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Philosopher
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2004
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- 7,324
I basically agree with much of what you say, but given that the idea of ID is only an idea, and that no real evidence exists, it seems frustratingly futile to speculate on what it might be if it did exist, and doubly futile to imagine how an equally unproven being exhibiting undefinable characteristics might have planned it. Back many years ago when my stepson was a child, he went through a Star Wars phase, and I recall that he pored over things like blueprints of the X-wing fighter, and mechanical maps of the Millennium Falcon. Speculating on why God might have implemented ID seems a bit like that.
I suppose that this kind of thing is why I find myself more and more sidestepping much of philosophy, but still occasionally invoking a form of the Pragmatist maxim: what difference does it make? If we can never even know if a thing actually exists, much less what it does, is there any point analyzing it? Were there enough fire extinguishers on the Death Star?
I find the difference it makes comparable with what how I was before contemplating such things.
I am different. So it makes a difference to me.
Fire extinguishers are useless just hanging on a wall and will not jump up and fight the fire of their own volition.
Now if - as the saying goes - one does not need to contemplate god ideas in order to be a good person, then that is not here nor there. Some do find the need to.
Those who don't would not complain about those who do because essentially if someone is being good due in part to their contemplating ID concepts etc then while the means might be different, the end result is the same.
We are 'brothers'.
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