Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 3:20 pm
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.
iambiguous wrote: ↑Fri Apr 15, 2022 6:46 pmWhat's the "audience" have to do with it? He's the one who keeps pointing out that just because those who are not Christians claim the One True Path to immortality and salvation that doesn't make it true. We are still ever and always confronted with "which one" it really is. I'm just noting that would include Aristotle's God as well. Right? His or ICs? Which one?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 15, 2022 7:26 pmThere it is. Why are you referring to me as "he," instead of "you"? Are you thinking that somebody else is your audience here?
Why? Because, in my view, he is so much the hardcore Christian objectivist here, it seems futile for me to pose my points to him. Though perhaps others here may offer insights into his thinking that might prove interesting. Or more illuminating.
Here, allow me to note again why "I" have basically lost all respect for his intelligence in this exchange. Back again to this:
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 3:20 pmIn 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.
And then somehow he connects the dots between "logic" and "Christianity". Not more than one view of God can be correct but "shortly" he will provide us with the evidence that it is his Christian God.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 15, 2022 7:26 pm Yep.
Just as soon as you tell me what you will even accept. Have you decided, yet?
How many here actually believe that I have not made this clear to him above?
Over and over and over again: evidence that the Christian God does in fact exist on par with evidence that Popes do in fact occupy the Vatican.
Finally, below, he responds:
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 15, 2022 7:26 pm You mean "historical evidence"?
There are various kinds of historical evidence. What kind will you accept? For example, it's not hard to show that a person named "Jesus" existed, and that He lived in first-century Israel. If that's all you require, the job is half done already.
But is that all you were requiring? I find that surprisingly simple.
What?! As though establishing historical evidence that someone calling himself Jesus Christ existed back then is "half way" toward establishing that he is both the Son of God and God Himself. And, uh, whatever the hell the Holy Ghost is?
Today of all days?
And few doubt the historical existence of Muhammad.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 3:20 pm 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?
On the contrary, I'm willing to accept his "intellectual assumptions" about an omniscient God and human autonomy, but given human autonomy here how exactly is he addressing the point I raise about what is at stake given that the Christian God is not even being able to provide mere mortals with a Scripture able to bring those who worship and adore the God of Abraham together? Historically, rather the opposite, right?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 3:20 pm Why would you assume that God would want to force everybody to believe in Him, whether they wanted to or not? That seems, at least on the surface, a questionable assumption. How would you defend it?
He keeps harping on the Christian God "forcing" others to believe, while I keep pointing out what is at stake for mere mortals on both sides of the grave if they choose the wrong God. Are those who read the Torah or The Vedas and The Upanishads, or the Quran or the Talmud and the Torah or The Kojiki not able to grasp that the Christian Bible is indisputably the most persuasive path to immortality and salvation?
What's wrong with them? Doesn't the Christian God make it clear enough for anyone with half a brain? On the other hand, that's what many of them are saying about Christians given what God makes abundantly clear to them in their own Scriptures.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 8:33 pm 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.
Sigh...
Back again to admitting the historical parameters of this...
https://thebestschools.org/magazine/wor ... -starters/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_r ... traditions
...but insisting that his own Christian God is The One. And, in fact, "shortly" he'll provide us with the proof of this.[/quote]
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 8:33 pm You're not getting it. However many answers are "out there," even answers in which people fervently believe, that doesn't make a thing true. And when their beliefs are also mutually contradicting, you can be 100% certain, based on the rules of logic, that most of them are actually false.
That's logic 101.
What I'm getting of course is that he notes there are many answers "out there" but that somehow using "logic 101" you really should come around to believing, what, that his own answer is the
least illogical? After all what he fervently believes is true here [short of demonstrable proof] is just like all the rest of them.
Right? That he believes in the Christian God doesn't necessarily make that true.
And it's not that most of them are false but that one of them is claimed not to be. And if they all insist it's their path? And even all of them insisting this doesn't make it such that one of them has to be. Where's the logic in that? None of them existing is still an option for many.
Now back to his own idea of "proof" here:
If the Scripture went straight to the point with respect to Judgment Day and Heaven and Hell, it would be abundantly clear that the Christian Path is the One True Path.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 8:33 pm It does. In fact, it's hard to imagine how it could be clearer.
"Then I saw a great white throne and Him who sat upon it, from whose presence earth and heaven fled, and no place was found for them. And I saw the dead, the great and the small, standing before the throne, and books were opened; and another book was opened, which is the book of life; and the dead were judged from the things which were written in the books, according to their deeds. And the sea gave up the dead who were in it, and Death and Hades gave up the dead who were in them; and they were judged, each one of them according to their deeds. Then Death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire. This is the second death, the lake of fire. And if anyone’s name was not found written in the book of life, he was thrown into the lake of fire." (Rev. 20:11-15)
Can you believe it? In order to "prove" that the Christian God provides the One True Path to immortality and salvation he quotes from the Christian Bible!!!
Like all the other denominations don't have their own rendition of "God exists because it says so in the Scriptures and the Scriptures must be true because they are the word of God".
To me, this sort of "logic" might be something that a child can be persuaded to believe...but a grown man or woman? And in a philosophy venue no less!
Again, as though all of those who embrace a God other than the Christian God don't have their own "Scripture" here to convey to me.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 8:33 pm Indeed, any number of people will tell you a different story. The only question is, will you believe what they say, or what God says?
Right, as though what he tells me the Christian God says is the same story that the Christian God Himself will tell me once "shortly" he demonstrates His existence. Basically all he is doing here is telling us that we should believe what he tells us about the Christian God.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am 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.
He's the one calling all this "determinism" of course. I'm merely noting how our personal experiences go a long way toward shaping our value judgments. The common sense part.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am I'm not "calling it" anything: it's definitionally true, actually. If you believe that one's social background inevitably makes one what one is, then one is, by pure definition, a Social Determinist. It's not a pejorative, it's a description.
What I believe is that the historical and cultural and social and political and economic and religious contexts into which 1] we are thrown at birth and in which 2] we are raised to adulthood are important factors in deciding which moral and political and spiritual prejudices we come to champion. Depending in turn on the existential trajectory or own personal experiences. Again, common sense.
And not that given some measure of free will we don't have some capacity to put our own subjective/intersubjective spin on it. But that too is profoundly rooted in dasein. Otherwise all those who were born and bred in the same general community would end up thinking and feeling exactly the same about everything.
And that's what I focus in on. Why we often do not agree about many, many things in the is/ought world. The role that dasein examined here...
https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtop ... 1&t=176529
https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtop ... 1&t=194382
https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtop ... 5&t=185296
...plays when we are confronted with conflicting goods. And conflicting Gods.
The point is what can I really know about IC's experiences and what can he really know about mine?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am 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.
That's my point, of course. IC has lived his life. And his experiences led him to Christianity. My experiences once led me to Christianity as well. But then another entirely different set of circumstances led me to atheism. The same with everyone else here. Their experiences are going to be more or less likely to lead them to Christianity. That's the existential nature of identity here.
On the other hand, if IC were able to provide us with demonstrable proof that the Christian God is the One True Path, all of those different experiences would become moot. Here is evidence that a God, the God is the Christian God. Show me that evidence and I'll become a Christian again ASAP.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am Then you've been sadly deceived. Atheism cannot be rendered in any logical form, so you must be responding to something more visceral and experiential. It's certainly not to the compulsion of reason, logic or even coherence, since Atheism cannot give reasons and contradicts itself even on its one basic claim.
More [to me] intellectual gibberish from him that has nothing to do with the point I make. One is "deceived" here to the extent that he or she does not take his own a leap of faith to wager placed on IC's Christian God. And the circular logic of his arguments above based on how he defines and deduces this God of his into existence speaks volumes regarding his wriggling around any demonstrable proof of HIs existence.
Here let's examine it again...
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am I gave you the historical evidence in the form you asked for it above. Just as the Pope lived in Rome, so too Jesus is recognized by every significant historian as having lived in ancient Judea. That's a simple, historical fact.
Again, this sort of "proof" in a Bible Study class at Church or around the dinner table of a devoutly Christian family would certainly suffice. But what must he think if us if he imagines it is proof enough here in a philosophy forum? It's embarrassing actually.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am 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?
71,000 to 250,000 men, women and children perished in it. What was the Christians God's point in triggering the eruption? That less than 10% of Indonesia's population is Christian? Or is it just tucked away in the Christian God's "mysterious ways" folder?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am Well, let's figure out what the alternative is. And in doing so, I'll answer your question directly.
The alternative? A loving, just and merciful God -- an omniscient and omnipotent God --
not creating a planet where such "natural disasters" commonly maim and mutilate and massacre countless men, women and children year in and year out. How is a God that does so not to be understood as a sadistic monster? Other than by falling back on his "mysterious ways" that mere mortals can't begin to grasp.
Sure, what can I say to that? No moral man or woman as most construe the meaning of moral would be permitted to do it without being deeply shamed. But they're not "mere mortals" for nothing right?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am Do you assume, then, that it was God's responsibility to
prevent the explosion? Just that one? Or all explosions similar to Mt. Tambora
Answer, then I'll continue. I'm not done yet, of course.
Well, let the Christians explain to me what they think it means for God to be "loving, just and merciful" and explain to me why any loving just and merciful entity would allow such terrible disasters to unfold over and over and over and over again. Not to mention the next "extinction event".
And, in the next one, human beings themselves may be on the list.
On the other hand, though the Holocaust was the work of those like Hitler, an omnipotent God could have prevented it from happening....but did not.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am Indeed so. Ask yourself this, though: could God even possibly have sufficient reason for NOT overriding such an event?
Let him tell me. I don't even believe that He exists to have reasons. Sufficient or otherwise. All I know is that millions of Jews still believe in their own rendition of his God. And I suspect that is because with atheism the horror is just that much more unendurable. The Holocaust? Well, in a No God universe, shits happens.
And, just out of curiosity, it's Judgment Day. The God of Abraham passes judgment on Christians, Muslims and Jews. Who goes up and who goes down given that only Christians recognize Jesus Christ as their personal savior. Even though Jesus Christ was Himself a Jew. As for the Muslims? That's always mystified me.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am The Bible answers that one, too. Jesus said,
"The Father loves the Son and has entrusted all things to His hand. The one who believes in the Son has eternal life; but the one who does not obey the Son will not see life, but the wrath of God remains on him.” (John 5:33-36)
And that's certainly true because he believes it is, right? Jesus Christ is a Jew. But Jews don't believe that Jesus Christ even existed...let alone existed as Christians insist.
So, what's Hitler's Holocaust next to the fate of Jews on Judgment Day? They'll burn in Hell for all of eternity unless they renounce their own faith and agree to believe in the Son. Although, of course, God isn't "forcing" them to.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am 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.
Okay, but nature's existence is of itself an act of God. So doesn't that make God evil?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am Well, God made you: does having made you make Him evil? He gave you a will, a choice and an identity, and freedom to exercise them; does that make Him evil? And if you decided to use that freedom and power He gave you to do evil, would that make God -- or you -- responsible?
Let's just say that doesn't exactly answer my question.