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A Challenge to the Theist and Atheist

ThePainefulTruth

Romantic-Cynic
Many times, Theist blame me for not understanding God.
I would love having a challenge.
Lets switch roles!

I will debate pro God, and you will debate Against.

I Assume one of two will be then clear:

1. Either I really am ignorant for anything relates to spirituality (Thus I will not be able to make my case)
2. I will successfully make my case and at least show that some atheist, know the spiritual "realm" better than you think.

I will however, probably be leaning more towards the Jewish God, as this is the Religion I was born into.

Cheers :)

Since there is a complete absence of evidence for or against the existence of God, or rather of a God created universe, the only reasonable position is an agnostic one. That said, you can discount ALL revealed religions as 100% hearsay. So is there a reasonable position on the possibility of God as creator? Yes, deism--that is, a non-interactive God.
 

davidroemer

New Member
It is very easy to refute the cosmological argument for God's existence. It assumes that the universe is intelligible even though there is much we don't understand. The argument is also contradictory and has no content.
 

davidroemer

New Member
Since there is a complete absence of evidence for or against the existence of God, or rather of a God created universe, the only reasonable position is an agnostic one. That said, you can discount ALL revealed religions as 100% hearsay. So is there a reasonable position on the possibility of God as creator? Yes, deism--that is, a non-interactive God.
You can only rationally call yourself an agnostic if you understand the arguments for God's existence.
 
In order for such a debate to work you can't have too many, if any at all, assumptions about what is God and that makes it difficult to pin down such things as "all powerful" which need not be true, or what was there before there was time, a question that contradicts itself. With these rules let the debaters begin. I can only spectate because I realize that I do not know.
 

chinu

chinu
Many times, Theist blame me for not understanding God.
I would love having a challenge.
Lets switch roles!

Understanding God = Becoming God

I will debate pro God, and you will debate Against.
Hence, no need of any debate thereafter.


I Assume one of two will be then clear:

1. Either I really am ignorant for anything relates to spirituality (Thus I will not be able to make my case)
2. I will successfully make my case and at least show that some atheist, know the spiritual "realm" better than you think.

I will however, probably be leaning more towards the Jewish God, as this is the Religion I was born into.

Cheers :)
Religion means.. Reunion with from where we all started the journey of life in the beginning.

All the best..
Chinu.
 
This is a much more complex matter than what I have read above shows. It might help were the participants read the 1948 BBC Radio Debate on the Existence of God between Father Copleston and Bertrand Russell:
 

It Aint Necessarily So

Veteran Member
Premium Member
No need to switch role. dear Segev.

I will reason from intelligence and observation to the existence of God, and you on your part see what or how you come to your conviction of there being no God.

First, of course we have to get linked up, with concurring on the concept of God, because when we don't concur on the concept of God, we will be acting illogically, with talking about a thing with deferent idea of what it is.

What do you say, do you have a concept of God?

Here is my concept of God:

"God in concept is first and foremost the creator and operator of the universe and man and everything with a beginning."

Take careful attention, what I present is a concept, not a proof of God existing.

From my experience with atheists, they regularly get all worked up with insisting that I am already into the prejudgment that God exists, with proposing my idea of what is God.

So, I ask them, if you propose a concept of Bigfoot before you go forth to seek evidence of his existence, is that already a prejudgment that Bigfoot exists?

That is always the illogical phobia or in effect taboo of atheists, mistaking a concept for a prejudgment.

What you should do, dear atheists, is to examine the concept to see whether it is a valid concept or not; but sad to say, you atheists are not cognizant of such an intellectual subtlety, that is why you are ever into very shallow water when you argue against God existing.

Maybe you should have taken the OP's suggestion and played devil's advocate: Defend atheism. I suggest that you don't know what it is. You wrote, "how you come to your conviction of there being no God" and "that is why you are ever into very shallow water when you argue against God existing."

You wanted to define what a god was (or who "God" is), which is a good idea in a discussion about existence for the reasons you gave.

Is suggest that you do the same with "atheist." I am an atheist, and neither of your comments apply to me. My arguments are not about the existence of gods, but about the lack of evidence for any and the logical consequences of that.

Of course, if what you are referring to is a specific god, as the capital-G-o-d spelling implies, then rejecting that god also does not define atheism. One need not be an atheist to reject any particular god. In fact, most theists reject almost all of them.

For what it's worth, I can't defend any god belief. I have seen the arguments, and find them fallacious - not compelling. How could I make such a case when everything that I would be writing I would know is fallacious? Even in a court of law where an attorney is defending a client he believes is guilty, he is not expected to make a false argument, just the best case he can while being honest.
 

omega2xx

Well-Known Member
Since there is a complete absence of evidence for or against the existence of God, or rather of a God created universe, the only reasonable position is an agnostic one. That said, you can discount ALL revealed religions as 100% hearsay. So is there a reasonable position on the possibility of God as creator? Yes, deism--that is, a non-interactive God.

The only reasonable explanation for a creation, is Creator.

The only way one can say reasonably say all revealed religions is 100% hearsay is if one is omniscient. This post proves you are not.

How do you explain the origin of matter, energy and life originating from lifeless elements?
 

It Aint Necessarily So

Veteran Member
Premium Member
if you atheists insist that I play the atheists' role, then here it is in two statements which sum up all the atheists' socalled explanation why they take up with calling themselves atheists:

1. We [you] atheists don't have to prove anything at all, because we [you] do not make any positive claim unlike theists.
2. It is impossible to prove a negative statement.

There, that is the ridiculous fact with atheists' socalled argument if it be any argument at all; of course it is not, but it serves for a cover by which atheists feel themselves so smug, yet actually it is loaded with nothing but inanity and vacuity in aid of flight from reason and observation and intelligent conclusion on an issue.

Nice job playing the role of atheist.
 

Fire_Monkey

Member
Many times, Theist blame me for not understanding God.
I would love having a challenge.
Lets switch roles!

I will debate pro God, and you will debate Against.

I Assume one of two will be then clear:

1. Either I really am ignorant for anything relates to spirituality (Thus I will not be able to make my case)
2. I will successfully make my case and at least show that some atheist, know the spiritual "realm" better than you think.

I will however, probably be leaning more towards the Jewish God, as this is the Religion I was born into.

Cheers :)


So, to begin, let my offer an opinion of your Yahweh.....

He is without a doubt one of the most loathsome and despicable characters in fiction and literature. He is a jealous, malevolent, petty, tyrannical, and homicidal sky god.

He demands constant obsequious worship, and he has a penchant for necessary cruelty. He has gone to great lengths to prolong the suffering and mayhem he inflicts, when there is no need to do so.
As when he "hardened Phahro's heart" so he could inflict more plagues.
A child killer as well, is your Yahweh. See: The Passover.

Also examine that delightful story where he had bears maul dozens of children just because they called one of his prophets "baldy."

A killer of innocents, is Yawheh. As he admittedly visits death upon the innocent relations and children and their children of folks who he thinks did him wrong.

Those are some of the reasons I detest Yahweh and am so glad that he is of course fictional. The Jews only invented him cuz they needed a pretend make-believe sky god to rally around since their enemies had Baal, who btw was a far more useful god, since he helped crops grow. And he was not nearly as evil
I am so happy you chose Yawheh as your god to defend. He is the easiest god, IMHO. of them all to criticize. Had a person ever done half the things Yawheh did, he would go down as the worst psychopathic murderer in the history of the world. Yahweh killed more than Hitler and Stalin combined.

Uh...your turn.

LOL

Sure ya wanna argue with me on this one? Be careful. As an atheist I believe in knowing my enemy. So I have read the Kanakh and the OT many times.

God is Impossible – Evil Bible .com

FM
 
Many times, Theist blame me for not understanding God.
I would love having a challenge.
Lets switch roles!

I will debate pro God, and you will debate Against.

I Assume one of two will be then clear:

1. Either I really am ignorant for anything relates to spirituality (Thus I will not be able to make my case)
2. I will successfully make my case and at least show that some atheist, know the spiritual "realm" better than you think.

I will however, probably be leaning more towards the Jewish God, as this is the Religion I was born into.

Cheers :)
Many times, Theist blame me for not understanding God.
I would love having a challenge.
Lets switch roles!

I will debate pro God, and you will debate Against.

I Assume one of two will be then clear:

1. Either I really am ignorant for anything relates to spirituality (Thus I will not be able to make my case)
2. I will successfully make my case and at least show that some atheist, know the spiritual "realm" better than you think.

I will however, probably be leaning more towards the Jewish God, as this is the Religion I was born into.

Cheers :)

"I would love having a challenge".

If that is indeed the case, the gauntlet has already been thrown down to both religious and atheist alike. And there is no greater spiritual test. I'm undertaking it for myself at the moment.

The first wholly new interpretation for two thousand years of the moral teachings of Christ has been published. Radically different from anything else we know of from theology or history, this new teaching is predicated upon the 'promise' of a precise, predefined, predictable and repeatable experience of transcendent omnipotence and called 'the first Resurrection' in the sense that the Resurrection of Jesus was intended to demonstrate Gods' willingness to reveal Himself and intervene directly into the natural world for those obedient to His Command, paving the way for access, by faith, to the power of divine Will and ultimate proof!

Thus 'faith' becomes an act of trust in action, the search along a defined path of strict self discipline, [a test of the human heart] to discover His 'Word' of a direct individual intervention into the natural world by omnipotent power that confirms divine will, law, command and covenant, which at the same time, realigns our mortal moral compass with the Divine, "correcting human nature by a change in natural law, altering biology, consciousness and human ethical perception beyond all natural evolutionary boundaries." Thus is a man 'created' in the image and likeness of his Creator.

So like it or no, a new religious teaching, testable by faith, meeting all Enlightenment criteria of evidence based causation and definitive proof now exists. Nothing short of an intellectual, moral and religious revolution is getting under way. To test or not to test, that is the question? More info at The Final Freedoms
 
Many times, Theist blame me for not understanding God.
I would love having a challenge.
Lets switch roles!

I will debate pro God, and you will debate Against.

I Assume one of two will be then clear:

1. Either I really am ignorant for anything relates to spirituality (Thus I will not be able to make my case)
2. I will successfully make my case and at least show that some atheist, know the spiritual "realm" better than you think.

I will however, probably be leaning more towards the Jewish God, as this is the Religion I was born into.

Cheers :)

A debate of this nature is similar to the one children go through in their minds, after receiving the first indications that Santa Claus doesn't in fact exist.
Initially they are torn between their desire to continue believing, and their desire to know the truth, both because of the good things that Santa brings and because they are reluctant to concede that their parents have been lying to them all these years. Next time Christmas comes around they start investigating more seriously, peeking into their parents cupboards only to find gift packages marked 'from Santa, or perhaps a Santa suit on a dry cleaners hanger.
At this point their investigations have taken them far beyond where most theists are able or willing to go in their search for proof of God's existence.
For a while, the child goes along with the parents deception, pretending to not know that Santa is a fake, conveniently stowed away in the parental closet. Then one day they tell their parents not to bother with Santa this year, because they KNOW their secret.
Again, that is not something that you will ever experience from theists who hide behind some misty, metaphysical thing they call Faith. That faith is as deceptive as the childrens' reluctance to abandon their belief in Santa Claus, but affects the course of the lives of tens of millions of people entwined in the deceptions of the many churches on Earth.
 

Sanmario

Active Member
Thanks, Brian, you bring in the debate between Russell and Fr. Copleston.

Part One is on the cosmological argument, i.e. the universe exists and has a beginning, and therefore God exists in concept as first and foremost the creator and operator of the universe and man and everything with a beginning.

Part One ends with Russell declaring that he does not accept the concept of a cause of the world; so Fr. Copleston proposed that it would be impossible to debate with a party who does not accept the concept of a cause of the world.

And Russell proposed that they go to another sphere of the issue God exists or not, namely, the religious experience argument for God existing.

They then launched into the religious experience for God existing or not existing.

That is my memory of that debate in BBC World in the year 1948.


You know everyone here, let us leave aside this silly thread, or not play silly roles of atheists acting theists, and theists acting atheists.

Let me propose that we all talk about evidence, as the way I see it, lack of evidence for God existing is the only sensible ground for atheists to hold to their position that God does not exist.

Now, there is the idea which I know is commonly held by all critical thinkers, namely: Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.

So, atheists here, do you understand that idea, namely, Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, when it is invoked in the issue of God existing or not, and atheists to my certainty have only one serious ground to deny God existing, namely, absence of evidence.


Is there a board here on One on One Debate? I like to debate an atheist one on one, on evidence for the existence of God, I hold the affirmative contention, and of course the atheist the negative contention.


This is a much more complex matter than what I have read above shows. It might help were the participants read the 1948 BBC Radio Debate on the Existence of God between Father Copleston and Bertrand Russell:
 

ADigitalArtist

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
You know everyone here, let us leave aside this silly thread, or not play silly roles of atheists acting theists, and theists acting atheists.
No. Make your own thread for that. Stop trying to control this one. Last warning.
 

Evangelicalhumanist

"Truth" isn't a thing...
Premium Member
Thanks, Brian, you bring in the debate between Russell and Fr. Copleston.

Part One is on the cosmological argument, i.e. the universe exists and has a beginning, and therefore God exists in concept as first and foremost the creator and operator of the universe and man and everything with a beginning.

Part One ends with Russell declaring that he does not accept the concept of a cause of the world; so Fr. Copleston proposed that it would be impossible to debate with a party who does not accept the concept of a cause of the world.

And Russell proposed that they go to another sphere of the issue God exists or not, namely, the religious experience argument for God existing.

They then launched into the religious experience for God existing or not existing.

That is my memory of that debate in BBC World in the year 1948.


You know everyone here, let us leave aside this silly thread, or not play silly roles of atheists acting theists, and theists acting atheists.

Let me propose that we all talk about evidence, as the way I see it, lack of evidence for God existing is the only sensible ground for atheists to hold to their position that God does not exist.

Now, there is the idea which I know is commonly held by all critical thinkers, namely: Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.

So, atheists here, do you understand that idea, namely, Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, when it is invoked in the issue of God existing or not, and atheists to my certainty have only one serious ground to deny God existing, namely, absence of evidence.


Is there a board here on One on One Debate? I like to debate an atheist one on one, on evidence for the existence of God, I hold the affirmative contention, and of course the atheist the negative contention.
Well, it seems abundantly clear to me that if we are going to use the argument "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence" in the defense of God's existence, then surely we must also -- on the same grounds and with exactly the same rationale and authority -- assert the existence of pretty much everything for which that holds true. There is, in fact, no evidence for the Tooth Fairy nor for Santa Claus. Yet, millions upon millions of humans have not only believed, but have (just ask them) received presents and/or money from both of them. The Gods of Egypt, of Greece and of Rome -- not to mention the Gods of the Aztecs and Mayans, nor the spirits so well-known to the aboriginal people's of the Americas, of Australia and New Zealand, and elsewhere -- were are strongly and religiously believed in. In fact, the people who believed in those Gods also in their own way "knew" them. They were as real to them as the Christ is to Christians or Allah to Muslims. And they, too, had no evidence for the existence of their Gods -- and because absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, it is only proper that we should accept those existences as just as real, for all the same reasons, and whatever God you happen to be worshipping now.

You have nothing better than they did, and they had nothing better than you do now. I used to be an atheist, but I find arguing on this line makes me something more of an ultra-democratic polytheist.
 

Guy Threepwood

Mighty Pirate
Many times, Theist blame me for not understanding God.
I would love having a challenge.
Lets switch roles!

I will debate pro God, and you will debate Against.

I Assume one of two will be then clear:

1. Either I really am ignorant for anything relates to spirituality (Thus I will not be able to make my case)
2. I will successfully make my case and at least show that some atheist, know the spiritual "realm" better than you think.

I will however, probably be leaning more towards the Jewish God, as this is the Religion I was born into.

Cheers :)

I tried that once and ended up talking myself out of atheism! :)
 
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