Quote from: reaper on March 12, 2007, 09:09:55 PMif there's no god, shouldn't there be much more evil than what's seen on earth? Have you even paid attention to human history?Quotehttp://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/SOD.CHAP2.HTMhttp://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/SOD.TAB2.1A.GIFhttp://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/SOD.TAB2.1B.GIFhttp://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/MEGA.HTMThe mass murder of their own citizens or those under their protection or control by emperors, kings, sultans, khans, presidents, governors, generals, and other such rulers is very much part of our history. In ancient times captured cities or towns would be pillaged and their inhabitants massacred; whole lands would be turned into regions of ruins and skeletons.Such genocide, massacre, and human slaughter; pillage, rape, and torture have been more common than war and revolution."Good" seems to be more the exception than the rule.What was your question, again?
if there's no god, shouldn't there be much more evil than what's seen on earth?
http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/SOD.CHAP2.HTMhttp://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/SOD.TAB2.1A.GIFhttp://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/SOD.TAB2.1B.GIFhttp://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/MEGA.HTMThe mass murder of their own citizens or those under their protection or control by emperors, kings, sultans, khans, presidents, governors, generals, and other such rulers is very much part of our history. In ancient times captured cities or towns would be pillaged and their inhabitants massacred; whole lands would be turned into regions of ruins and skeletons.Such genocide, massacre, and human slaughter; pillage, rape, and torture have been more common than war and revolution.
"Good" seems to be more the exception than the rule.What was your question, again? glupek2The standard answer, as I understand it, would be to dance around the problem by saying that God gave people free will, therefore any evil done by people is our own fault. Which is interesting, because that would be just as true if you remove God from the equation entirely.By the way, would you mind explaining your "perfect world" theory to us, the way you might explain it to the estimated 89,000,000 to slightly over 260,000,000 million men, women, and children who were victims of genocide, massacre, and human slaughter, pillage, rape, and torture throughout history?Inquiring Minds Want to Know.
Ever notice how people ask you what sign you are and always say "I knew it" only after you tell them which one?
Why should there be more evil?Scientifically, god invokes more problems than it solves. Perhaps Hawking thinks this.
at which point you would feel vindicated in spending $19.95 on your newly acquired Brazilian power crystal, just as an executive from a psychic hotline does a line of coke off a hooker's ass with the millions he's raked in from morons like you.
Quote from: dahangWhy should there be more evil?Scientifically, god invokes more problems than it solves. Perhaps Hawking thinks this.i don't think stephen hawking can understand god, or anyone for that matter, so i don't know how god is creating problems. unless you consider humans not understanding everything a problem
can i think the world is perfect, yet is incomprehensible?
can i think the world is perfect, yet is incomprehensible? sure i can, because i do!Quote from: quadzI'm sorry, but I'm going to have to object to your use of the word "think" in this context.
I'm sorry, but I'm going to have to object to your use of the word "think" in this context.
Well, I'm sorry, but there's nothing evident to me about how many-possibilities-of-life mixed in with things-we-don't-understand, leads to extreme evil.
if you can think it, your thoughts exist/will exist/have existed"Quote from: quadzAs far as we know, thoughts exist as electro-chemical patterns in the brain. So you're saying that if you can think it, then your thoughts existed at some point as brain patterns? Isn't that self-evident? And what do brain patterns have to do with lack of a governing force leading to extreme evil?
As far as we know, thoughts exist as electro-chemical patterns in the brain. So you're saying that if you can think it, then your thoughts existed at some point as brain patterns? Isn't that self-evident? And what do brain patterns have to do with lack of a governing force leading to extreme evil?
Can you explain why you think some governing force is needed, beyond "lots of possibilities and stuff we don't understand?"
Huh????????? If your glass is half-full of perfection, that's pretty damn imperfect.
I have no idea what you are getting at in regard to the "slaughtered women". Explain?
oh well, i think human free will would shed some sense on the situation(that i believe in). if god didn't exist, i don't think we would be communicating,Quote from: quadzIf we're communicating using free will, what role does god play in our communication?
If we're communicating using free will, what role does god play in our communication?
OK, so, given these initial ingredients:
any thoughts
Mainly, I think your big-picture reasoning is both circular, and insulates you from empathizing with people who are truly suffering.
The problem is, as mere mortals, we can damn well comprehend the suffering that exists a million-fold, right this second on this planet all around us. There's nothing incomprehensible about that--and it's a long way from perfect.
So I don't feel obligated to care about some hypothetical unknowable long-range big-picture plan from some entity that seems to have gone out of Its way to create a world (universe) that unfolds according to fundamental laws without external help anyway.
Perfect schmerfect. I'm not concerned with a hypothetical afterlife. If god created us, then He gave us nervous systems. What we feel is real, to us. Therefore I care about the very comprehensible suffering of fellow mortals.Any circular reasoning that would try to whitewash that by claiming it's all somehow perfect in god's eye, is not for me.
Quote from: quadzThe problem is, as mere mortals, we can damn well comprehend the suffering that exists a million-fold, right this second on this planet all around us.
The problem is, as mere mortals, we can damn well comprehend the suffering that exists a million-fold, right this second on this planet all around us.
Would you care to be more specific about which point you disagree with? 1. We are mere mortals 2. We can damn well comprehend the suffering of millions of other mortals this second around us 3. There's nothing incomprehensible about mortals being able to comprehend the suffering of other mortals 4. The fact that millions are horribly suffering at this moment means things are a long way from perfectYou try to dismiss all that as mere opinion; but I will challenge with reasoned debate on any or all points.
That is sophistry and in effect mental masturbation. Explain how that is in ANY WAY different from saying, "i don't think we truly understand the physical laws of the universe. there[sic] not really laws, if the Flying Spaghetti Monster could mess around."Please explain the difference. Becuase as far as I know THERE IS NONE.
You never explained why life is "perfect" for everyone who is suffering horribly.
i thought there's a 51 percent chance god exists : ). i still feel the same.