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#81
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Hi to all!
You guys are wasting your time on peripheral issues! Why don't you stop for a moment & ask how the following entities 'know' & 'acquire' 'facts' about the world or their environment: 1. a single-celled amoeba 2. An E.T. who's ahead of us in evolution for 5 billion years. 3. Helen Keller, who learned about the world only through her fingers, because she was blind & deaf. 4. Your pet dog & cat. 5. Your desktop PC. I strongly recommend this one because this is the easiest! Besides, robots' 'brains' have exactly the same architecture. Peace, sondadareas |
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#82
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Correct me if i'm wrong, but I would say writing secret codes affecting ones conception of something as universal as 'good and bad' is somewhat a violation of PURE free will. Yes, we have the choice to move where we'd like, but that does little to shake the restraints of our pathes in life. Option A = win The rest = Hell. Cool, what to do, what to do! "You've won a $10 000 shopping spree in Electronics Boutique!" "Wo-" "But you may choose only from THIS ONE GAME!" Awesome. Awesome to the max. A mouse in a cage controls his own movement... Is he free? |
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#83
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When discussing a point of religion that pertains to a particular faith, I try to answer on the premise that that faith's doctrine etc are a given. Then I can focus on the point at hand rather than constantly taking everything back to such a big picture that no point can usefully be discussed. The person I was quoting was clearly a Christian (had said they love God and Jesus Christ in their post, etc) and (as I am a Christian) I answered them from our common ground as believers. If you are an agnostic clearly you don't think as we do, but it is useful to suspend disbelief for the sake of argument. If I choose to comment on a point in a Muslim's post, it serve nothing to respond, "well I'm a Christian, so can you please give me a sound logical argument for every basic premise of your faith before I deign to consider the point you've made." Which is basically what you have done. I also didn't say that the Bible is evidence that God exists. I said (to a Christian) that the scriptures are one form of guidance from God. Quote:
2. We have not demonstrated that we are INCAPABLE of fixing the world, only that we are UNWILLING to fix it. 3. Okay I'm sure this won't sit well with the 'believe and you are saved, don't and go to hell' crowd, but I don't personally believe that what you believe is as important as how you live according to your current understanding of right and wrong. Believers can commit terrible, hypocritical acts, and non-believers can do marvellous good in the world and I don't think God ignores that. (I'm more of the 'faith without works is dead' school of thought.) Quote:
I believe that God sees as tragic the death, suffering and pain caused by human action - rather than the tsunami, those who, in the wake of the tsunami, could have rendered help and chose not to do so. And those who every day choose to hurt, cheat, neglect, exploit other people. If we didn't do that, if we supported each other instead of tearing each other down, if we were fair to each other and people didn't have to already deal with injustice and inhumanity from other people, then the suffering of normal life - the sickness, natural disaster, etc would be so much easier to deal with - even the hardest things in life (eg, death of a child) can be coped with, if you have support, empathy, and the help of those who've been there before you.
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Choosing to conform to what you believe is right does NOT represent an absence of free thought. Last edited by rivenrock; 01-23-2007 at 05:45 PM. |
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#84
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Why yes, I do. If God is the author of 'right' or 'good' then anything God deems right IS right. It could change daily, it could jibe against our every sense of justice, it could (in other words) be completely arbitrary, and it would still be 'right'. This makes no logical sense to me. If right and wrong have no absolutes then (to me) they also have no meaning and provide no impetus to 'do right'. This doesn't discount the notion of relative right and wrong. For example, what is wrong in one situation (stabbing someone) can be right in another (a surgeon cutting someone open to operate), but both might relate to an overarching principle, like "life is precious and should be respected"). [Please don't bother to pull that principle apart - I'm not claiming it as an eternal truth, just giving an example of how absolute truth and relative truth can co-exist.]
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Choosing to conform to what you believe is right does NOT represent an absence of free thought. |
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#85
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__________________
Choosing to conform to what you believe is right does NOT represent an absence of free thought. |
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#86
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Secondly, surely God (being all powerful and able to do anything) would be able to show to us proof he exists without violating our 100% free will.
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TIBERIUS
Active Ingredient: 2.6% nonsensical ramblings |
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#87
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I find it very interesting whenever the parent/child comparison is made when discussing the Christian god, especially since it is that very comparison that makes this god intolerable to some of us. As a parent, I love my child unconditionally, and there is nothing, I repeat, nothing he could ever do in this life that would change that. I've been told it's the same with God, but I find it odd then, that this all-loving god would allow his "wayward children" to be tormented in hell for all eternity, based on mistakes that they made in their relatively brief span on earth. As my young son gets older, he is going to rebel, I know this, and it may anger and hurt me, and he may need to be punished occassionally, but nothing he could ever do would make me torture my own child for all eternity (assuming I were capable of such a thing.) And my love for my child is supposed to pale in comparison for this god's love for humanity. I've been told that I can't hold God to the same standard as a human mother, but at the very least, this seems like bad parenting to me.
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#88
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I agree that we will never have proof that god exists, but not for the reason given in th OP.
I don't see how not showing itself has anything to do with free will. A parent doesn't refuse to show that it is there to love and care for the child. |
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