newfangle
hates you.
Upon reflection, I should have used the word omniscient, though I fear you would have giving me the same response.
So your God is neither omniscient or omnipotent?
So your God is neither omniscient or omnipotent?
Free Enterprise said:The difference in the comparision is that teleporting could or might lead to excessive power potential which would disrupt normal function (unless the world were a utopia).
That would prevent humans from choosing to inflict evil on others thus preventing meaningful relationships among humans. If only good seems possible to humans then they must be good an cannot be evil. The teleportation issue is not necessary for meaningful free will. The non-utopian condition of humans could perhaps explain the lack of teleportation abilities.
What motive would the Catholic Church have to do such a thing? History records their actions, and the fruits of those actions, and judging by those fruits, the RCC is about as apostate as you can get. Anyone with even conversational familiarity with the Bible's contents can shoot gaping holes in the entire Catechism.newfangle said:Thanks for clearing that up.
You'd think that people like the Pope would attempt to eliminate such blatant contradictions like omnipotence.
romelus said:well, what's normal. is humans being able to clone themselves also normal? i'd say that's even cooler than teleportation. yet we are now able to clone ourselves (and some claim they've already done so), and i don't see God wagging his finger and telling us to stop. cloning can easily be argued as "excessive power potential", yet God made it possible (if he existed and created us)
and who says one day we won't be able to teleport![]()
errrr... are you saying that God wants us to be able to inflict evil on each other? and if he really gave a crap about whether we worshipped him or not, he could easily and instantly alter our brains so everybody in the world believed him 110% without question. it comes back to my point. either he can't do it, doesn't care to do it, or he doesn't exist.
If by this you mean time-dilation we certainly have overwhelming evidence of its existence. GPS satellites correct for its effect all the time.Non-linear Time (Seems like a safe bet, but still no proof of its existence...)
Again depending on how you mean this, we certainly have overwhelming evidence that something is holding all those galaxies together and it's not matter that interacts with radiation. Not to mention more sophisticated ideas regarding the form of the cosmic microwave background.Dark Matter
All these last are things that currently only exist in the human psyche and there is no physical evidence for. It's the old Invisible Dragon in my garage issue (nod to Carl Sagan).God
Satan
Absolute Morality
The Perfect Philly Cheese-steak Sandwich (I will scour the earth for it though, 'til my dying day...)
Pointlessness said:Symbols:
W: God is willing to prevent evil.
A: God is able to prevent evil.
I: God is impotent.
M: God is malevolent.
E: Evil exists.
G: God exists.
^: Conjunction (And)
V: Disjunction (Or)
~: Negation (Not)
->: Conditional (If then)
Proof:
1. ~A -> I (1-5) (Given)
2. ~W ->M
3. E -> (~W V ~A)
4. E
5. G -> (~I ^ ~M)
6. ~W V ~A (3) (M.P.)
7. (~A -> I) V (~W -> M) (1,2) (Conj.)
8. I V M (6,7) (C.D)
9. ~ (~I ^ ~M) (8) (De M.)
10. ~G (5,9) (M.T.)
Therefore, god does not exist.
Voynich said:The problem with this equation exists in the first and second premises. It may be necessary for God to allow human created evil to happen in order to allow free will to exist. One argument for why God must allow natural evil is that there must be predictable outcomes from natural events. Altering any of this would generally affect free will.
Birdjaguar said:I would be curious about how posters define god. Do all the believers see god the same way? What is gods role in the universe? Is there within Christianity (any flavor) a described purpose to the universe? The nature of good an evil will flow naturally from your answers.
On the other side of the debate, where logic rules, I would ask you to say if you think that the universe had a beginning or if it is eternal? If it had a beginning, what was the first cause? If it is eternal, how do you account for the big bang?
These are the fundamental questions that define the religious and anti religious postions. If you cannot answer them you must be an agnostic.
Some of us wonder why God hasn't been better about telling us what it wants. What does God say? Which 'holy text' is a man to believe? and why? I have only found anything resembling the word of God from introspection.'Belief' was never truly the issue. The issue has always been willingness, or lack thereof, to do as God says instead of doing as we please. Most people would rather cut off an arm than accept the limitations on their right to be as self-serving at any cost to others as they want to be that would result from following God's rules.
My common sense, and deep introspection, tells me to live along a very similar line to what is described in the Bible and various other religious texts. Of course all of those texts also include suggestions that I don't agree with (in some interpretations of the various vague wordings at least). How we get from there to believing in Christ, or any of the innumerable saviors represented in various religions, or taking a specific text as the 'word of God' is beyond my ken.To save themselves the trouble of worrying about it, they simply decided to pretend that God doesn't exist, and then passed it to their children, and drilled it into their heads (along with all kinds of mixed messages about Santa and Christmas, and Halloween and Easter and who-all knows what) until they ignored what their own common sense was telling them and accepted it.
W: God is willing to prevent evil.
W: God is willing to prevent evil.
stormbind said:What religion is that from? Seems your theory is somewhat flawed given that God offers free choice![]()
Pointlessness said:Premiss 2: ~W -> M If there was an all seeing God, it would be pretty malevolent of it to watch the evil and do nothing.
Can you prove that I'm trying to piss you off?Pointlessness said:Are you trying to piss me off..
Free Enterprise said:Many would answer false to premise number two. Many would also say that God does do things to correct the evil (not directly under this premise however it is a related concept). Your conclusion is grounded in this premise. Therefore your argument does not account for all possibilities.
Pointlessness said:I believe the universe is eternal, a claim you have thought about...
Pointlessness said:Like what? What does god do to correct the evil? I would say a god who does nothing to correct evil is malevolent by definition. Would you like to dispute that definition?
Besides, I already destroyed my own proof in the post you quoted from. I merely disproved the notion of a omnipotent, completely benevolent god.