THat could almost be taken as support for my position - watch yourself 

In order for atheism to be justified, the central position needs to be 'We admit no more causes or natural things than the evidence insists'.
By this logic, the afterlife, dualism, platonic philosophy are all against the idea, since we have no good reason to belive in them.
While technically atheism means lack of a God, I take it to mean lack of religious convictions.
In order for atheism to be justified, the central position needs to be 'We admit no more causes or natural things than the evidence insists'. By this logic, the afterlife, dualism, platonic philosophy are all against the idea, since we have no good reason to belive in them. While technically atheism means lack of a God, I take it to mean lack of religious convictions.
I disagree. "God" is defined as a deity, and, in the sense used here, an absolute one. Redefining "God" as something other than a deity completely ignores the fundamental question of said deity's existence. It's merely redefining terms until you can find an answer that suits you, rather than actually attempting to deal with the question as stated. It's one thing to dispute the nature of the deity, another to claim that God is something different altogether.
I was under the impression that the idea of God as a deity was largely used to explain that which is unexplainable.
God is a m o r a l.
Explanation: if God is perceived as the Supreme Being - which is usual -, consider that most beings, i.e. plants and animals, lack any sense of morality. Most beings are motivated by necessity. (The notion of a Supreme Being may in itself be a psychological necessity.) God is either moral or amoral. If God is almighty the existence of the devil negates God's morality. If no devil exists, God tolerates evil deeds - and again, by extension, evil itself. (The idea of the human free will is as immaterial as it is irrelevant.) Conclusion: God is amoral. QED
It's entirely possible they misunderstood it.This completely misses the point of theism as it is understood by most monotheists.
I feel like there is. If there's no God in command of the Earth, that means WE are. It means the fate of all things Earth-ey rests in our hands.....There is no "point" of atheism.
It's entirely possible they misunderstood it.
Three thousand years ago, just about everybody on Earth thought the world was flat. They were all wrong.
All the theories--errrr.....sorry, that's the wrong word, because theories require actual evidence....all the.....what's the word.....fancy stories
about all possible universes and God's relationship to them is guesswork written by us. Well, maybe we got it wrong. Maybe God only created all things in this universe, and cannot interact with other universes because the different laws of physics prevent Him from entering them.
BasketCase said:I feel like there is. If there's no God in command of the Earth, that means WE are. It means the fate of all things Earth-ey rests in our hands.....
Errrr.....actually, I assume he doesn't exist. What I described was possible. One possibility in a pretty long list.You're doing what I described in an earlier post - assuming that God exists
What's wrong with a God having limitations? The Bible says it took God an entire six days to Create the universe we now know and live in. Why six days? A God without limitations could have done it instantly. And other religions are full of gods that do have limitations (though now we get into multiple lower-case gods instead of one upper-case God, and that causes certain people in here to have conniptions.....As I argued there, it makes more sense to take an "essentialist" approach, where one first defines God (or whatever) and then considers whether such a thing exists. I would say that if other universes exist, and there is a being which created everything in this universe but which did not create everything in those other universes and cannot interact with them, then that being is not God, because such limitations are not consistent with deity.
Just because we're in the driver's seat doesn't mean we have to take the wheel. Yes, it's generally a good idea to take the wheel when we're driving, but some of us may go all Tyler Durden and decide to let the car go where it wants to.Why must anyone be in command of the earth? Why can't it be the case that God isn't in command, and no-one else is either?
Snooze. My list only has eight items on it. You're not gonna like this, but you don't come in first. "Piss off Ziggy" only comes in at number four.And the to-do list is astronomical![]()
Good luck with that.Snooze. My list only has eight items on it. You're not gonna like this, but you don't come in first. "Piss off Ziggy" only comes in at number four.![]()
Heh, I still have a game going with the Brutii where I'm holding 35 provinces, while the Julii and the Scipii are expanding, both having more than 40 regions, pissing of the Senate. They're close to getting the thumbs-down and when that happens I have armies positionedThe other items on my list involve pizza, posting in CFC, finishing that game of Rome: Total War that I've spent more than a year on, getting back to work on the Vanguard story thread (sorry about that, folks--real-life complications), getting air conditioning installed, and......errrrr......the other two items are women-related stuff I can't talk about in here.![]()
You haven't proven that at all. For your conclusion even to follow from your premises you need to add at least two more - first, God exists, and second, a being who tolerates evil deeds must be amoral. I'll be interested to see how you support those claims.
Errrr.....actually, I assume he doesn't exist. What I described was possible. One possibility in a pretty long list.
What's wrong with a God having limitations? The Bible says it took God an entire six days to Create the universe we now know and live in. Why six days? A God without limitations could have done it instantly.
In my opinion, any single Being capable of creating entire planets with his mind qualifies as God (or a god or whatever). God may not actually be all-powerful--just all-powerful from our limited viewpoint.
1) If a proposition starts with "God is..." it already presupposes the existence of God;
Based on what I've seen in those PM's you threw at me in past weeks, I would say I've already succeeded. Actually, that whole "piss off Ziggy" thing was just a joke anyway. I (usually) don't aim to piss you off--it's just a side effect. As the old saying goes, the truth hurts.Good luck with that.![]()
You remember that old joke I once made about how you and I act like a married couple???Heh, I still have a game going with the Brutii where I'm holding 35 provinces, while the Julii and the Scipii are expanding, both having more than 40 regions, pissing of the Senate. They're close to getting the thumbs-down and when that happens I have armies positionedAfter that my to-do list reads: Trying to get Baskie to love me as well. It's a work in progress.
Erm, yeah.
No way, dude. Pizza proves that he's real.Pizza will definitely prove God is imaginary.![]()
Yes.All right then, you're not exactly assuming that he exists, but you are assuming that we think of whether he exists first and only then of what he is. You're saying, "Maybe God is this" or "Maybe God is that", on the assumption that there's some fixed referent for "God". But what do you think the word "God" means? Is it a proper noun? Or does it stand for a kind of thing?
Anybody of great knowledge, who can make vast events happen with his mind, qualifies. Jean Luc Picard does not: when he conjures up a mug of Earl Grey (hot) out of thin air, he's not using his mind--he's using the food synthesizer.If it's a proper noun, what's its referent? Are you talking about a character in a story, or what?
That's why it makes more sense to start by defining "God" and only then arguing about whether he exists or not. In which case there's no long list of possibilities. Either a being answering to our definition exists or he doesn't.
Which means God is either lazy, juvenile, or just plain imperfect. Maybe He created the Universe just for fun. Or maybe He took six days because He wasn't sure how everything would work out. None of which means He doesn't exist--just that He's different from the way we thought He was.What's the Bible got to do with anything? I'd say that if the author of Genesis 1-2 thought that God couldn't make the universe in less than six days, that author had a poor conception of God. However, I don't believe you'll find any passage in the Bible that states that God couldn't make the universe in under six days, only that he didn't. I don't see any inconsistency in supposing that an omnipotent being could choose to take longer doing something than he has to, if he wants to.
Actually, I think #1 is the most important in the whole list. Plus there's a criterion missing: that God is all-powerful. God's willingness to tolerate evil is contingent on his ability to do something about it.The key points of <Jeleen's> argument break down into something like this:
(1) A moral being would not tolerate evil acts.
(2) God tolerates evil acts.
(3) Therefore, God is not moral.
(1) A moral being would not tolerate evil acts.
(2) God tolerates evil acts.
(3) Therefore, God is not moral.
(1) seems pretty dubious to me, but we'll skip over that. What is the justification for (2)? It must be something like:
(2') If both God and evil acts exist, then God tolerates evil acts.
(2'') Evil acts exist.
(2''') God exists.
(2) Therefore, God tolerates evil acts.
The argument as you stated it explicitly argues for (2''). Why do you need (2''') as well? Because only if God and evil acts co-exist can you legitimately say that the one tolerates the other. If only evil acts existed, and not God, then God wouldn't be tolerating anything, any more than Father Christmas tolerates anything.
That is why I said that your argument presupposes both God's existence and the claim that it is amoral to tolerate evil acts. Since both of these premises are pretty controversial, your conclusion is not very sound.
Now you might recast the argument so that it concludes only that if God exists, then he is amoral. That would run like this:
(1) A moral being would not tolerate evil acts.
(2) If God exists, then if evil acts exist, God tolerates evil acts.
(3) Evil acts exist.
(4) If God exists, then God tolerates evil acts. (from (2) and (3))
(5) If God exists, then he is not a moral being. (from (1) and (4))
That is better, because you are no longer assuming God's existence. You're still assuming premise (1), though, which now becomes the key premise for the argument.
No way, dude. Pizza proves that he's real.![]()
You may be correct (on which I'm not commenting), but I prefer writing sentences over formal argumentation. It makes for better reading.