Quote from Free Thinker:
are you anti education?
http://www.arn.org/blogs/index.php/2/2006/02/26/the_false_duality_argument_debunked_in_k
Quote from Free Thinker:
are you anti education?
Quote from Ricter:
I'd have to consider that the designer's (if there is one) notion of loving might be far beyond what I think loving is, particularly since the designer appears to be working at a "divine" level, from my pov. Then I might have to consider the possibility that the suffering is, from that pov, neither ultimate or eternal and could well be akin to "ripping a bandage off".
The beauty of this slippery argument is that you can justify just about anything with such mystical divinity talk, even when it flies in the face of your own "god-given" cognition. However, would "god" want you to disregard the very cognitive capability "he" had given you?Quote from Ricter:
I'd have to consider that the designer's (if there is one) notion of loving might be far beyond what I think loving is, particularly since the designer appears to be working at a "divine" level, from my pov. Then I might have to consider the possibility that the suffering is, from that pov, neither ultimate or eternal and could well be akin to "ripping a bandage off". This "god" feeling is a feeling billions have, so it's not likely going away.
Quote from Free Thinker:
that could all be true. if so can you think of any reason that humans should worship a being that could care less about human suffering?
Quote from Gabfly1:
The beauty of this slippery argument is that you can justify just about anything with such mystical divinity talk, even when it flies in the face of your own "god-given" cognition. However, would "god" want you to disregard the very cognitive capability "he" had given you?
I don't see how a theist can win this argument. If a theist uses the judgment he is presumably capable of, then he can only conclude that "god" is not good. If a theist does not use his cogntive capability and judgment, then he is disregarding his "god-given" gift of reason, which is singularly the only thing that has brought him out of his cave. You really have to squint and use pretzel "logic" to make it all "come together" as a theist.
Epicurus: Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God?
i understand. it is possible that god,if he exists, is like the little boy that likes to light ants on fire to watch them scramble for kicks. maybe to god we are nothing more than ants. why should humans worship such a being?Quote from Ricter:
My point is that "could (sic) care less" implies that our understanding of suffering is the best (or only) understanding of suffering, and that may not be true.
Quote from Free Thinker:
i understand. it is possible that god is like the little boy that likes to light ants on fire to watch them scramble for kicks. maybe to god we are nothing more than ants. why should humans worship such a being?
Quote from Wallet:
Millers explanation of irreducible complexity is flawed imho. In all things we find ourselves digging deeper or smaller into the material of matter, when we look at the cell, now we realize the complexity of it's inner workings, Miller addresses this as breaking the flagellum into smaller but identifiable parts thus possibly proving evolution.
How ever when taking those parts to the next level we find our selves looking at the basic bio-building blocks being assembled. To me this is outside the possibility of chance
Again, the complexity of the body, at every level, all biology down to the most basic level/quantum, screams design.
An Atheist who disagrees with a Christian (?) who disagrees with Creationism.
Why I disagree with Ken Miller, by Massimo Pigliucci
http://www.scientificblogging.com/rationally_speaking/why_i_disagree_ken_miller