Then I think you have some research to do.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 5:47 pmAs far as I know, the Bible is no different than many other human mythologies.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 5:28 pmThe evidence is not merely out there in nature, around us all, but we also have intuitive knowledge of God, for, as it says "God has made it evident to them." In fact, says Romans, we all have enough knowledge that only a willful effort will prevent us realizing that God exists.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 5:15 pm
How is that passage above the least bit relevant to reasoning that God exists?
You may not take my word for it, but then, the Bible isn't my word. It's His.
Is morality objective or subjective?
- Immanuel Can
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
- Immanuel Can
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
He wouldn't have to "send" you anywhere. You, yourself would choose. If God has done enough that you should know about Him, and you don't care enough to pay attention, then on whom is that responsibility? And if the choice has been to live without God, what should be done to honour that choice, but to make it ongoing? To do otherwise would be to compel your will.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 5:54 pmIf there's a God, I don't know why s/he/it would send me to hell just for being agnostic. Seems kind of ridiculous.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 5:40 pmWhat if he's already done enough, and you are just unwilling to accept His terms? What if you insist on running the relationship your own way...meaing without having to trust Him at all? Do you suppose, then, that the Supreme Being owes you to bend to your will? Or do you think that being defiant is going to win you something?Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 5:18 pm If God is a good being, then God is welcome to come before me and make his presence known if that's what God wants to do. Until, then I'll remain agnostic.
You really should take Pascal more seriously, perhaps. You're not being very prudent.
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
I would like to think so. But what makes you think that?
If you mean that, and really want to know God, then I'm confident it won't be long.However, if there's a God, then God is welcome to show him or herself to me.
Heads up.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Playing Pascal's wager is for spineless cowards, don't think the Goddess would let those into heaven. The correct choice is to not play at all, but to follow your own reason.
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Gary Childress
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Most people are unless they're running around instigating a great deal of harm. I assume you're probably like most of us.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 6:23 pmI would like to think so. But what makes you think that?
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Gary Childress
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Sounds good.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 6:23 pmIf you mean that, and really want to know God, then I'm confident it won't be long.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 6:07 pm However, if there's a God, then God is welcome to show him or herself to me.
Heads up.
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Gary Childress
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Honestly, I would think I have more to fear from some people out there than I do from God, if there is one.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Yes, I know that you personally accept those things as evidence, but they do not constitute evidence under the same standards that science, or the law, would require for something to be counted as evidence. The things that you present as evidence are not even slightly convincing unless you believe in God to start with.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 5:37 pmCreation itself, for one. Morality, for another. Revelation, for another. The person of Jesus Christ, for the conclusive evidence.Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 5:25 pmYou are continuing with the analogy, but I am asking what phenomena you see in our world to which the only possible, or even most likely, explanation could be God?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 3:46 pm
Head trauma, perhaps. Blood spatter. The presence of a weapon with the deceased's brain matter on it. Being bludgeoned to death looks rather different from "natural causes," doesn't it?
Well I stand by what I said: If genuine evidence for the existence of God had been found, I'm sure everyone would know about it, it would be the biggest news story ever.IC wrote:No, we aren't, actually. We're only asking what one Harbal is capable of claiming, rationally speaking.Harbal wrote:Well now we are talking about evidence of evidence.
So your evidence for God's existence is your claim to have it, and we can verify that simply by asking you. Is that what you are saying?IC wrote:Actually, I have MORE evidence that God exists than that Boston does. As I said, I have no personal experience with Boston...just testimony by others, a few pictures people tell me are Boston, and maybe an artifact that says, "My parents went to Boston, and all I got was this lousy t-shirt."Harbal wrote:What firm evidence of God's existence do you have that is as verifiable as the claim that Boston exists?
But I don't have to be an expert on dragons to reasonably come to the conclusion that there is a lack of genuine evidence for their existence. It is my knowledge of the world, and access to accredited information about it, that entitles me to do that. And as far as mythical creatures are concerned, I would say God is a bigger stretch on credulity than even dragons.IC wrote:The opposite. I'm pointinog out that one Harbal's lack of knowledge has no relevance to anybody else's decision about that, and does not constrain the contrary experience of even one person. Heck, it doesn't even stop Harbal himself from discovering something new in the next five minutes. That's fairly obvious, isn't it?Harbal wrote:You seem to be implying that someone who believes in God to start with is in a better position to judge what constitutes evidence for his existence.
I'm afraid what someone once wrote on a papyrus scroll hundreds of years ago doesn't carry that much weight with me.IC wrote:Romans 1 says you do. And I agree, of course.Harbal wrote:When I look at the world, I have absolutely no reason to consider God as an explanation for anything I might not understand, or have an explanation for.
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Fair enough.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 6:44 pmMost people are unless they're running around instigating a great deal of harm. I assume you're probably like most of us.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 6:23 pmI would like to think so. But what makes you think that?
- Immanuel Can
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Law? Well, it meets that standard. But science? Even yesterday's news cannot be tested by "science." Science has specific material sorts of phenomena and entities it can test: but there's a lot it cannot. I know of no scientific test for love, or for rightness, or for consciousness -- things in which we all believe, and have no trouble believing in, but which have no scientific experimental verification.Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 7:04 pmYes, I know that you personally accept those things as evidence, but they do not constitute evidence under the same standards that science, or the law, would require for something to be counted as evidence.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 5:37 pmCreation itself, for one. Morality, for another. Revelation, for another. The person of Jesus Christ, for the conclusive evidence.
I don't think that's the case. I think there'd still be doubters, and lots of them. Some people still believe COVID wasn't a fix...even though they're not any longer wearing masks, social distancing or getting "vaxxed." Some people doubt the existence of the Holocaust, or the moon landing, or even of 9-11. People have a greater ability to choose not to believe than you're suggesting, I think.Well I stand by what I said: If genuine evidence for the existence of God had been found, I'm sure everyone would know about it, it would be the biggest news story ever.IC wrote:No, we aren't, actually. We're only asking what one Harbal is capable of claiming, rationally speaking.Harbal wrote:Well now we are talking about evidence of evidence.
Well, personal testimony is certainly an important form of evidence in court. But no, I don't expect you just to believe me. I expect you only to be willing to exercise enough faith to consider it possible that God exists, and that He rewards those who seek Him...which is exactly what He promises in the Bible, actually.So your evidence for God's existence is your claim to have it, and we can verify that simply by asking you. Is that what you are saying?IC wrote:Actually, I have MORE evidence that God exists than that Boston does. As I said, I have no personal experience with Boston...just testimony by others, a few pictures people tell me are Boston, and maybe an artifact that says, "My parents went to Boston, and all I got was this lousy t-shirt."Harbal wrote:What firm evidence of God's existence do you have that is as verifiable as the claim that Boston exists?
Kimodo dragons? They exist. Or at least, people think they do.But I don't have to be an expert on dragons to reasonably come to the conclusion that there is a lack of genuine evidence for their existence.IC wrote:The opposite. I'm pointing out that one Harbal's lack of knowledge has no relevance to anybody else's decision about that, and does not constrain the contrary experience of even one person. Heck, it doesn't even stop Harbal himself from discovering something new in the next five minutes. That's fairly obvious, isn't it?Harbal wrote:You seem to be implying that someone who believes in God to start with is in a better position to judge what constitutes evidence for his existence.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
No it doesn't. I don't know the criteria, but your evidence certainly does not reach it. I'm not talking about proving God's existence in court, or anything silly like that, I am just talking about the conditions that have to be met to qualify something as evidence.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 8:30 pmLaw? Well, it meets that standard.Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 7:04 pmYes, I know that you personally accept those things as evidence, but they do not constitute evidence under the same standards that science, or the law, would require for something to be counted as evidence.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 5:37 pm
Creation itself, for one. Morality, for another. Revelation, for another. The person of Jesus Christ, for the conclusive evidence.
But those are all immaterial things, whereas the proof you are claiming is to do with the existence of physical things. Science, and its proofs, are what inform us about the physical universe. God may not be physical, but the things you are putting forward as evidence are.But science? Even yesterday's news cannot be tested by "science." Science has specific material sorts of phenomena and entities it can test: but there's a lot it cannot. I know of no scientific test for love, or for rightness, or for consciousness -- things in which we all believe, and have no trouble believing in, but which have no scientific experimental verification.
I daresay there would, but that wouldn't prevent the story from being the biggest news headline in history.IC wrote:I don't think that's the case. I think there'd still be doubters,Harbal wrote:Well I stand by what I said: If genuine evidence for the existence of God had been found, I'm sure everyone would know about it, it would be the biggest news story ever.
People believe all sorts of things that seem wildly implausible to me, and I tend to dismiss them as not worth thinking about most of the time, as I'm sure you do. I had a very entertaining evening once with someone on another forum who was convinced that the Earth was once occupied by ancient space aliens, thousands of years ago. Are you suggesting I should have been willing to exercise enough faith to consider it possible that he was right? God is a special case to you, but he's just another made up character in another made up story to me, and deserves no special consideration.IC wrote:Well, personal testimony is certainly an important form of evidence in court. But no, I don't expect you just to believe me. I expect you only to be willing to exercise enough faith to consider it possible that God exists,So your evidence for God's existence is your claim to have it, and we can verify that simply by asking you. Is that what you are saying?
But this is straying from the point: The only thing I am questioning here is, what can legitimately be called evidence, and I do not think that what you are claiming as evidence can legitimately be called it.
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Mar 16, 2024 10:27 pmNo it doesn't. I don't know the criteria, but your evidence certainly does not reach it.
Want to say something not self-contradictory, instead?
Of course.But those are all immaterial things, whereas the proof you are claiming is to do with the existence of physical things. Science, and its proofs, are what inform us about the physical universe. God may not be physical, but the things you are putting forward as evidence are.But science? Even yesterday's news cannot be tested by "science." Science has specific material sorts of phenomena and entities it can test: but there's a lot it cannot. I know of no scientific test for love, or for rightness, or for consciousness -- things in which we all believe, and have no trouble believing in, but which have no scientific experimental verification.
Love may be something science can't measure, but we know it by its physical realities. Rightness is a moral property, but as you yourself have said, we often sense it when something isn't right...and when it is...and we do so by things in the physical world. As for consciousness, it may not itself be capable of physical experimentation, but not a single scientist can do a single experiment, no matter how simple, without depending on this very elusive quantity we call "consciousness."
We know the things that are not physical, but are real, by their physical effects, if not by something more experiential or spiritual. And if you cannot get the Supreme Being into a graduated cylinder, or pinched in Vernier calipers, or squirming under your skeptical microscope, is that a surprise to you? And does it even remotely extenuate the decision to ignore all the manifest effects of God in the physical world -- far less the personal determination to position oneself as a cynic or even as His detractor -- if such is one's wish?
The thing about evidence is this: it remains evidence, whether one wishes to see it or not. All one changes by gratuitously refusing it is the level of one's own access to the evidence.
I daresay there would, but that wouldn't prevent the story from being the biggest news headline in history.IC wrote:I don't think that's the case. I think there'd still be doubters,Harbal wrote:Well I stand by what I said: If genuine evidence for the existence of God had been found, I'm sure everyone would know about it, it would be the biggest news story ever.
Not really.People believe all sorts of things that seem wildly implausible to me, and I tend to dismiss them as not worth thinking about most of the time, as I'm sure you do.IC wrote:Well, personal testimony is certainly an important form of evidence in court. But no, I don't expect you just to believe me. I expect you only to be willing to exercise enough faith to consider it possible that God exists,So your evidence for God's existence is your claim to have it, and we can verify that simply by asking you. Is that what you are saying?
I would like to think that a better route is to hear them out, decide if what they were saying was possibly relevant to where I live, or to something I needed to know, and if it was, I'd want to see their evidence. What I wouldn't do is just gratuitously say, "You have no evidence." I'd see if they did.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
You don't have a monopoly on talking nonsense, you know.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Mar 17, 2024 12:18 am"I don't know the criteria, but the evidence you have doesn't reach the criteria I don't know." That's basically what you just said.
Want to say something not self-contradictory, instead?![]()
I don't believe there is any such thing as the supreme being, so of course it doesn't surprise me that you can't put him in a bottle.We know the things that are not physical, but are real, by their physical effects, if not by something more experiential or spiritual. And if you cannot get the Supreme Being into a graduated cylinder, or pinched in Vernier calipers, or squirming under your skeptical microscope, is that a surprise to you?
But I do not accept that you have any evidence. Give me a sample of your evidence, and let's have a look at it.The thing about evidence is this: it remains evidence, whether one wishes to see it or not. All one changes by gratuitously refusing it is the level of one's own access to the evidence.
I'm not saying you are wrong for believing in God, I'm just saying that you are misleading people if you tell them that there is evidence of his existence, because there simply isn't. I don't know why people believe in God, but it is nothing to do with logic, rationality or evidence.IC wrote:Not really.People believe all sorts of things that seem wildly implausible to me, and I tend to dismiss them as not worth thinking about most of the time, as I'm sure you do.
I would like to think that a better route is to hear them out, decide if what they were saying was possibly relevant to where I live, or to something I needed to know, and if it was, I'd want to see their evidence. What I wouldn't do is just gratuitously say, "You have no evidence." I'd see if they did.
I asked my daughter a while back if she believed in God, I think it was some discussion or other I had with you that prompted me to ask. While she didn't come out with an outright yes, she couldn't bring herself to say no. I could see she was a bit embarrassed about it, because she knows it is an irrational belief. At least she didn't seem to mind whether God existed or not, which was some consolation. The point is, people don't really believe in God because there is evidence for his existence, their belief seems much more to be based on a feeling. You could say that God put the feeling there, and I would not be able to say with any authority that he didn't; although I can say he doesn't seem to have put it in me.
Even if there are things that seem to suggest there is more to the universe than science and our understanding can account for, that isn't evidence of God, and all we are really entitled to say is that, at least for now, we don't know what it means.
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Yes, I know. And it's still evidence.Harbal wrote: ↑Sun Mar 17, 2024 1:18 amBut I do not accept that you have any evidence.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Mar 17, 2024 12:18 am The thing about evidence is this: it remains evidence, whether one wishes to see it or not. All one changes by gratuitously refusing it is the level of one's own access to the evidence.
Let's start with this: open your eyes. Look at who you are, and where you're living, and what's going on in this universe, and ask yourself if it isn't just the most obvious thing that this whole drama is no accident.Give me a sample of your evidence, and let's have a look at it.
Ah, I see: you're claiming to be God? You know what evidence exists in the whole universe, and even what other people can or do know?I'm just saying that you are misleading people if you tell them that there is evidence of his existence, because there simply isn't.
You'll forgive me if I find that just a little implausible, and not a little hubristic.
Apparently she's more rational than her dad. She at least knows what it's impossible for her to know....she knows it is an irrational belief.
I'm astonished at how confidently you claim to be able to know what all other people can know. Truly, wisdom will die with you.Even if there are things that seem to suggest there is more to the universe than science and our understanding can account for, that isn't evidence of God, and all we are really entitled to say is that, at least for now, we don't know what it means.
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popeye1945
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Biological consciousness is the measure and the meaning of all things. Subjective experiences and their meanings to the biological subject constitute all meanings including systems of morality. The thoughts and sentiments of subjective awareness give experiences their subjective meanings and are the property of the conscious subject alone, never the property of the object. Until the conscious subject bestows meaning upon a meaningless world the world is devoid of meaning. This is the only means of morality being objective when it is given form in the outer world as proclamations, rules, norms, and institutions embracing the thoughts and sentiments of the conscious subject/s. This projection is embraced as if the qualities and values belong to the world of objects when in fact it is an orchestrated illusion, a melody if you like heard only by the conscious subject. Meaning is the interpretation of experiences and never, again never are they the property of the physical world. Objectifying is a subjective function in the play between subject and object.