Robin
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2004
- Messages
- 14,971
We have had at least two threads in this forum alone where that claim has been made."A rocket provides no thrust in a vacuum"
I couldn't make that stuff up.
We have had at least two threads in this forum alone where that claim has been made."A rocket provides no thrust in a vacuum"
It is actually a pretty important tenet of Christianity that our salvation was earned by Jesus Christ. That was supposed to be the entire point of the whole dying on the cross thing, he wasn't just into S&M.
Another point is that in Christianity, Judaism and Islam, the God is not just some powerful supernatural force that just turned up and offered rewards, God is the creator of all things.
Do you think that Islam, for example, would accept a definition under which a powerful Djinn might be classified as God?
Didn't Robin invent this phrase? Is it copied?Robin did not invent that.
Try again.
We have had at least two threads here where that has been claimed.
By the by, here are a couple of emails I received today:
and
What do you think? Plausible?
Here is a question.
Say we have the proposition "A implies B"
Suppose that we find A is false, does that imply that B is false?
What if we found that the proposition "A implies B" was false, would that imply B is false?
Does A being false or "A implies B" being false tell us anything at all about the truth or falsity of B?
"Implies" and "cause" are separate concepts do I don't really understand your answer.No. Because B could also be caused by C.
Why? Would you say the same for the man"s claim about his rich corrupt uncle?So you have to work a little more on the answer than simply proclaiming that their belief is implausible.
I don't recall saying that they did.None of the cases you cite (astrology, psychokinesis, etc.) refer to God.
Just because you decide that something doesn't interest you doesn't mean that something shouldn't be discussed according to certain rules
That applies in the case of theists and the idea of God because what we are discussing is the idea that they have in their head, which is what we say we don't believe.
It does not apply to any kind of discussion on any other subject. "Love" for example.
Are you absolutely sure that nobody could have a concept of love which you would disagree with?
What about dragons?
I really don't need to know exactly which colour of dragon someone might propose exists, nor whether it can fly or breathe fire. Dragons are a pretty well defined category of things which are not real. Dragons are just pretend. I don't believe in them.
I don't care if you just thought up some new dragon with rainbow scales and wheels instead of feet. Since nobody else has thought of it yet clearly nobody currently believes in it and you may take it for granted that when you do tell me about it, I will not believe in it because it's a dragon and they're just pretend.
Likewise Gods.
It is a matter of practical necessity that you have to decide which one of these, if any, merits any time.
Now, while anyone can invent a particular dragon, it would be a bit stupid for an atheist to invent a particular god.
You're responding to Jack by the Hedge's post about dragons which discussed potential properties of dragons like the ability to breathe fire or to fly. You and him are talking about dragons without agreeing on what dragons are (which was kind of his point). It's perfectly possible to discuss vague, ill-defined, changeable concepts like 'god' or 'dragon' without agreeing on a definition. I can dismiss dragons and gods because they all fall under an umbrella of ideas that are quite silly and implausible as far as I can see, so there's not much point to getting into semantics. Arguing about anyone's or everyone's idiosyncratic ideas of God and examining them to see if you can dismiss them (you can) is like debating how many angels can dance on the head of a pin. There's better things to be doing.But I am sure that if we want to talk about dragons or gods we will have to agree on how we use that word.
Now, I think I wouldn't go so far as to say that...Now, while anyone can invent a particular dragon, it would be a bit stupid for an atheist to invent a particular god. The reason is very simple: the atheist is someone who says he doesn't believe in the gods theists believe in. If an atheist invented a god to say that he doesn't believe in gods, he would be the laughing stock of people.
I have nothing against addressing the arguments theists make, it is just that I object to the idea that it should be some sort of duty for atheists to address these.Oh, sure. That is why those of us who defend rational thinking from irrationality and pseudoscience have to limit our objectives. I would say that a belief that is shared by hundreds of millions of people and that directly affects legislation and political practices around the world deserves special attention.
Humans have believed in innumerable Gods over the course of history. Since theist and atheists can at least agree that the vast majority of them are not real, obviously someone invented them. You may think that was more stupid that inventing a dragon or other folklore creature but that doesn't seem to have prevented them from doing so.