Why God Doesn't Exist
Created on: October 7th, 2006
Why God Doesn't Exist

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October 7th, 2006
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ya if he wants to abolish evil, then he needs to also abolish good.
October 7th, 2006
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hmmmm
October 7th, 2006
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Angry, that was probably the dumbest comment I have ever heard. One would not need to abolish Good for there to be no evil because if there was nothing but pure good, there would be no evil within the good to abolish.
October 7th, 2006
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god has given us choice!
October 7th, 2006
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ya no sh*t (thaedderz)
October 7th, 2006
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Good and evil are entirely subjective as concepts to human beings, but objective to God. Also, God is not a genie from a magic lamp. He isn't there to grant us our every wish and make our lives easier - if we made decisions for God, we would be God.
October 7th, 2006
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While I do agree that good and evil are subjective so therefore this doesn't really hold any sway, 5'd for simplicity.
October 7th, 2006
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^So objectively he allows people to be raped and murdered. Excellent! Obviously you're not a philosopher or theologian because that is not the way around it. The way around it is through some version of free will. Unfortunately, all attempts to reconcile omnipotence with free will have failed. See Malebranche for an attempt. See Spinoza for a better one (one that results in pantheism).
October 7th, 2006
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Because of sinners. That's why.
October 7th, 2006
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coyotejack: ...Huh? The Bible says whatever you pray for, you shall have it. Too much work too look up where it's said.
October 7th, 2006
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Korf41: Does Free Will really matter if we have rules we MUST follow?
October 7th, 2006
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2000+ yr old Greek philosophers > the last 2000 years of Christian controlled "philosophy" aka theology and book burning.
October 7th, 2006
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win
October 7th, 2006
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because God gave man free will.
October 7th, 2006
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Well there's the whole "God will let you do whatever you want. You just go to hell for it." I mean, you can do other than he "commands" in terms of the commandments, but if you actually consider the logical implications of omnipotence and realize that an omnipotent got implies an efficacious will (whatever he wills, happens, necessarily. Nothing that he doesn't will happens, necessarily.) Existence is an extension of an omnipotent will... nothing can be that is not directly caused by him.
October 7th, 2006
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FishY3: Once again, but does free will really matter if we have rules we MUST follow?
October 7th, 2006
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You don't have to follow the rules, you choose not to break them because of the consequences. By all means, break them if you want.
October 7th, 2006
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If you don't believe that God wills existence then you don't believe that God created the universe and you don't really have any reason to believe in God at all. There are certain things that Christians MUST maintain in order to not slide into deism or pantheism or some directly contradictory form of theism (or atheism) and... nothing seems to be able to reconcile the issues. Oh, except "God is beyond all of the natural laws for he is supernatural".
October 7th, 2006
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"You don't have to follow the rules, you choose not to break them because of the consequences. By all means, break them if you want." Yeah read what I said and you'll realize that this either implies that God does not exist or that God is not omnipotent (and, thus, is not the Christian god).
October 7th, 2006
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NEDM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
October 7th, 2006
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Let's just go back to loving Mother Earth.
October 7th, 2006
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If people accept that God is supernatural, then all you have to do is tell them about the flying spaghetti monster that supercedes God's supernaturality and supercedes all other possible supers and this God says that you must not follow any god, not even himself, for you have no rational reason to believe in him or any other god. Also, if you do believe in him or any other gods you will be sent to a Hell like none that you could possibly comprehend. Do NOT mess with him.
October 7th, 2006
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everyone can believe what they want to believe, and if you change you religious views because of a YTMND, that is sad. Also this new version of FireFox rules!!!
October 7th, 2006
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If you accept that God is supernatural you must accept that the FSM that I have just described (not the classical one) exists and accept the consequences. If God is beyond natural laws and reason, then there is as much "reason" to believe in this FMS as in God, which is to say none.
October 7th, 2006
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Wrong, please educate yourself. Read "The problem of Pain" By C.S.Lewis because it answers this.
October 7th, 2006
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"Huh? The Bible says whatever you pray for, you shall have it. Too much work too look up where it's said." The stipulation to that was if it is in God's will. People who know the Bible and understand God's laws would only truthfully ask for things that they know God would grant them. Thus when I pray for a little extra energy in the morning to get out of bed, I get it, whereas when you pray for a toilet made out of solid gold, your YTMND gets downvoted.
October 7th, 2006
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The only God is max and he is only omnipotent on one planet in cyberspace.
October 7th, 2006
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ooooh philosiphy 101 how i love thee, god can't exist due to the existance of evil
October 7th, 2006
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""Huh? The Bible says whatever you pray for, you shall have it. Too much work too look up where it's said." The stipulation to that was if it is in God's will. People who know the Bible and understand God's laws would only truthfully ask for things that they know God would grant them. Thus when I pray for a little extra energy in the morning to get out of bed, I get it, whereas when you pray for a toilet made out of solid gold, your YTMND gets downvoted." ANSWER THE GOOD AND EVIL PROBLEM.
October 7th, 2006
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This arguement is old and has been disproven many times... Read that book or even think about it for a second...
October 7th, 2006
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Because what we may see as evil, He may see as something else. Everything for a higher purpose and all.
October 7th, 2006
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"This arguement is old and has been disproven many times... Read that book or even think about it for a second..." Not really...
October 7th, 2006
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I do not usually vote at all on sites such as these, but in this case I will have to make an exception as to prevent disproven sayings ending up in U&C...
October 7th, 2006
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coyotejack: So why are christian people suffering from cancer not miraculously healed?
October 7th, 2006
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"Because what we may see as evil, He may see as something else. Everything for a higher purpose and all." The bible talks about evil. You can't get away from it. The bible talks about an evil serpent. You lose. There is evil. Thus, the problem of evil. If someone can actually bring up a good rational argument to solve the problem, let's hear it. Malebranche, a Christian rationalist, attempted and, according to most philosophers, failed. Spinoza was a Christian and... became a pantheist...
October 7th, 2006
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due to the problem of omnipotence that I mentioned before...
October 7th, 2006
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"So why are christian people suffering from cancer not miraculously healed?" Because it is not in God's will that those individuals be cured, it is the will of the individuals who want to live. What we judge to be evil in the short term may ultimately all be part of God's plan to create a greater good. So, for example, a grandmother dies of breast cancer, her grandchildren grow up to find the cure. A woman is raped in an alley, she gives birth to a Nobel peace prize winner. Etc.
October 7th, 2006
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"I do not usually vote at all on sites such as these, but in this case I will have to make an exception as to prevent disproven sayings ending up in U&C..." BRING US ONE OF THE ARGUMENTS. Saying that something has been disproven is not good enough to disprove an argument. Bring it here. Find it and bring it and I'll go find 30 counterarguments.
October 7th, 2006
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COYOTEJACK the problem of evil is REAL. The bible mentions evil. THUS, you must account for GOD to be both OMNIPOTENT and ALL GOOD and somehow allow evil to exist.
October 7th, 2006
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Korf41 please look at my other posts above that one, I do not have the command of the english language such as C.S.Lewis has and he explains it far better then I.
October 7th, 2006
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You can't get around it by just throwing out the word "free will" without rationally proving that it does not conflict with omnipotence, as is to be expected.
October 7th, 2006
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That book is the arguement you are looking for.
October 7th, 2006
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C. S. Lewis was a fiction writer. I don't really think you're going to find any solid logical proofs anywhere near his writings. You can go and reprint it word for word, but I am not very confident that it will hold up to any sort of scrutiny.
October 7th, 2006
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coyotejack: What is the point of finding a cure of a disease a higher power supposedly can cure?
October 7th, 2006
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KORF41: "the problem of evil is REAL. The bible mentions evil. THUS, you must account for GOD to be both OMNIPOTENT and ALL GOOD and somehow allow evil to exist." FIRST of ALL, CALM the F*CK down and STOP with the IMPASSIONED TEENAGER random CAPITALIZED words TYPING. 1. God is omnipotent, you are not. Thus God is a better judge of good and evil than you are. 2. Free will is the alternative to living slavery, wherein all actions would be scripted to avoid us all struggle and hardship.
October 7th, 2006
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Korf41... You cannot be serious... You clearly do not know anything about him do you? He was NOT a fiction writer. He happened to make Narnia and it become popular, but for the most part he was not writing like that. He was an athiest that turned Christian and wrote many books and papers on these kinds of matters.
October 7th, 2006
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"What is the point of finding a cure of a disease a higher power supposedly can cure?" Because we are here to make our own choices and live our own lives. Would you prefer life as a mindless automaton if it meant no one had to die, suffer, or work?
October 7th, 2006
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... YES.
October 7th, 2006
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Kierkegaard is a genius, and a Christian, and says that there are blatant contradictions throughout the bible but believes that these are only there to give doubt as to the existence of god. Without doubt, he believes, faith is meaningless. The guy is, honestly, a genius, but he uses irrationality as a measure to enhance his faith. I won't, and I'll accept his claims that the bible has plenty of contradictions (including this one). Read Kierkegaard and stop the apologetics (and theodicy).
October 7th, 2006
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"God is omnipotent, you are not. Thus God is a better judge of good and evil than you are." It doesn't take a judge. All you have to do is read God's word. He says there is evil. I used LARGE CAPITAL LETTERS because http://largecapitalletters.ytmnd.com/. Also that statement is question begging but we won't even get into that.
October 7th, 2006
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"Because we are here to make our own choices and live our own lives." That and we have rules we MUST follow or perish.
October 7th, 2006
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"Free will is the alternative to living slavery, wherein all actions would be scripted to avoid us all struggle and hardship." Actually free will is the alternative to determinism, which omnipotence logically necessitates. If you can prove otherwise I'd be glad to hear it. I really would. It'd be a philosophical breakthrough.
October 7th, 2006
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Alitheas... Are you serious? Life like that would render everything meaningless... We would learn no personality defining lessons and would be more ignorant then the most richest uninformed person that is born into wealth and has their entire life set up for them with no worries whatsoever. It is good that God knows most people would never want that (and I am betting all people would not if it actually happened)
October 7th, 2006
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"He was NOT a fiction writer. He happened to make Narnia and it become popular, but for the most part he was not writing like that. He was an athiest that turned Christian and wrote many books and papers on these kinds of matters." Oh ok. He wrote a lot. Awesome! Writing a lot has nothing to do with whether or not his logic is foolproof or not. Like I said, bring his logic here and I'll give a counter.
October 7th, 2006
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"... YES." Then you'd also sacrifice any pleasure life could bring you, and nothing would have value. If all food tasted delicious to our subjective judgement as it stands now, no food would taste delicious. If the weather was always a sunny 75 degrees outside, we wouldn't even notice. Everything would be bland, everything would be scripted and predictable, life would have no purpose. Personally, I strongly believe that hard work is its own reward, not because I'm a masochist, but because it allows me
October 7th, 2006
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"We would learn no personality defining lessons and would be more ignorant then the most richest uninformed person that is born into wealth and has their entire life set up for them with no worries whatsoever. It is good that God knows most people would never want that" This doesn't answer the problem of omnipotence and that it is logically impossible for this "choice" to be made.
October 7th, 2006
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to relax in my beanbag chair and fire up the ol' X-Box. If I didn't work hard, I wouldn't appreciate the value of my possessions, relaxation time, or sense of accomplishment and well being.
October 7th, 2006
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"We would learn no personality defining lessons and would be more ignorant then the most richest uninformed person that is born into wealth and has their entire life set up for them with no worries whatsoever. It is good that God knows most people would never want that" Also, if there is no god we get to learn these lessons as well. Makes you think, doesn't it?
October 7th, 2006
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Korf41, like I said, I cannot find this book right now on the internet and cannot recall the exact words he wrote... Please stop wasting time. Just find the book and read the entire thing and you will understand.
October 7th, 2006
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"If all food tasted delicious to our subjective judgement as it stands now, no food would taste delicious" Yes! Logic. If all food is delicious, then no food is delicious. Given that food is delicious, no food is delicious. Outright contradiction! Your logic fails miserably! That means you have a false premise. My guess? God.
October 7th, 2006
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coyotejack: Well wasn't that Heaven which you just desribed? Life after death?
October 7th, 2006
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"Korf41, like I said, I cannot find this book right now on the internet and cannot recall the exact words he wrote... Please stop wasting time. Just find the book and read the entire thing and you will understand." I read Malebranche. Same problem, probably the same strategy, probably the same ending. There's a reason you don't read C.S. Lewis in a class about rationalists. Because he's not rational.
October 7th, 2006
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"to relax in my beanbag chair and fire up the ol' X-Box. If I didn't work hard, I wouldn't appreciate the value of my possessions, relaxation time, or sense of accomplishment and well being." Atheism doesn't prevent you form doing any of this! Christianity does. You guys love to prove your own religion wrong, it's fun!
October 7th, 2006
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"Don't worry whetstone, max isn't God, and if he bans you, then that will only prove taht your right cuz he along with the rest of YTMND is scared of you and of course ppl r gonna say "were scared of you cuz ur psycho" but u and i both know its deeper then that and were not psycho. Plus if max bans you, then u have earned some pretty kool toys in heaven, lol, as your mission will be accomplished. Max will inevitably be helping you if he bans you ;) now thats irony"
October 7th, 2006
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What? You just made a bunch of assumptions you cannot backup. Not rational? And just how the hell would you know? You assume the book is the same as other books?
October 7th, 2006
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That's my favorite quotation ever. Directly from Peterguy. Exactly the same line of reasoning as Muslim fanatics. Incredible.
October 7th, 2006
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"Well wasn't that Heaven which you just desribed? Life after death?" A spiritual life, not a physical life. It's not like a cartoon, where you go walk around on a cloud, pet unicorns and get chocolate from a chocolate tree. It's a lot more ephemeral than that, and there's a lot of speculation about exactly what to expect. The Bible is very vague about its description of heaven.
October 7th, 2006
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I am not Christian by the way, or any religion out there, but I do belive in God. Now Korf41, Read........The........Book. And stop assuming what it is. That is all I am leaving. Whether you read it or not is your own choice, but if you don't and you assume it is not worth the time you are missing out.
October 7th, 2006
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"What? You just made a bunch of assumptions you cannot backup. Not rational? And just how the hell would you know? You assume the book is the same as other books?" I could go ask a professor if he's read the book and ask him to give an analysis of it, but I don't really expect much out of a fiction writer. Nor do I expect much out of someone who isn't a philosopher and isn't held in any regard as a philosopher. Christians like him because he's preaching his own crowd... aside from that...
October 7th, 2006
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"Atheism doesn't prevent you form doing any of this! Christianity does. You guys love to prove your own religion wrong, it's fun!" We weren't talking about atheism. We were talking about whether it would be preferable if God created a world without hardship.
October 7th, 2006
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"The Bible is very vague about its description of heaven." It's not vague about the problem of evil. Please try to reconcile it. I bet you can't! Get on topic!
October 7th, 2006
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Again assumptions, asking someone what they think is a bad idea. If you wont read it and continue to assume "he is a fiction writer" and all that childishness aimed at irritating me then so be it. Goodbye.
October 7th, 2006
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"We weren't talking about atheism. We were talking about whether it would be preferable if God created a world without hardship." And, like I said, what you said you were doing is logically impossible given that God is omnipotent and all good. Thus, the Christian conception of god is flawed. The atheist conception, which is to say the lack of a dogmatic belief system, accomodates actions that you could deem as "good" and "evil" as do many other religions. But, not Christianity.
October 7th, 2006
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"Again assumptions, asking someone what they think is a bad idea. If you wont read it and continue to assume "he is a fiction writer" and all that childishness aimed at irritating me then so be it. Goodbye." Sorry, but there are millions of books in the world. I don't read every one that some kid tells me to. I'll read some Bertrand Russell instead. He's funny.
October 7th, 2006
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"It's not vague about the problem of evil. Please try to reconcile it. I bet you can't! Get on topic!" I did, you danced around it. God's a better judge of good and evil than Korf41, the militant atheist debating on a YTMND comments section. Thus God allows what God deems good to exist, not what Korf41 deems good.
October 7th, 2006
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coyotejack: So Hell is good how?
October 7th, 2006
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"So Hell is good how?" Hell is just consequence and repercussion. It's an eternal feeling of woe and lament for acting against God. If nothing has consequence, why act according to God's law?
October 7th, 2006
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"Thus God allows what God deems good to exist", "Hell is just consequence and repercussion. It's an eternal feeling of woe and lament for acting against God." And the problem of evil continues?
October 7th, 2006
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And by the way, do you happen to be creationists who don't believe in evolution?
October 7th, 2006
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To our subjective minds, yes. To God, no.
October 7th, 2006
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And so God is a God of love, self-love.
October 7th, 2006
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"I did, you danced around it. God's a better judge of good and evil than Korf41, the militant atheist debating on a YTMND comments section. Thus God allows what God deems good to exist, not what Korf41 deems good." I like that you say that God deems things yet it is, according to most philosophers, impossible for him to deem this so, logically. It just doesn't work. Also, you can't prove that he is a better judge. He can't come debate. Sorry.
October 7th, 2006
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"Hell is just consequence and repercussion. It's an eternal feeling of woe and lament for acting against God. If nothing has consequence, why act according to God's law?" I'm not acting against god. I'm acting according to reason. If god exists, god gave me reason. If god exists, he is obviously not the Christian god because he would be a logical contradiction. I have no reason to believe that god doesn't exist, but I have no reason to believe that god exists. Thus, I withhold my belief.
October 7th, 2006
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If someone can point out where I deviated from my normal rational pacifist atheist self and somehow became militant please inform me. Until that time, I'll assume that he was talking out of his ass.
October 7th, 2006
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Sounds like you're agnostic, like me, Korf.
October 7th, 2006
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The greatest hypocracy of man is Atheism. You forfeit all notions of faith because you have to believe an idea without proven fact or science to back you up, so you believe something that cant be proven with fact or science. If you really had a grip on philosophy, you'd be agnostic.
October 7th, 2006
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Atheism is a faith based religeon. You have to believe something unprovable and believe it entirely based on your own faith. You belong to the church of atheism.
October 7th, 2006
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Roomy: You're not making any sense, did you pay attention in science class? Also, you HAVE to believe in some sort of evolution, or do you think Adam & Eve were white, black and asian at the same time?
October 7th, 2006
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What?? Did you read what I wrote at all? I hold no organized faith, nor do I declassify science or evolution. The beliefs written in the bible are a way for mankind to explain the unknown. One engulfing desire of humanity is the need to explain everything, and we did so through religion. We now have a better understanding of things, so we can use science to explain. The ultimate question though is "Why?", and this can never be explained through science.
October 7th, 2006
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But honestly, take a step back and think about things for a second. We have a law of the universe that energy or matter can never be created nor destroyed. This we know. Our universe holds a set amount of energy and matter and will never have more. Now how did we get the energy that formed matter and anti-matter and everything we have in the universe? The only true answer you can say is "we don't know".
October 7th, 2006
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If you consider yourself to be governed by the laws of science and the ideas of philosophy, you HAVE to say there is a possibility that God does exist, and there is a possibility that God does not exist. We don't have the proof either way, so to say either God does exist or God doesn't exist takes an amount of faith, hense believing something you can't prove. It is fact that Atheism is just as much as a religion as Christianity or Islam.
October 7th, 2006
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Personally, I define myself with being agnostic because I cannot believe the various ideas in organized faiths. Organized religion directly contradicts proven science and was just a way of explaining the universe to a people that had no way of understanding it. As we mature, so will our religions. But I also can't say that God doesn't exist, because that would be equally ignorant. If you take a look at physics and astronomy and how exact our universe really is, it just seems
October 7th, 2006
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to have some sort of order about the universe. Like the fact that there were about 1 billion and 1 parts matter for all 1 billion parts anti-matter, and that imbalance makes all the matter we exist with today. The method that higher elements are created, how elements past iron are made from collapsing stars, the life of stars themselves, the mathmatical gravitational constant of the universe, and i could go on for days. Everything is so fine tuned in the universe, it just seems too orderly to be chaos.
October 7th, 2006
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I understood that better. And incase you haven't read what I said before, I am an evolutionist agnostic and have been for a long time.
October 7th, 2006
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Although, I might agree on appearing atheist by making a Ytmnd called 'Why God Doesn't Exist', well I'd make a 'Why God Exists' if there wasn't one already. One thing I have thought about is that if we took away all life in the universe, exactly all life, what would be the point of the universe? There would be noone and/or nothing to experience it.
October 7th, 2006
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Your life for Xenu.
October 7th, 2006
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Arguing that everything is so fine tuned and gives the world such order so there must be a god is great. If everything were chaos there could be no life. Thus, we would not be alive to think about it. If gravity repelled instead of attracted then matter would be relatively equally spaced throughout the universe and no compounds, planets, life forms, anything would form. So to say, "why is it so orderly" is a bad question when the answer is "the reason you can wonder why it is so orderly is because it is"
October 7th, 2006
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To argue that life is such a rarity and has such a low likelihood of developing is similar. If life were impossible, we would not be here. It is possible. Regardless of how unlikely it is, the numbers line up at some point in the universe and here we are. Maybe we are the only ones, maybe we are one of many. It doesn't really matter... we know that it is possible for life to exist elsewhere because we know it is possible for life to exist here.
October 7th, 2006
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To say that life magically formed on this planet is to disregard that half of the history of the world was lifeless, that humans have developed in the equivalent of a minute in the world's life. It took a long time for life to develop to the point it is at currently. If the first lightning bolt had hit a pool of matter and formed the correct compounds for the first biological compounds to form and soon after (relatively speaking) life had formed it wouldn't mean anything different. It's just probability.
October 7th, 2006
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Now, to say that atheism is a type of faith is to completely misunderstand atheism. Atheism is an awful term as it describes two fundamentally and ideologically different belief structures. Strong atheism is the belief that there is no god. This is a positive assertion, as are all theistic assertions, and must be supported by sufficient reason in order to be considered rational and not irrational (such as faith). Seeing as many philosophers believe it to be impossible...
October 7th, 2006
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to prove that god cannot exist, this does not seem a tenable position, rationally. Thus, people who are strong atheists are likely either doing so on blind faith or flawed reasoning unless they can rationally prove otherwise. Weak atheism, on the other hand, is the belief that there is no reason to believe that god exists. This is different from agnosticism which is the positive assertion that it is impossible to determine whether or not god exists. Many philosophers, including Bertrand Russell...
October 7th, 2006
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believe that this position is as untenable as strong atheism. Weak atheism is merely the belief that there is no reason to believe that god or gods exist and no reason to believe that it is impossible to determine whether or not god exists. If a person cannot prove the existence or non-existence or impossibility of god or gods this is the default and rational position to hold. It makes no assertion at all. It is not a belief but a lack of belief due to a lack of proof of any positive theistic assertions.
October 7th, 2006
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I have no reason to believe that unicorns exist. This is not to say that unicorns do not exist either here or anywhere else in the universe and this certainly is not to say that it is impossible for unicorns to exist or impossible to determine whether or not unicorns exist. IT is not a belief at all. You cannot say that I have faith that unicorns do not exist. I in fact lack faith in anything pertaining to unicorns and lack any belief as to the existence of unicorns. A weak aunicornist is not crazy.
October 7th, 2006
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As to the question of "Why?"... Why do we need a why? Matter exists because it is possible for matter to exist. We exist because it is possible for life to exist, life came into being, life evolved into humans, humans had babies and one of those babies was you and one of those babies was me. Why were we created? I see no reason to believe that we were created through some force of will. The reason we, as a species, came into being is simply natural selection and chance.
October 7th, 2006
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Why does existence exist? People say that it is in God's nature to exist. Existence is a part of God's essence. If someone is going to argue for this, why not argue for the simpler explanation that existence is part of existence's essence. If something exists that is because it exists. That's a simple explanation. I have no reason to believe that matter has ever been created or destroyed. Now, matter isn't as simple as we thought it to be 100 years ago... antimatter is some crazy stuff...
October 7th, 2006
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but that hasn't changed our conceptions of existence. When matter and antimatter collide they release energy and split into other particles which are quite complicated in terms of their relation to matter, but nothing is destroyed. Conservation still holds. The last thing I think I'll mention is a strange question that apparently is popular as I've heard it from a couple people lately... the feeling that it is impossible for existence to be infinite because it would imply an infinite prehistory and...
October 7th, 2006
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an infinite posthistory, and this is supposed to prove that the present is impossible. It's not very complicated to refute, however. Draw a timeline. Put an arrow one each end pointing to infiniti and place a dot wherever you like. Call that dot now. It is possible.
October 7th, 2006
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God gives us the choice to be evil and good. He wants us to pick good, but will not force us to.
October 8th, 2006
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For the sake of being brief, I'll only touch on one thing you said. "this position [agnostic] is as untenable as strong atheism." I don't see it as something that could be defended or refuted at all, but more along the lines of a consession into the fact that arguing either way for the existance of God or against the existance of God is simply just futile. I see it as the only factual choice on this topic since basicly it's saying "I don't know, you don't know, and we will never know, so why bother".
October 8th, 2006
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Your argument for weak atheism and strong atheism makes sense and has shown me another side to the argument I didn't consider before, and your analogy with unicorns was strong. I've enjoyed reading your posts.
October 8th, 2006
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Great Quote and Thanx for the Upvotes on my sites.
October 21st, 2006
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◄or option E) None of the above. As you can see this is an old and worthless argument called the 'theodicy'►
December 24th, 2006
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"God gives us the choice to be evil and good. He wants us to pick good, but will not force us to." Oh, yeah, we have free will, but the moment we use that "free" will to do something bad we get a kick in the crotch and a one-way ticket on the Bullet Train to Heck. Benevolent god my ass.