Silencer, on 17 June 2010 - 06:59 AM, said:
1. You ever read TV Tropes? "Blue and Orange Morality" is a good one. Despite the fact that God's perception of good or evil may be different from ours, that doesn't change the nature of what he does
from our perspective. Hitler may have viewed himself as perfectly good and doing the best for humanity, does that make him any less 'evil' to the rest of the world? No.
2. Once again, because it's simply an extension, it falls prey to the same rebuttal. Just because we live longer than cats doesn't mean we can cause them great pain in the name of science and call it moral, does it? There may be arguments for it from our perspective, but not from the cats', and that is the point.
And as for unprovable assumptions...we're having a debate over God, good sir, so bring your arguments of unprovable assumptions to the table by all means, but you tread on unstable ground...
(Oh, and I don't think Epicurus was arguing against the existence of God per se. Merely pointing out that, assuming he does exist, there's something seriously wrong with the way he operates. It's hypothetical and not by any means a proof or argument, it merely sums up a position).
You are probably right about Epicurus's argument, I haven't read that much of him.
1. The problem with this is the assumption that our pov is the dominant one. When speaking of Hitler's pov then yes, we can say that while he may have considered himself good, our estimation is of equal (as a group more) importance than his and he was wrong. However when we are dealing with a postulated Infinite Divine Being then our pov, our subjective opinion of what constitutes good and evil, is by definition less valid, less important than his.
2. In this point I will disagree. While experimenting on another human and causing great pain is most certainly wrong (without prior informed consent), I believe that testing on an animal in such a way is not immoral. Now causing great UNNECESSARY pain I believe is wrong, however if the pain has a specfic purpose that will advance our understanding and ability to aid other cats or to aid humans in a significant way...perhaps even in an insignificant way (with significance being defined as greatly improving the quality of life, e.g. Better techniques for heart surgery=significant, better mascara = insignificant for the purposes of this post) then I see nothing wrong with it.
3. Yes, the idea of God is an unprovable assumption, however it is not an invalid assumption which I will argue that Epicurus's arguments are.
Silencer, on 17 June 2010 - 06:59 AM, said:
1. If God has a plan, bearing in mind he is omniscient and omnipotent, then the outcome is likely fixed. While it is quite reconcilable with the idea of Free Will, if the outcome is fixed we are essentially incapable of making any significant change, yes? If God is treating this as an experiment in the hands-off, see-what-comes-of-it sense, then he doesn't have a real plan. Hence my statement.
2. Slightly different, in that the Will of God, if incomprehensible, will never be understood and could in fact be completely misinterpreted with ease, whereas the scientific phenomena you describe are not incomprehensible, and can be understood with time. The statement that we cannot understand the will of God is a follow-on from the contradiction with free will/a plan, however, and is a common argument amongst Christians I have talked to. The reason for rejecting the Bible or other scripture only follows if they are in fact correct. That being said, I never said to throw out belief in God, just the mortal attempts at comprehending his Will.
3. See #2. It's not lack of comprehension, it's inability to comprehend. One could say we should still follow God's teachings, but those teachings must inherently be incomprehensible if God's Will is incomprehensible. I.e. we assume he wants us to listen to his Word, but that could very well be wrong because we cannot comprehend his Will. See?
I don't think there was any flaming in my post at all, merely a reasoned argument on a series of rebuttals I have heard people state. I've also heard people claim "God is God and that's it", and trust me, I WILL and have flamed that assertion.
1. No, I would agree that there was no flaming in your post, I did not mean to implie there was, but upon rereading it I realize that the implication was there. Apologies for that.
2. The idea of Omnipotence and Omniscience is problematic. However if one accepts that there is a difference between foreknowledge and determinism then the problem is greatly lessened. If I see 'God's Plan' as a stamp placed upon all of history and existence that THIS WILL HAPPEN, then I am leaning towards determinism. However is I see 'God's Plan' as a reaction to my own choices decided upon before the fact then Free Will remains intact within the plan. Within this reasoning there is is fixed outcome, both for all of life and existence and for my own life, however this fixed outcome is a result both of the choices which I made and the response of God to those choices, both of which were known before the fact. The idea that an Infinite Divine Being knows my choice before I choose it does not make it in any way less my choice.
3. Within the sciences it is quite apparent that we do not know things, the problem is that we do not know what, or how much, we do not know. The belief that we will someday have a full can clear understanding of them is, in my opinion, based wholly on faith. We are growing in knowledge on all these subjects but we do not know the extent of the knowledge yet to be gained and it may, plausibly, be of infinite extent such that we will never have complete knowledge or understanding on these subjects. However this does not mean that we should reject the knowledge which we have gained. I will argue that the same is true of any potential Infinite Divine Being, though we may never be able to know everything about him nor fully grasp his nature or his plan this does not mean that we cannot know something about him. Now the knowledge one accepts will necessarily be dependant on the belief that said Infinite Divine Being communicates some measure of his nature, plan, and desire in some way. However, assuming the existence of an Inifinte Divine Being who is not removed from his creation then it is fully plausible that he would communicate in some way with said creation, the only question remaining then become which one is correct.
4. Flaming that they rightly deserved I'm sure.
Silencer, on 17 June 2010 - 06:59 AM, said:
Now this is a stance I can appreciate. Though one could argue that religion is part of culture, and so your stance is still culturally relative, it is more in line with the discussion at hand. Though I'm curious as to how an unappeasable God would treat humans - is there a follow-on to this belief in regards to Heaven/Hell, or is he still benevolent and forgiving at that point?
/curious.
Ah, and this is the beauty of Christianity. In the Orthodox Christian religion it is taught that God is unappeasable because his standard is perfection. Thus there is no way to escape the just punishment of which imperfect beings are, in the judgment of a perfect God who seeks perfection, fully deserving.
However, being a God of both perfect Justice and perfect Love, God saw fit to provide a means of release from this punishment. In orthodox belief God came in the flesh, as Jesus Christ, taking on a fully human nature while remaining fully divine so that he might:
1. Live as an example to all men as to how to please him
2. Die as a worthy sacrifice to take on the punishment rightfully waiting for men
3. Rise from the dead, invoking power over death so that those who follow him might be covered by his perfection in the eyes of God, perfected through their lives and their deaths, and become worthy to enter heaven.
The idea of God as being benevolent and forgiving and the idea of God being wrathful are both common in Christian teaching, however the connection between the two is rarely seen outside of Christian circles....crap...a lot of the time it's rarely seen within Christian circles...I lament the sad state of theological thought in the Christian church today.