(October 19, 2015 at 4:52 pm)robvalue Wrote:(October 19, 2015 at 11:55 am)JBrentonK Wrote: robvalue, every action in your life that you take is inspired by your faith in the world. It only follows that a belief in God as part of your actions removes you from all blindness about the positive outcome of your actions! If you are to have a God, you are to have one hell of a God!!! The atheists in this thread are too blind to that fact, and I might mention that it is an obvious fact! They each of them do not have that positive value that comes with the faith in God as a part of life. So therefore, if they believed in God, they would get a maximum of greatness for everything they do! If you believe in God, you can act it out in faith, and play a much larger role in the world. It only comes down to proving your belief though.... If you don't prove that you are an atheist, you can't act out your beliefs with the utmost of faith! You need to believe in God first, and then you can prove that you are something else though.... Anything you want!
That doesn't make any sense.
Don't worry guys, I speak word-salad. Let me answer this one.
@JBrentonK
If an action is not performed in life and without faith but is inspired by God then that action by necessity is not an action. It is the illusion of an action. It is nothing more than a concept albeit one with negative utility. But if you have a life and do not perform actions then how can you have faith in God? We have two completely contradictory cases here which means that the two cases are simultaneously mutually exclusive yet complementary. The level of faith that you have is indirectly inversely proportional to your position in action-space that you inhabit cross linked by your belief in God's greatness. Which means that if you in any way perform any actions whatsoever then your belief in God must be an illusion. Therefore the more you try to prove your faith the less chance there is that God exists.
QED (this is just a formal politeness used in word-salad to say that it's the other person's turn to speak)