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Religiosity, Spirituality and the Moral
RE: Religiosity, Spirituality and the Moral
(February 22, 2015 at 12:42 pm)robvalue Wrote: Ether: Are you consciously ignoring all my posts, just out of interest?

No, and I am sorry for having missed them. I have bee so involve with a running conversation with Surgenator that in talking to him, going to dialysis and packing for a move to Richmond, I've just overlooked them... again, sorry.

What was your question?

(February 22, 2015 at 2:50 pm)Parkers Tan Wrote: I seem to remember Ether posting that he's not here to change minds.

Given the unconvincing nature of what he writes, probably a wise approach.

Absolutely. I cannot... am not able to change minds. Neither are the missionaries or any other member of the church. All I (we) can do is offer information and that is as far as it goes. If the atunement (being in tune with the spirit) is there, God does the changing. Atunement comes before Atonement.
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RE: Religiosity, Spirituality and the Moral
(February 22, 2015 at 4:16 pm)Surgenator Wrote: If God and the rules cannot be separated, you cannot know which came first. Hence, you don't know the moral rules god enforces are actually moral. Faith is your only defense.

Of course I don't know which came first. If both are eternal without beginning, coming first makes no sense. Enforcement is either immediate or postponed (in mortality it is postponed for reasons I indicated earlier); but God enforces them all. As for knowing all the laws; maybe not, but the ones that have been revealed by prophets I know to be moral and yes, of course I have faith. I never denied that. As for it being a defense; I don't need to defend it. As I have said, I don't believe I am able to convince anyone in here of anything. I'm just here to express a point of view knowing ahead of time that nothing I say will be accepted. I participate because it is interesting and I am learning something.

Quote:You say: "How about we define objective-moral-law as the application of a rule for a given situation where the situation and punishment do not depend who, where or when the situation partook?"

I'm ok with that except that the word "application" implies and applier. To me, in terms of an eternally objective moral law, that means God.

Quote:So that is where your stuck. The applier and what the rule states are two different problems. I'm arguing about how the rule can be objective. Your arguing about how the administrator can be objective (maybe). Lets address one problem at a time please.

You're right. That is where I am stuck. I don't see how you can separate the two, and you cannot see how I cannot.

Quote:I find what the other responder said to be very interesting. Ontology is "the branch of metaphysics that studies the nature of existence or being as such." (from the dictionary) In this case, the existence of God which I believe in and you do not. There's the rub. We will not be able to come to an agreement because of that fact.

Quote: It is not like I cannot be convinced a God exist. I just need evidence, not unsupported stories, to convince me. Are you even open to the idea that your wrong?

Believe me, I understand the desire for more information (evidence)concerning God. God will not provide proof of His existence because we are in the middle of a test. The answers to the test aren't provided until the test is over. Thus, faith is a requirement for the test; whether one believes the words of the prophets or not. As I have said before, we are responsible for those things that have been revealed and there are consequences for ignoring the prophets. So, waiting for evidence, from my point of view, can be hazardous to your eternal health. No. I'm not open to that idea. Eternity and infinity, the non-destructibility and eternal nature of matter, spirit, intelligence and all that goes with that makes too much sense to me. Since I believe that intelligence like matter can neither be created or destroyed (it can only change state) and that there are different levels of intelligence, this means to me there is an intelligence that is all knowing and that is God.

Quote: Before we get too deep into philosophical distinctions, building upon mutually agreed propositions is valid with both theories of justifications. It is cleared that you want to bypass the justification of your belief in the prophets. However, internal consistency is not enough to justify anything real. If it were, the existence of super heroes are justified because the comic books are internally consistent.

Yes, and I am sure in your mind the scriptures do indeed read similarly to a comic book. There is no other evaluation possible is there?

Quote: I also know that there are inconsistencies in the Mormonism. I prefer not argue about these but only to point out there consistency is not something mormonism has.

OK, I went an looked at the list of things written by Packham. He is very good a coloring things he does not understand to make them look absurd and some of the things in there are outright lies. If you want answers to some of the things Packham says, then may I suggest you check out FairMormon. I'd give you the link but I'm not allowed yet. But that is another subject and I'm not interested in debating that stuff. What I do in here is, if I notice a topic that interests me, I'll comment on it. I'll repeat myself again. I'm not in here to convince anyone of Mormonism. That would indeed be a waste of time.
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RE: Religiosity, Spirituality and the Moral
Ether: well I've made about 4-5 posts now, but I've read in another thread that you're leaving so I guess there's no point me compiling it all. If you would like to address them let me know please, and I'll do so.
Feel free to send me a private message.
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RE: Religiosity, Spirituality and the Moral
(February 22, 2015 at 7:22 pm)ether-ore Wrote:
(February 22, 2015 at 4:16 pm)Surgenator Wrote: If God and the rules cannot be separated, you cannot know which came first. Hence, you don't know the moral rules god enforces are actually moral. Faith is your only defense.

Of course I don't know which came first. If both are eternal without beginning, coming first makes no sense.
You can still have one come before than another. You can have one be a smaller infinity than the other. (infinities still have sizes)

Quote:
Quote:You say: "How about we define objective-moral-law as the application of a rule for a given situation where the situation and punishment do not depend who, where or when the situation partook?"
I'm ok with that except that the word "application" implies and applier. To me, in terms of an eternally objective moral law, that means God.
Applier is a separate problem. Who applies vs what is applied.

Quote:
Quote:So that is where your stuck. The applier and what the rule states are two different problems. I'm arguing about how the rule can be objective. Your arguing about how the administrator can be objective (maybe). Lets address one problem at a time please.
You're right. That is where I am stuck. I don't see how you can separate the two, and you cannot see how I cannot.
What is to be applied vs who applied what. These two are separable problems.

Quote:
Quote:
Quote:I find what the other responder said to be very interesting. Ontology is "the branch of metaphysics that studies the nature of existence or being as such." (from the dictionary) In this case, the existence of God which I believe in and you do not. There's the rub. We will not be able to come to an agreement because of that fact.
It is not like I cannot be convinced a God exist. I just need evidence, not unsupported stories, to convince me. Are you even open to the idea that your wrong?

Believe me, I understand the desire for more information (evidence)concerning God. God will not provide proof of His existence because we are in the middle of a test. The answers to the test aren't provided until the test is over. Thus, faith is a requirement for the test; whether one believes the words of the prophets or not. As I have said before, we are responsible for those things that have been revealed and there are consequences for ignoring the prophets. So, waiting for evidence, from my point of view, can be hazardous to your eternal health. No. I'm not open to that idea. Eternity and infinity, the non-destructibility and eternal nature of matter, spirit, intelligence and all that goes with that makes too much sense to me. Since I believe that intelligence like matter can neither be created or destroyed (it can only change state) and that there are different levels of intelligence, this means to me there is an intelligence that is all knowing and that is God.
God is a terrible teacher is he insists that faith is the main evidence. Faith is not evidence and leads people into bizarre beliefs. You don't have to look very hard to see the various cults that existed, still exist, and are recently born. God is a failed teacher.

Quote:
Quote: Before we get too deep into philosophical distinctions, building upon mutually agreed propositions is valid with both theories of justifications. It is cleared that you want to bypass the justification of your belief in the prophets. However, internal consistency is not enough to justify anything real. If it were, the existence of super heroes are justified because the comic books are internally consistent.

Yes, and I am sure in your mind the scriptures do indeed read similarly to a comic book. There is no other evaluation possible is there?
Prophesy suppose to be a good indicator. However, most prophesies are very broad or you have to bent over backwards to see how they're fulfilled.

Quote:
Quote: I also know that there are inconsistencies in the Mormonism. I prefer not argue about these but only to point out there consistency is not something mormonism has.

OK, I went an looked at the list of things written by Packham. He is very good a coloring things he does not understand to make them look absurd and some of the things in there are outright lies. If you want answers to some of the things Packham says, then may I suggest you check out FairMormon. I'd give you the link but I'm not allowed yet. But that is another subject and I'm not interested in debating that stuff. What I do in here is, if I notice a topic that interests me, I'll comment on it. I'll repeat myself again. I'm not in here to convince anyone of Mormonism. That would indeed be a waste of time.
You can always start a thread based off the link I gave.

Also, can you take more care with the quoting. It's becoming a nuisance to fix your quoting mistakes.
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RE: Religiosity, Spirituality and the Moral
(February 22, 2015 at 9:43 pm)robvalue Wrote: Ether: well I've made about 4-5 posts now, but I've read in another thread that you're leaving so I guess there's no point me compiling it all. If you would like to address them let me know please, and I'll do so.

To be fair, please PM me and we'll talk.
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