David Mo
Philosopher
I am astounded that one person could fit so much wrong into a single sentence.
I'm astounded you consider a phrase to be wrong without saying why. Explain your astonishment, please.
I am astounded that one person could fit so much wrong into a single sentence.
Oh, sod off David. (Sorry, mods.) You are being totally dishonest in your approach, IMO. You do not want to discuss anything. You are getting a little thrill out of this. I have no evidence of this, but that won't worry you.
Serious question: how old are you? I'd guess 14.
Why?
Do we have to justify all our actions? Blowing my nose? Deciding what to wear in the morning? Or is just moral actions? Important moral actions? Do we have to justify them in terms of not believing in God? Justify our actions to ourselves? Justify our actions to others?
I'm genuinely perplexed by where you're coming from and where you're heading with all of this. To me (and perhaps it's just me), this is just another grand declaration about what atheists must or do do, and when they disagree with you, I'm going to predict that the statement "you must find justification for your actions in a godless world." is going to be watered down until it becomes some dull self-evident and/or inconsequential truth like the other grand statements you've made in this thread.
Is there an overall coherent point to all this?
God or no God, justification for action always ultimately boils down to "because I want to"
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Nope. Read what I said again. A little more carefully this time.So, if God is dead, everything is allowed. Everything you like. Everything the other person would like to do to you. Absolute relativism..
So, if God is dead, everything is allowed.
I don't understand the question.
I have told you that if you are a consistent atheist you must find justification for your actions in a godless world. Not that you should find the justification of the gods.
I was proposing you a mental experiment that began with the assumption that God exists.
Nope. Read what I said again. A little more carefully this time.
I said "God or no God"
So scratch those words you were trying to put in my mouth and try again.
I am not speaking of particular beliefs in particular religions. There are still worse that you quote. I have laid clear that I was speaking of the deny of a general concept of God. Because that the atheist don't believe in any god all inquiry about particular precepts is improcedent.I note that the officials position of the NSW Anglican Church on gender dysmorphia is that it is a consequence of Man's disobedience in the Garden of Eden.
And you say we are missing something important if we don't include such views when considering a rational philosophy for life.
Seriously?
In any case, it is a little like saying that the consequences of rejecting leprechauns is that we have to relinquish all that free gold at the end of the rainbow.
Well, well.
Thankfully "allowed" (in the implied sense of allowed by some or other God) is not the guide humans generally use when choosing which actions to take.
Sure enough. Some people trap themselves in the delusion that morality is obedience to their God's wishes rather than their God's wishes being a just-so story explaining how their society would like its members to act, and ultimately that story was created from its authors' innate sense of right and wrong.Tell that to a believer and you'll see what a face he makes.
as they imagine that "because I want to" is a bad thing and will result in anarchy as people just do whatever selfish or psychopathic thing crosses their mind. They have blinded themselves to the trivial fact that most people most of the time don't want to do mean things because they will feel bad about it. Evolution made us that way. Mostly we are kind, considerate and cooperative. Sometimes we are selfish but we know instinctively to conceal such unfair behaviour because it will affect how others treat us.`justification for action always ultimately boils down to "because I want to"'.
This is your absolute relativism manifesto: `justification for action always ultimately boils down to "because I want to"'. If you would believe in God you cannot affirm this.
What actions are those then? I'm an atheist and I'm not sure what actions I do that I ever actually justified with a belief in God. So I don't know what need is actually going unfulfilled and what consequences there are to the need not being met.I am genuinely perplexed by your perplexity. It is obvious that I was not referring to every action, but just those that were justified by the belief in God and his representatives in earth.
Robin's claim is not the slightest bit incompatible with the existence of God.
Firstly it is not s manifesto, just a statement of how things are.This is your absolute relativism manifesto: `justification for action always ultimately boils down to "because I want to"'
Tell me, do you think that believing Christians want to go to heaven? Or not?If you would believe in God you cannot affirm this.
Matthew Ellard said:A person only needs to apply a hypothesis to an observable phenomena.
As there is no observable phenomena that requires any "God" from the set of potential god types, to be included in a hypothesis, I don't have to contemplate any "God". Therefore I don't have to believe in any "God".
There is no observable phenomena that indicates intelligent design. If, hypothetically, an alien were to introduce genes into a species, those genes would still have to go through the standard eliminating processes of evolution like random mutations, anyway. Unless some alien can simultaneously eliminate all forms of natural evolution, intelligence design makes no sense whatsoever.This is a reasonable answer. It only needs some clarifications.
Defenders of the theory of Intelligent Design claim that the hypothesis of God is verified when phenomena are investigated. Do you agree? Why not?