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Debunking Christianity? It's actually quite as simple as asking "why?"
#86
RE: Debunking Christianity? It's actually quite as simple as asking "why?"
(July 16, 2011 at 5:04 pm)Welsh cake Wrote:
(July 16, 2011 at 4:42 pm)Boris Spacek Wrote: Well, if you really think they would, I'm afraid that means they're at least a little dim. I was not saying that something prevents God from creating the nonexistence of whatever He creates, I was saying that realizing something's existence without further realizing the lack of it is not something God would be narrow minded enough to do. It's meaningless to ask God to create some obvious contradiction, like a square circle. So, why bring it up? Even if He could do such a thing, there would be no way of using it in our world. So if we're to use any logic here, we'll have to stop bothering God to perform mindless tasks.
I already brought this argument up in a dicussion with void but here goes. If we decide to talk about God's omnipotence then why can't he kill himself? Nothing logically contradicting like creating a rock so heavy he can't lift it, I can kill myself quite easily, so why can't an all-powerful deity manage it?

Well, you have to recall that death and killing are restricted to act on finitely extant organisms. How is that? Simply, a change in God's existence is not compatible with other of God's properties: God is defined as infinite and eternal, so if God presently exists, He will for all time. That may sound like we are capable of something God isn't, which could lead to my concluding God isn't omnipotent, but finite existence is merely a imperfect infinite existence. So, in fact, the restrictions placed on our existence are what necessitate death, to plunge us into infinite darkness or eternal life, depending on whether we chose God or against God.

The other way to see it is that God is (according to NeoPlatonic arguments) the idea or form of Good, which, since a form, is immutable and such.


(July 16, 2011 at 5:33 pm)FaithNoMore Wrote:
(July 16, 2011 at 5:24 pm)Boris Spacek Wrote: I suppose it is, but I'm in no hurry: apart from the origin of evil and the denouncing of my ontological arguments, I haven't really received any solid challenges against the possibility God does exist.

You're missing the point of the burden of proof. No challenges are needed for you to have to prove god exists.

It's on my To-Do board, but presently, I prefer plain old 'faith'. Our Creeds don't read "I have substantial evidence for the existence of God," but rather "I believe in One God..." In the meantime, I'd rather respond to actual arguments against God's existence than pleads to do so or gifts of burden. As a Christian, I don't feel compelled to prove God's existence; that's just not the emphasis of our faith.
(July 16, 2011 at 5:34 pm)Rhythm Wrote: Pretty hefty leap from god to God. I was looking back through the posts, and yep, I came in right under you regarding your missing a step, so you have had a pretty straightforward challenge. Is possibility the only thing you hope for from the christian god, you just want him to be possible? There are a great many things that I wish were possible......can these also be true?

Sorry, but I'm not certain which post you're referring to. Probably the guy who said:

1. Prove God exists.
2. Wax philosophical...

But it wasn't a leap (of mine, are you accusing?). As I've already said, I was responding to the original poster, who in his thought experiment, already presupposed the existence of God:

Quote:When "god" was making us, WHY would he even implant the ability to be violent?

I reluctantly offered to clarify the God I was being asked to prove existed, so as to show how it was a matter of explaining the nature of ideals, not of funding some interstellar mission to probe beyond the heliosphere. Debates touching on the existence of God should really be confined to discussions of what is good, how did there come to be evil, and other abstractions.

What do I hope for? Until I encounter some doctrinal or logical contradiction that should make God implausible (and have to iron it out or reject some attributes I've mistakenly given God), I don't really fret the im/possibility of God. I think most Christians, as the liturgy and Gospels and countless vampire movies encourage (Jerry Dandrich), just hope to have enough faith in that Heaven exists and that God doesn't hate them for them to be good people and live well. So, yes, we wish Him to be possible, but since most of us are either convinced by arguments or by emotion, we more importantly hope for the result of his existence: you know, a purpose to existence, life eternal, the blessings of salvation (Hell, where's my BCP).
(July 16, 2011 at 5:07 pm)Rhythm Wrote: Any time threads like this pop up I feel the urge to link this book. No matter which side of the aisle you're on, the information in this book should be interesting.

http://www.amazon.com/History-God-000-Ye...0345384563

Oh, and I've been meaning to read that.
(July 11, 2011 at 7:44 pm)FaithNoMore Wrote:
(July 9, 2011 at 9:01 pm)Boris Spacek Wrote:


Do you realize that your proof of God involves characteristics you have given to God? I can do it too.

The FSM is the source of all light.
Light exists.
Therefore, the FSM exists.

For your proof to work, you would have to prove that God has the characteristics you claim he does. To do that, you'd have to prove God exists. See the problem?

I'm working on this one...But for now:

What if I hadn't given God these qualities? What if these were all scripturally based or teaching of church patricians? I know scripture doesn't prove anything; it's just a guide to God (from my point of view), and to anyone else it's the first source Christian philosophy and doctrine. I guess, my question is, if I call something the source of Goodness, wouldn't the next step to be to establish whether Goodness could have a source? You disagree with my method of naming, but I can't: if indeed the FSM is the source of all light, then, if a source of light exists, the FSM must as well.

All I've done is give a name to a collection of attributes: if each of these attributes exists, then shouldn't God as well? There would then be the question of coexistence: can all of these attributes be present in one body, God's? But if God is omnipresent, then sure. You can't confine any of these qualities to where God isn't, since He is everywhere. What about Hell being the absence of God? Where is that, then? I dunno. But it sounds like nonexistence, which God isn't a part of. Oh, so nonexistence is where exactly? Easy: nowhere. But does that mean Hell doesn't exist? No. Just that nonexistence and nothingness are Hell. You know, the ideas, not the material imitations.
(July 16, 2011 at 4:49 pm)FaithNoMore Wrote:
(July 16, 2011 at 4:42 pm)Boris Spacek Wrote: Well, if you really think they would, I'm afraid that means they're at least a little dim. I was not saying that something prevents God from creating the nonexistence of whatever He creates, I was saying that realizing something's existence without further realizing the lack of it is not something God would be narrow minded enough to do. It's meaningless to ask God to create some obvious contradiction, like a square circle. So, why bring it up? Even if He could do such a thing, there would be no way of using it in our world. So if we're to use any logic here, we'll have to stop bothering God to perform mindless tasks.

I agree the squared circle is a flawed argument, but these things are not brought up to have God perform meaningless tasks. They are brought up to see if God's qualities that are ascribed to him, such as omnipotence and omniscience, are contradictory in nature.

True. It was an intrusion to introduce an obvious contradiction instead of the more abstract one he brought up. And I was bringing an irrelevant complication into the midst by suggesting it was bothering God himself. Reverence for or fear of God, as well, must not cloud one's mind from asking such questions.
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Messages In This Thread
RE: Debunking Christianity? It's actually quite as simple as asking "why?" - by Boris Spacek - July 17, 2011 at 1:14 pm

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