like, I'd say have a look around.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Dubious wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 12:22 am In neither case, "original pair" or "group-simultaneous explanation" as you say do they fit the reality of how evolution works, which by this time, is well known but doesn't imply that everything is known.
I understand how the "original pair" explanation fits both Theism and Evolutionism. But I'm unaware of any plausible theory from either side that fits the "group-simultaneous" explanation.

Still, I'm ready to hear how that story would go, if you can even conceive of how it could go...and even accepting you're not sure it actually went that way.

I just want to know if there's any way even to make it plausible theoretically, let alone in practice.
uwot
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Re: Christianity

Post by uwot »

Dubious wrote: Mon Mar 14, 2022 1:32 am...well, wasn't this exciting! :roll:
Whatever floats your boat.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

iambiguous wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 3:10 am One thing we can conclude is that your own Christian God has yet to provide mere mortals with a Script that leaves no doubt whatsoever as to what constitutes evil behavior. And, given Judgment Day, you would think that might be important to Him.
What? Because they continue to disagree with the "Script" he HAS given them? Why would the obduracy of man count as evidence against there being such a Script."

That doesn't seem to follow at all.
Also, it seems reasonable to conclude that since down through the ages historically, and across the globe culturally, and given all of the uniquely personal experiences any one individual might accumulate in his or her life, moral relativism would be all but inevitable.
It doesn't at all seem obvious. An objective reality is always objective, regardless of the opinions or "personal experiences" people have. One's opinion about the laws of surface tension will not decide whether or not one can walk on water, and one's "personal experiences" do not invalidate the law of gravity.

Objective is objective. No number of opinions change objective reality. Physical reality does not "all but inevitably" turn relative if people don't know about or agree with features it has.

So if morality is objective, opinions are irrelevant to the moral facts. The only question is, "Is morality reflective of an objective moral truth, or is it merely a product of human imagination?" But if it's the latter (a product of human imagination) then it's not merely "relative," but rather "delusional," since it fails (in all its forms) to correspond to any objective facts at all.
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pm You've said, "People accuse each other." Fine. How do we know what the value of those "accusations" is?
You ask them.

No, that won't do.

Asking them if they personallly believe their own "accusations" is different from being able to show what the value of the accusations actually is. If I accuse you of murder, and believe you did it, that does not mean my allegation is in any way justified -- unless you actually did it, and I have good reasons to know you did.
dasein,
Meaningless word. No definition for the term has been offered.
with determinism we have no consensus of opinion among either scientists or philosophers that free will is in fact the real deal.

Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pm We certainly have a 100% consensus of all, one demonstrated through the way they act -- even among those who, like you, pretend they believe in Determinism, and say so in the most passionate language.
You assuming that people act as though they are free
I don't assume it. I don't need to. I can see they do. So can you. It's obvious. And you're doing it at this very instant.
At least I'm willing to admit that my own take on all of this may well be wrong.
You are, are you? Well, that's something.
Immanuel Can wrote: Thu Mar 10, 2022 7:04 pm Which way do you want to argue? Are the opinions people express indicative of some truth we have to account for, or are they simply dismissible.
I'm still waiting for an answer to this question: are you going to supply one?
Good and evil are among the word-sounds that English speaking people invented. The rest is history. With or without the Christian God.

Immanuel Can wrote: Thu Mar 10, 2022 7:04 pm Honestly, I've got to say that that's one of the worst arguments I've ever heard ! :lol: It's really funny.
Right, like down through the centuries people have not invented words to differentiate behaviors they approve of and behaviors they do not. With or without countless Gods.
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pm That they have "invented words" is the least profound observation you could have made. They also invented "pixie" and "unicorn."
Please. Why did they invent the words?

"Pixie and unicorn"? Because people like to fanatasize. They like pretty stories and legends.

But "people like to fantasize" won't show that the words they invent or fantasize refer to anything real at all.
...flesh and blood human beings often interact such that their behaviors come into conflict because one side sees them as good and the other side as evil.
But that, too, doesn't explain anything. It's "flesh and blood human beings" who created pixies and unicorns. You've failed to show that any of their moral "words" belong in any more dignified category than that.
...back to unicorns and pixies. Words created to describe creatures that do not actually exist...but are only invented for "make-believe" stories. Whereas Good and Evil [and all the many equivalents] were invented in all communities to encompass behaviors that were in fact embodied in any number of contexts in which the consequences were anything but "make-believe".
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pm You're missing the point...probably trying very hard to miss it, too.

The "behaviours" existed. So do the "words." But that the "words" describe any objective property of the "behaviours" is the question you have to resolve.

A thing does not become "good" or "evil" merely because somebody comes up with the word. That value-claim has to be justified in some way.
That's all you have at your disposal though...
Well, that's what you're assuming, perhaps. It's certainly not something you've proved to be the case. "Words" do not turn fantasies into realities. They don't have that sort of alchemical or magical power.
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pm There is no chain of logic that ties Atheism as a first premise, to a single moral conclusion. And if you listen to enough Atheists, you'll find that's exactly what they, themselves -- at least the one's who understand their own view -- actually say as well. In fact, they pride themselves on that.
What on earth is that even supposed to mean to those flesh and blood human beings dealing with actual conflicts?
It means they are floating like lost spacemen, adrift in an amoral, ethically-meaningless universe. They have no objective basis upon which they can judge anything as good or evil. They're lost.
Out in the real world, people are rewarded or punished every day for behaviors that are entirely grounded in actual flesh and blood human interactions out in particular communities.

Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pm Like the Salem Witch Trials, you mean? Yes, no doubt.
The irony here.
It was intentional. I took from the Atheist stock of stories one that I knew would appeal to an Atheist.

What it shows is this: the fact that somebody is being punished does not show they deserved it. They may have, or may not have: but whether they deserved it or not will not be established by the fact of their being abused by somebody. If your argument worked, then the fact that the young women were being punished would be proof they were witches.
Instead, it's my point that in a No God world, Evil is merely that which someone believes exists "in their head".
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pm Right. In other words, it's a delusion. Nothing more.
But what isn't a delusion are the conflicting behaviors themselves.

That behaviours "conflict" does not show them to be evil. The most it can show is that they are incommensurable. But they could both be good, or both evil, or both indifferent.

Example: my desire to buy ice cream for a party and your insistence we should use the money for cake could be incommensurable: but they are in no way evil. They're just incommensurable if there isn't enough money for both.

In fact, an Atheist can't even coherently say that conflict among people itself is "evil." He could as easily think it's just the evolutionary process doing its usual work of eliminating some and allowing others to thrive at their expense.
Last edited by Immanuel Can on Mon Mar 14, 2022 3:08 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Dubious
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Re: Christianity

Post by Dubious »

seeds wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 4:44 pm
Dubious wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 7:44 am The point was, in case you missed it, god doesn’t explain anything, existing or not.
uwot wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 9:05 am I completely agree.
Come on guys, it would explain lots of things.

At the very least it would explain why this vast "dream-like" illusion that we call a universe is so remarkably well "designed" that it causes two highly intelligent blokes, such as yourselves, to be fooled into thinking that it is a product of chance.

The first thing that needs to happen is that whenever you hear the word "God," you need to stop visualizing this anthropomorphic nonsense...
_______
Any non-abstract god entity, biblical or not has zero relationship when reflecting on a universe as the creation of an abstract intelligence. Anthropomorphism simply no-longer applies in that kind of debate and actually turns out to be a contradiction and paradox when considering it in those terms.

It's logical and even reasonable to assume that an organized entity like the universe and all of its contained intelligences must have been created by a greater one. There is nothing illogical about such an idea. It begins with a god incipience or Cause whose blueprint establishes a chain of future causes. Sounds reasonable enough.

But should that preclude any probability of a very different process happening in establishing the same outcome reason normally defaults to?

It is entropy, time and emergence which create the conditions of complexity which manifests itself in both micro and macro perspectives. It's a process which proceeds on its own on multiple levels, the Intelligence required already contained in it. Every process contains a paradigm formed by an intelligence which doesn't have to be self-aware to be active.

In both its simplicity and complexity it travels the grooves of least resistance compared to an extra-mundane intellect external to time and space and having to wonder where that derived from.
Dubious
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Re: Christianity

Post by Dubious »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 3:51 pm
uwot wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 3:24 pmDo you think my analysis is wrong?
Let's start with I think you blunder some of the high notes. And those are the important ones!
That was hilarious! Mozart would have been under the table laughing had he heard this musical parrot trying his best to sing the Queen of the Night aria from the Magic Flute.
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iambiguous
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Re: Christianity

Post by iambiguous »

iambiguous wrote: Sun Mar 13, 2022 3:10 am
One thing we can conclude is that your own Christian God has yet to provide mere mortals with a Script that leaves no doubt whatsoever as to what constitutes evil behavior. And, given Judgment Day, you would think that might be important to Him.
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Mar 14, 2022 5:17 amWhat? Because they continue to disagree with the "Script" he HAS given them? Why would the obduracy of man count as evidence against there being such a Script."

That doesn't seem to follow at all.
Are you telling me that the omniscient God of Abraham could not come up with a Scripture such that the terrible inquisitions, crusades, and wars fought down through the ages between Christians, Muslims and Jews over what God's words meant couldn't instead have been entirely avoided?!

And what of those born before the alleged birth of Christ? Those who never even heard of Christianity? What of those who go to the grave worshipping an entirely different God precisely because no one ever brought your God to their attention?

What of their fate on Judgment Day?
Also, it seems reasonable to conclude that since down through the ages historically, and across the globe culturally, and given all of the uniquely personal experiences any one individual might accumulate in his or her life, moral relativism would be all but inevitable.
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Mar 14, 2022 5:17 amIt doesn't at all seem obvious. An objective reality is always objective, regardless of the opinions or "personal experiences" people have. One's opinion about the laws of surface tension will not decide whether or not one can walk on water, and one's "personal experiences" do not invalidate the law of gravity.
Again, unbelievable. Gravity is applicable to all men and women down though the ages and acroos the globe. No exceptions.

But people born hundreds or thousands of years ago, and in countless cultural contexts producing any number of conflicting moral and political agendas...objective is objective here too?
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Mar 14, 2022 5:17 amSo if morality is objective, opinions are irrelevant to the moral facts. The only question is, "Is morality reflective of an objective moral truth, or is it merely a product of human imagination?" But if it's the latter (a product of human imagination) then it's not merely "relative," but rather "delusional," since it fails (in all its forms) to correspond to any objective facts at all.
Again, the only reason you are able to assert that here is because you merely assume that this objective morality is derived from a Christian God that you basically refuse to take here...

1] to a demonstrable proof of the existence your God or religious/spiritual path
2] addressing the fact that down through the ages hundreds of Gods and religious/spiritual paths to immortality and salvation were/are championed...but only one of which [if any] can be the true path. So why yours?
3] addressing the profoundly problematic role that dasein plays in any particular individual's belief in Gods and religious/spiritual faiths
4] the questions that revolve around theodicy and your own particular God or religious/spiritual path


...given a particular set of circumstances.
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pm You've said, "People accuse each other." Fine. How do we know what the value of those "accusations" is?
You ask them.

Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pm No, that won't do.

Asking them if they personallly believe their own "accusations" is different from being able to show what the value of the accusations actually is. If I accuse you of murder, and believe you did it, that does not mean my allegation is in any way justified -- unless you actually did it, and I have good reasons to know you did.
Again, my point does not revolve around accusing someone of murder, but in establishing that the accusation itself is warranted because it can be established in turn that murder itself is immoral. And [of course] what you do here in order to "establish" that is to insist that such things ever and always go back to the subjective, rooted existentially in dasein assumptions you make about the Christian God! Around and around you go!!

Just as those who worship and adore an entirely different God will.

Meanwhile...

Where is this God? Are you able to produce Him? demonstrate to us why we should accept your own "private and personal" set of assumptions?

No, of course not. Instead, yours is just another leap of faith, another wager.
Instead, it's my point that in a No God world, Evil is merely that which someone believes exists "in their head".
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pm Right. In other words, it's a delusion. Nothing more.
But what isn't a delusion are the conflicting behaviors themselves.

Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pmThat behaviours "conflict" does not show them to be evil. The most it can show is that they are incommensurable. But they could both be good, or both evil, or both indifferent.
Again, let's bring this down to Earth.

Here are the scheduled executions coming up Texas.

https://www.tdcj.texas.gov/death_row/dr ... tions.html

Now, given your own understanding of the existential relationship between this behavior, objective morality and the Christian God, how are we to understand "incommensurable" here?

Now, from my frame of mind in a No God world, there does not appear to be a way for philosophers to establish if capital punishment is in fact either Good or Evil behavior. Instead, different individuals having led [at times] very, very different lives will be predisposed existentially to embrace conflicting political prejudices.

What say you?

Instead, you bring it "down to Earth" given a different context...
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pm Example: my desire to buy ice cream for a party and your insistence we should use the money for cake could be incommensurable: but they are in no way evil. They're just incommensurable if there isn't enough money for both.
Well, at least there is no mention of pixies and unicorns.
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pm In fact, an Atheist can't even coherently say that conflict among people itself is "evil." He could as easily think it's just the evolutionary process doing its usual work of eliminating some and allowing others to thrive at their expense.
More to the point [mine] atheists who subscribe to moral nihilism as I understand it do come to conclude that human conflict in a No God world that is essentially meaningless and purposeless, ending for each of us one by one in oblivion, is neither good nor evil.

Sans God, how could it possibly be either one?

On the other hand, this can be no less but somewhere in between an educated and a wild ass guess given "the gap" and "Rummy's Rule.

I mean, given just how utterly insignificant "I" am in the context of "all there is", what could I possible really know about any of this.

It's just that I suggest in turn that this is applicable to you too. Indeed, that's why I suspect further it is so important for those like you to believe in things like Christian Gods. Something, anything to anchor I in.

Try this...

Go here: https://www.sciencechannel.com/show/how ... ks-science

Watch a few episodes in order to grasp just how profoundly mysterious "all there is" is. See if you can connect them to your Christian God.
uwot
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Re: Christianity

Post by uwot »

Dubious wrote: Mon Mar 14, 2022 5:51 amAny non-abstract god entity, biblical or not has zero relationship when reflecting on a universe as the creation of an abstract intelligence.
For those of us who aren't fluent in gibberish, could you explain what this means?
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

iambiguous wrote: Mon Mar 14, 2022 8:57 pm Are you telling me that the omniscient God of Abraham could not come up with a Scripture such that the terrible inquisitions, crusades, and wars fought down through the ages between Christians, Muslims and Jews over what God's words meant couldn't instead have been entirely avoided?!
If man has free will, he can choose to listen to what God says or not. So don't blame God for what man chooses to do when he chooses to disobey the Script.
And what of those born before the alleged birth of Christ? Those who never even heard of Christianity?
Read Romans 1, and you'll have your answer to that.
Also, it seems reasonable to conclude that since down through the ages historically, and across the globe culturally, and given all of the uniquely personal experiences any one individual might accumulate in his or her life, moral relativism would be all but inevitable.
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Mar 14, 2022 5:17 amIt doesn't at all seem obvious. An objective reality is always objective, regardless of the opinions or "personal experiences" people have. One's opinion about the laws of surface tension will not decide whether or not one can walk on water, and one's "personal experiences" do not invalidate the law of gravity.
Again, unbelievable. Gravity is applicable to all men and women down though the ages and acroos the globe. No exceptions.

But people born hundreds or thousands of years ago, and in countless cultural contexts producing any number of conflicting moral and political agendas...objective is objective here too?
Of course.

And you think so, too. Because if you didn't believe in the objective wrongness of "conflicts," as you call them, you would have nothing to point out here.

Objective is always objective.
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Mar 14, 2022 5:17 amSo if morality is objective, opinions are irrelevant to the moral facts. The only question is, "Is morality reflective of an objective moral truth, or is it merely a product of human imagination?" But if it's the latter (a product of human imagination) then it's not merely "relative," but rather "delusional," since it fails (in all its forms) to correspond to any objective facts at all.
Again, the only reason you are able to assert that...
I'm able to assert it by way of reason. It requires no other assumptions. That you complain about God shows beyond a shadow of any doubt that you believe in objective morality, even while you claim you don't.
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pm You've said, "People accuse each other." Fine. How do we know what the value of those "accusations" is?
You ask them.

Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pm No, that won't do.

Asking them if they personallly believe their own "accusations" is different from being able to show what the value of the accusations actually is. If I accuse you of murder, and believe you did it, that does not mean my allegation is in any way justified -- unless you actually did it, and I have good reasons to know you did.
Again, my point does not revolve around accusing someone of murder, but in establishing that the accusation itself is warranted because it can be established in turn that murder itself is immoral.
Then you are missing the important point. The important point here is that the mere fact of somebody accusing does not imply the accusation is warranted. That should be obvious.
rooted existentially in dasein
When you say this word, we all hear this: 💩
Where is this God?
Read Romans 1.
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pmThat behaviours "conflict" does not show them to be evil. The most it can show is that they are incommensurable. But they could both be good, or both evil, or both indifferent.
Again, let's bring this down to Earth.
It's already there. Ice cream, remember?
Now, from my frame of mind in a No God world, there does not appear to be a way for philosophers to establish if capital punishment is in fact either Good or Evil behavior.

It's worse than that. There's no way for a person in a no-God word to show that ANYTHING is "good" or "evil." The words have no objective referent.
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Mar 11, 2022 6:52 pm In fact, an Atheist can't even coherently say that conflict among people itself is "evil." He could as easily think it's just the evolutionary process doing its usual work of eliminating some and allowing others to thrive at their expense.
More to the point [mine] atheists who subscribe to moral nihilism as I understand it do come to conclude that human conflict in a No God world that is essentially meaningless and purposeless, ending for each of us one by one in oblivion, is neither good nor evil.
Yes, that's what logically they must believe...assumiing they want to be logical, of course.

With Atheists, I've found there's no certainty of that. There are many who want to keep believing in "good" and "evil," even as objective properties. But their Atheism allows no logic to that.
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Re: Christianity

Post by promethean75 »

Indeed, our atheists are too pious. The christian protestant culture is so ingrained in them that even while God has been dead for centuries - and they know that without god, everything is permitted - they still hold on to that morality out of plebian habit and fear.

Feuerbach had a hand in killing god, but he kept the morality just the same, now calling it 'humanism'. But this too is just another abstraction. Stirner to D4. There is no 'mankind', there is only the individual.
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Re: Christianity

Post by attofishpi »

iambiguous wrote: Mon Mar 14, 2022 8:57 pm Again, the only reason you are able to assert that here is because you merely assume that this objective morality is derived from a Christian God that you basically refuse to take here...

1] to a demonstrable proof of the existence your God or religious/spiritual path
2] addressing the fact that down through the ages hundreds of Gods and religious/spiritual paths to immortality and salvation were/are championed...but only one of which [if any] can be the true path. So why yours?
3] addressing the profoundly problematic role that dasein plays in any particular individual's belief in Gods and religious/spiritual faiths
4] the questions that revolve around theodicy and your own particular God or religious/spiritual path
I know the above was not directed my way, but allow me to have a crack.

1] to a demonstrable proof of the existence your God or religious/spiritual path

Simulation or Divine Reality - evidence of God\'God'
viewtopic.php?f=11&t=33214



2] addressing the fact that down through the ages hundreds of Gods and religious/spiritual paths to immortality and salvation were/are
championed...but only one of which [if any] can be the true path. So why yours?


To know God is via Christ - a bloke that went to his death stating he is the path - seems a likely place to start.


3] addressing the profoundly problematic role that dasein plays in any particular individual's belief in Gods and religious/spiritual faiths

What do you mean?


4] the questions that revolve around theodicy and your own particular God or religious/spiritual path

Wo/men can be evil. God can also be evil, where required. Per my experience of this entity - it is very hard to <Live> when God does <eviL> to you.
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