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Is it?

True but the suffer has no choice. Where is his free will?

Having free will does not mean being able to do absolutely anything you want. For example, just because you cannot choose to fly doesn't mean that you don't possess free will. So even if you have free will, your choices may be constrained. Ironically, in the scenario I put forth, if nobody suffered, nobody would have free will at all.

If the robot had no conciousness it would not suffer. If it had, it could make it's own purpose.

Please rephrase this. I don't understand.

How so? The suffer has to suffer so that the others can benefit from the greater good.

The sufferer also has free will, which it can be argued is better than not suffering but having no free will.

Yep. But that would depend on what kind of an afterlife it is.

I believe that according to Christianity, those who suffer most in this life benefit the most in the afterlife.

-Bri
 
A teapot orbiting a moon COULD in priciple be proven to exist. So believing in such a teapot doesn't make too much sense.

A teapot orbitting the moon could in principle be proven to exist in the same way that an immaterial being could be proven to exist -- evidence is possible for their existence, but not for their non-existence.

But immaterial entities CANNOT be in fact proven to exist.

Quite incorrect, as I pointed out before. An immaterial entity that is consequential (i.e. could interact with the material world) could prove itself to exist. An immaterial entity that is inconsequential (can in no way affect our material world) is not worth believing in because whether or not it exists has no bearing on us whatsoever.

So believing in them does make sense. Such a belief should be respected. If there is no way to prove something, then thinking that it is true cannot be disproved, and therefore is reasonable.

I understand what you're trying to say, but you're saying it wrong. What (I think) you want to say is that something which cannot be disproved might possibly be true. You are certainly welcome to believe in such things, as long as you realize that your belief is based on faith rather than fact. In other words, your belief that an immaterial being exists is only your opinion until such time as it chooses to provide evidence of itself.

-Bri
 
When you make a claim, you have to back it up. If you can't, then my point of view is better because I don't make claims that can't be backed up.

Everyone makes claims that can't be backed up with evidence -- these are called opinions. For example, "black licorice tastes better than red" is an opinion and cannot be backed up with evidence.

If a claim can be backed up with compelling evidence, it would be closer to fact rather than opinion.

There's nothing wrong with having opinions, as long as you don't claim them to be fact.

-Bri
 
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A teapot orbiting a moon COULD in priciple be proven to exist. So believing in such a teapot doesn't make too much sense.

But immaterial entities CANNOT be in fact proven to exist. So believing in them does make sense. Such a belief should be respected. If there is no way to prove something, then thinking that it is true cannot be disproved, and therefore is reasonable.

I always thought that logic was basically common sense.

Wrong again. Did a human write this?

As for the sentence in bold: Therefore they don't.
 
Everyone makes claims that can't be backed up with evidence -- these are called opinions. For example, "black licorice tastes better than red" is an opinion and cannot be backed up with evidence.
-Bri

Of course the black tastes better, it is actual licorice flavour after all. The red stuff is usually strawberry. Strawberry will never taste as good as licorice. Therefore black wins.

:D
 
I have already conceded that free will is possible without suffering. It is possible to have a world where the only choice in life is whether to have ambrosia or nectar for breakfast. But if the greatest good is for humankind to be able to freely choose to do right while resisting the temptation to do wrong, this scenario wouldn't qualify.

Oh, I agree. My point was that if the "greatest good" (however that gets defined) requires us to choose evil things once in awhile, then God must have designed that into us on purpose, since he has a template where that's not the case -- Himself, at least. I don't think there are any Christians who don't believe God has free will -- but if he does, he somehow never manages to choose evil.

(In the Christian view, anyway. From my own POV, if you presuppose Jebus, then he's chosen evil a multitude of times.)


My (limited) understanding of Christian theology is that angels don't have free will, nor is there any temptation to do wrong. A rather empty existence, really -- they exist only to do God's bidding. God has free will, but God is ... well, God. Presumably, God, being benevolent yet all powerful can do wrong but chooses only to do good.

Now that I think on't, I don't recall if I've ever had a Christian tell me if they think angels have free will or not. If angels do not, then that tells us some interesting things about the revolt of the angels and why Satan did what he allegedly did. That thought won't make many Christians happy.

If God designed humans so that they cannot choose to never do evil, then making us apologize for these God-guaranteed sins seems odd at best. (Psychotic at worst.) Maybe a perfect and un-petty God could have shared a little more wisdom so we wouldn't ignorantly choose evil, or maybe put us in a better world, so we weren't forced to sometimes choose evil (say, to steal food after a flood to feed your children).

Anyway, I'm not trying to derail the thread. Please continue :)
 
An all-powerful God could certainly ensure that a person who is meant to die will die. An all-powerful God could also remove free will or limit the choices available in a given circumstance if he so chose.
God's says I give you free will except where it interferes with what I want to do. God is certainly within his right to do so but it that kind of defeats the purpose of giving us free will. Our will is not free when it becomes inconvieniant for him.



From our perspective, God does things that if a person without omniscience were to do them would be immoral.

I don't know what you mean by the sentence that I've put in bold. Please explain.
Sorry, I worded the statement awkwardly. I'm stating from our perspective god does immoral things. From our perspective, it does not matter what gods motives are because they are unkown to us. We only know what we can know. And I don't think being omniscient disqualifies you from being immoral.

Since you will not respond to these issues further (understandably) I will only state my brief replies with the following.
Not really, but here are some quick synopses of some of the possibilities:


One answer had to do with the idea of "middle knowledge." This means that God doesn't know directly, but can predict what you will choose to do of your own free will.
Seems like a cop out to me. If he can't know something directly that means he does not know something which means that he is not omnicient.

Another answer was that omniscience simply means the ability to know anything that is knowable, just as omnipotence means the ability to do anything that is doable. Since it is simply a logical absurdity to know something that is unknowable (such as the result of a free choice) God doesn't actually know what the result will be, but is still omnipotent. This is logically equivalent to the question of whether an omnipotent being can make a boulder larger than it can lift. The answer is that the concept of lifting the unliftable is simply a logical absurdity, and therefore is not something that an omnipotent being would be required to do.

That is only if you define foreknowledge of our choice a logical absurdity. I don't understand how that can be a logical absurdity. The absurdity is only there if you say god is omnicient and can't know what our choice is (in order to preserve the notion of free will under the concept of an all knowing god.) It's a false dilema.

Another is that although God CAN know your future action, he can choose to restrict his knowledge in order to allow for free will. In other words, God's knowledge and your free choice are mutually exclusive, but under God's control.
Another cop out. There is still apart of god that knows since if he's omnicient. He just chooses not to act upon that knowledge.


Another answer had to do with God operating outside of and being unlimited by time. If the timeline of the universe is established in a single instance (actually timelessly) then it is possible that the choices we make are free, but that God can then examine the timeline, essentially peeking into the future, and determine what you will do of your own free will. This would essentially mean that God knows what you will do by simply observing it (just as we can know what occurred in the past by observation).
Then god can still know all your choices in advance. Since he can take that knowledge with him back to a point in time before you made the decision. If you mess with time you have to accept all the paradoxes it implies.

Theres still the issue of god's big plan. Especially if he does not allow free will to affect that plan. Any choice we makes which that goes against that plan is negated in favor of the plan. So the free will we exercised in making that choice becomes meaningless and the end result is the same as if we made the choice god wanted us to make inorder so that his plan remains intact.



It's possible that natural disasters truly are random and God doesn't specifically control them. So why would a benevolent God put something like that into motion? Possibly because without them, we would have no incentive to do evil, and therefore no freedom to choose to do good despite the temptation to do evil. So, it is possible that random suffering leads to a greater good.
I'm not seeing your point. How does a natural disaster provide us with an incentive to chose or do evil?


Again, I agree it would suck for the victim. And whether or not God exists, there is no doubt that suffering sucks for the sufferer.

That said, it is possible that the suffering is entirely random. It is also possible that it's not random and that God makes a choice as to specifically which lives will be ended to produce the most good.

If the "most good" is related to the human species having free will, you cannot say that one life is forfeited for another, but rather that some lives are forfeited for free will (which benefits us all). It can also be argued that were no lives forfeited and free will therefore were not to exist, that it would be a fate worse than death for us all. In that vein, those whose lives are "forfeited" also benefit from others before them forfeiting their lives, and that death and suffering are a small price to pay for free will.
It only matters to us if we believe that we have free will.
I don't see how we can have actual free will (in god's perspective) if god is all knowing and has a plan that he does not allow our actions to affect.
If this is the case then free will has no value to god as something that is worth allowing people to suffer for. It's only to perpetuate our own belief in our false sense of free will.
Only his plan is what matters to him. And if he wants his plan to come to fruition and not allow us affect that plan (lest it reaches an outcome he does not want) then god cannot allow us to have true free will. Whatever choice we make is nullified so that the plan progresses as he wishes.

Nature does not value the individual as important compared to the whole. If god feels that way also then the greater good is more important than the well being of the individual. That kind of puts a damper on the whole personal god idea.


It can be argued that "the ends don't justify the means" is not an ideal, but a necessity due to our limitations (limitations that God doesn't have). It would not be an example of our holding ourselves to a higher moral standard -- it would only be an example of our holding ourselves to a different moral standard due to the fact that we cannot know the full consequences of our actions.
The spirit of the statement implies that the outcome or ends is a good outcome.
The statement says that it makes no difference if the end is a good and just end, doing bad things to get to that end does not justify the bad things you did to get to that good and benevolent end.
It doesn't matter how good and beneficial the results of the action are.
It does not matter wether we know what the full consequences of our actions are or not.






I disagree. Theft is generally immoral, but in some circumstances not stealing would be more immoral.
well that can be seen as a rationalization.
But the act itself is still considered immoral. Just in certain situations the immoral act can be overlooked.


In a court of law, it's called "extenuating circumstances" and people are often held to a less severe punishment or completely absolved of any wrong-doing based on extenuating circumstances.
Yep. that's called "overlooking the immoral act inlight of the circumstances"
Yea. it may be an argument of sematics but there you have it.



If God is omnibenevolent, he would be compelled to follow the more benevolent picture regardless of the saying.

-Bri
yea, but the statement implies that the outcome or bigger picture doesn't matter. The moral value of the acts affects the moral value of the outcome.

But if you run into logical problems with omnicience, you'll have the same logical problems with omnibenevolence. In fact with omni-anything.
 
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Of course the black tastes better, it is actual licorice flavour after all. The red stuff is usually strawberry. Strawberry will never taste as good as licorice. Therefore black wins.

:D

Since I happen to agree, I will say that it is a FACT that black is better than red!

-Bri
 
Oh, I agree. My point was that if the "greatest good" (however that gets defined) requires us to choose evil things once in awhile, then God must have designed that into us on purpose, since he has a template where that's not the case -- Himself, at least. I don't think there are any Christians who don't believe God has free will -- but if he does, he somehow never manages to choose evil.

Yes, I assume that God did design us to have the potential to do evil as well as good. And we certainly don't disappoint, do we?

As for God, never choosing evil in no way reduces his ability to do evil if he wanted. He might also potentially be free to choose between various good options, but some would presume that he always chooses the best good option available.

Now that I think on't, I don't recall if I've ever had a Christian tell me if they think angels have free will or not. If angels do not, then that tells us some interesting things about the revolt of the angels and why Satan did what he allegedly did. That thought won't make many Christians happy.

According to Wikipedia Christians believe that fallen angels were banished from heaven because they were given free will and subsequently took actions against God:

It is generally accepted by most Christians that the fallen angels were cast out of Heaven because of actions taken against God.[citation needed] These actions were enabled because the angels were granted free will.​

If God designed humans so that they cannot choose to never do evil, then making us apologize for these God-guaranteed sins seems odd at best. (Psychotic at worst.)

I think that's pushing it. If we have the freedom to choose evil, it doesn't mean that we can't choose not to do evil. The fact that we have the freedom to choose implies that we are responsible for those choices.

Anyway, I'm not trying to derail the thread. Please continue :)

I don't think it was any more of a derail than any other discussion as of late! I appreciate your comments.

-Bri
 
God's says I give you free will except where it interferes with what I want to do. God is certainly within his right to do so but it that kind of defeats the purpose of giving us free will. Our will is not free when it becomes inconvieniant for him.

Possibly so. Removing free will in certain circumstances wouldn't necessarily defeat the purpose of having free will in general.

Sorry, I worded the statement awkwardly. I'm stating from our perspective god does immoral things. From our perspective, it does not matter what gods motives are because they are unkown to us. We only know what we can know. And I don't think being omniscient disqualifies you from being immoral.

Being omniscient doesn't disqualify you from being immoral, but being omni-benevolent does. Just because something might appear to be immoral from our perspective doesn't make it necessarily immoral given that our perspective is limited. That's why at least some (if not most) Christians assert that you cannot apply human rules and characteristics to God.

Since you will not respond to these issues further (understandably) I will only state my brief replies with the following.

I was oversimplifying the arguments, of course. But to go into the detail required to do them justice would definitely be a derail.

Theres still the issue of god's big plan. Especially if he does not allow free will to affect that plan. Any choice we makes which that goes against that plan is negated in favor of the plan. So the free will we exercised in making that choice becomes meaningless and the end result is the same as if we made the choice god wanted us to make inorder so that his plan remains intact.

Except that the plan might actually require allowing us to choose between good and evil, in which case our choices don't negate the plan, they ARE the plan.

I'm not seeing your point. How does a natural disaster provide us with an incentive to chose or do evil?

Imagine a world with no natural disasters and no suffering caused by things beyond the control of people. No drought, plenty of food and water, no shortage of resources, etc. What exactly would we have to fight about? Most of the evil we do is to gain an advantage over those we fear are trying to gain an advantage over us. If everyone has everything they need, there might be no temptation for anyone to do evil.

I don't see how we can have actual free will (in god's perspective) if god is all knowing and has a plan that he does not allow our actions to affect.

I don't think anyone ever suggested this. I suggested that the plan may very well involve us having actual free will.

well that can be seen as a rationalization.
But the act itself is still considered immoral. Just in certain situations the immoral act can be overlooked.

Why would an immoral act be overlooked? That overlooking of a supposedly immoral act is in fact a rationalization. If what you say is true, then the person would have to be punished for stealing the same way regardless of the circumstances.

A moral dilemma occurs when you have to make a choice between two seemingly immoral acts and decide which is the lesser or two evils, in this case stealing or letting someone die. In this case it is fairly clear-cut, and I don't see how making the obviously moral choice to save a life would be worthy of punishment.

yea, but the statement implies that the outcome or bigger picture doesn't matter. The moral value of the acts affects the moral value of the outcome.

I know what the statement means, but why are you talking about the statement as if it's an absolute truth when it has little to do with the discussion? Specifically, it isn't even clear that it's a belief that Christians hold, so it is irrelevant to the discussion.

But if you run into logical problems with omnicience, you'll have the same logical problems with omnibenevolence. In fact with omni-anything.

Omni-benevolence isn't generally taken to mean never allowing anything bad to happen to anyone (clearly if it did, Christians wouldn't believe their God to be omni-benevolent and your point would be moot).

-Bri
 
Yes, I assume that God did design us to have the potential to do evil as well as good. And we certainly don't disappoint, do we?

As for God, never choosing evil in no way reduces his ability to do evil if he wanted. He might also potentially be free to choose between various good options, but some would presume that he always chooses the best good option available.

Of course, many Christians would say that everything God does is good, so it would be impossible for him to do wrong by definition. No matter what it was, if he did it, it was the best thing to do. Quite a P.R. campaign he has going.

According to Wikipedia Christians believe that fallen angels were banished from heaven because they were given free will and subsequently took actions against God:

It is generally accepted by most Christians that the fallen angels were cast out of Heaven because of actions taken against God.[citation needed] These actions were enabled because the angels were granted free will.​

Interesting. God gives some of his angels free will, and they immediately turn on him. Omniscience ain't what it used to be, I guess. Makes you wonder why he did it again with us.

(Hypothetically. I don't actually believe in free will, really.)


I think that's pushing it. If we have the freedom to choose evil, it doesn't mean that we can't choose not to do evil. The fact that we have the freedom to choose implies that we are responsible for those choices.

In theory. But in practice, we pretty much have to start apologizing for everything the minute we take our first breath. And we have to apologize for every little urge, fantasy, and dark thought that we had, and that our forebears had. Pretty unusual, especially after Jesus allegedly made up for all that for us.
 
Having free will does not mean being able to do absolutely anything you want. For example, just because you cannot choose to fly doesn't mean that you don't possess free will. So even if you have free will, your choices may be constrained. Ironically, in the scenario I put forth, if nobody suffered, nobody would have free will at all.
Well if god's plan requires that the person suffer or makes a choice that will lead to him suffering for the greater cause. Where is his free will? Where is his freedom?



Please rephrase this. I don't understand.
Well, I was not quite sure what you meant about the robot statement. Robots by definition do not feel anything.



The sufferer also has free will, which it can be argued is better than not suffering but having no free will.
Well chosing not suffer is defintly not in his cards. And to be honest I don't believe that we really have free will. Only the illusion of free will.
And it is doubly so if there is a god.



I believe that according to Christianity, those who suffer most in this life benefit the most in the afterlife.

-Bri
That's great if you believe in an afterlife.
 
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Possibly so. Removing free will in certain circumstances wouldn't necessarily defeat the purpose of having free will in general.
Maybe, but it kind of lessens the spirit of it. And it means the greater good of god giving us free will is not quite so great if it is only doled out in portions. It like saying that god loves unconditionaly but with conditions.



Being omniscient doesn't disqualify you from being immoral, but being omni-benevolent does. Just because something might appear to be immoral from our perspective doesn't make it necessarily immoral given that our perspective is limited. That's why at least some (if not most) Christians assert that you cannot apply human rules and characteristics to God.
Well it sounds to me that being omnibenvolent is a little like "to the holy all things are holy". Because god is omnibenevolent anything that god does good no matter what. God commits genocied but it's good because god did it. I think this would run into several logical absurdities.
I'm an agnostic and I also believe that you cannot apply human characteristics to god if he exists. But then that would also mean that free will would have a different meaning to god than it does to us.



I was oversimplifying the arguments, of course. But to go into the detail required to do them justice would definitely be a derail.
I agree.



Except that the plan might actually require allowing us to choose between good and evil, in which case our choices don't negate the plan, they ARE the plan.
But then how does giving us free will where we might choose evil mean that the god"s plan end in a greater good? WHat if by some strange fluke we all choose evil. I know that highly improbable but not impossible. Especially if satan did a particularly good job of fooling us?



Imagine a world with no natural disasters and no suffering caused by things beyond the control of people. No drought, plenty of food and water, no shortage of resources, etc. What exactly would we have to fight about? Most of the evil we do is to gain an advantage over those we fear are trying to gain an advantage over us. If everyone has everything they need, there might be no temptation for anyone to do evil.
Actually that might be a great place to live. Isn't that what some people believe heaven is?



I don't think anyone ever suggested this. I suggested that the plan may very well involve us having actual free will.
And if it we all choose badly in gods eyes?


Why would an immoral act be overlooked? That overlooking of a supposedly immoral act is in fact a rationalization. If what you say is true, then the person would have to be punished for stealing the same way regardless of the circumstances.
Well isn't that what you are doing when you say theft is justified if the end result was a good thing? Your overlooking the immoral aspect of the theft. Overlooking the loss of the one who was stolen from.
Some court may convict the offender but give him a symbolic punishment because of the extenuating circumstances. Most would say that yea, the theft is immoral but choose not to do anything about it because of the circumstances

A moral dilemma occurs when you have to make a choice between two seemingly immoral acts and decide which is the lesser or two evils, in this case stealing or letting someone die. In this case it is fairly clear-cut, and I don't see how making the obviously moral choice to save a life would be worthy of punishment.
Well you just said that stealing was an evil. I agree it is a lesser evil than letting someon die. But stealing is still considered evil none the less. And like I said most would choose to ignore the "evil" of the theft in light of the life saved.



I know what the statement means, but why are you talking about the statement as if it's an absolute truth when it has little to do with the discussion? Specifically, it isn't even clear that it's a belief that Christians hold, so it is irrelevant to the discussion.
Well it was relevent to the original post about gods actions being moral or not in a certain situation which is what I thought we were talking about.

What the statement also implies is how would it sit with you if your benefit came at the cost of other's well being? If I had my choice I would not want my well being to come at the cost of another's well being. although I know that it happens all the time.
Do you see how that would apply to god killing and causing suffering for a greater good? Is it worth it to you that god cause all that death and destruction so that things are better for you?
You begin to wonder if there was a way where god din't have to do it.
Could you live with it.

In the theft/life scenario; I would rather have not had to steal inorder to save the life. I would have liked to have done it another way than by stealing. I would do it again but
I would also feel bad about having to steal. Now think about if it was god that set up the situation where I was forced to to have to steal to save the life.

I don't know if the "ends justifies the means" statement is related to christianity. but then Christians do not have an exclusive claim to god.
And it does have a good point.



Omni-benevolence isn't generally taken to mean never allowing anything bad to happen to anyone (clearly if it did, Christians wouldn't believe their God to be omni-benevolent and your point would be moot).
-Bri

Omni benevolence means that everything you do is good reguardless of what it is. That leads to a logical absurdity.
like a round square or a good evil act.

And isn't non-action in preventing somethning bad from happening also a bad thing?
 
To kind of expand on the other meaning of the "ends do not justify the means" statement, consider the United States.
I think most Americans will agree that the existance of the U.S. is a good thing. But now think about what had to happen for the U.S. to come into being.

The Native Americans were decimated and almost completely displaced so that the U.S. could start. (In fact they continue to suffer.) Slaves were used to build alot of the infrastructure. And half of Mexico's territories were taken so that the U.S. could become a bi-coastal nation. I am certain that most will agree that these are terrible things. Does the existance of the U.S. justify those actions? Does it make those actions good?

Do these actions take away or lessen the greatness of the U.S.? Personaly I think it does.
The U.S. though great as I think it is has tarnish because of those acts. It does not have higher moral basis than it could have had.
 
A teapot orbiting a moon COULD in priciple be proven to exist. So believing in such a teapot doesn't make too much sense.

But immaterial entities CANNOT be in fact proven to exist. So believing in them does make sense. Such a belief should be respected. If there is no way to prove something, then thinking that it is true cannot be disproved, and therefore is reasonable.


One word: falsifiabilty.

Even thought it's Wiki, this seems a pretty good article on the subject.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falsifiability
 
A teapot orbitting the moon could in principle be proven to exist in the same way that an immaterial being could be proven to exist -- evidence is possible for their existence, but not for their non-existence.



Quite incorrect, as I pointed out before. An immaterial entity that is consequential (i.e. could interact with the material world) could prove itself to exist. An immaterial entity that is inconsequential (can in no way affect our material world) is not worth believing in because whether or not it exists has no bearing on us whatsoever.



I understand what you're trying to say, but you're saying it wrong. What (I think) you want to say is that something which cannot be disproved might possibly be true. You are certainly welcome to believe in such things, as long as you realize that your belief is based on faith rather than fact. In other words, your belief that an immaterial being exists is only your opinion until such time as it chooses to provide evidence of itself.

-Bri



One word: falsifiabilty.

Even thought it's Wiki, this seems a pretty good article on the subject.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falsifiability

I am talking of non-consequential immaterials. Yes, they are unfalsifiable, and they fall outside of the realm of science. So what?

The point is this - if there are a few people, a few points of view, how do you know that you are the right one? You need to be sure that all the others are wrong, you need to falsify their claims somehow. If there is no way to do that, then they are just as right as you are, and we have relativism.
 
I am talking of non-consequential immaterials. Yes, they are unfalsifiable, and they fall outside of the realm of science. So what?

The point is this - if there are a few people, a few points of view, how do you know that you are the right one? You need to be sure that all the others are wrong, you need to falsify their claims somehow. If there is no way to do that, then they are just as right as you are, and we have relativism.

If they are non-consequential immaterials, they have no impact on us. Until such time as they are proven, they exist only in your imagination. If they do have an impact on us, then they are consequential, and must in some way have a measurable material effect. Including emotional effect. We may not have the technology to measure it today, but that doesn't mean it isn't measurable.

Again: you're welcome to believe what you want to believe. What you do with those beliefs is where people get into trouble. If you believe a non-consequential immaterial god wants you to do something that will in any way effect my life, then we've got a problem. If you keep it to yourself, then the problem goes away. Pretty simple, really.

How do you know that you are the right one? You don't. What works for me is the process of evaluating the evidence. No evidence? The point of view fails. Non-consequential immaterials don't actually exist until proven otherwise. If I'm wrong and they do exist, so what? They're non-consequential, therefore it is meaningless to think about them.
 
If they are non-consequential immaterials, they have no impact on us. Until such time as they are proven, they exist only in your imagination. If they do have an impact on us, then they are consequential, and must in some way have a measurable material effect. Including emotional effect. We may not have the technology to measure it today, but that doesn't mean it isn't measurable.

Again: you're welcome to believe what you want to believe. What you do with those beliefs is where people get into trouble. If you believe a non-consequential immaterial god wants you to do something that will in any way effect my life, then we've got a problem. If you keep it to yourself, then the problem goes away. Pretty simple, really.

How do you know that you are the right one? You don't. What works for me is the process of evaluating the evidence. No evidence? The point of view fails. Non-consequential immaterials don't actually exist until proven otherwise. If I'm wrong and they do exist, so what? They're non-consequential, therefore it is meaningless to think about them.

I don't know that I am the right one with unfalsifiable nc-immaterials, but neither do you. So, the point of view of a person that thinks they are is just as valid as thinks they are none, ergo relativism.

Agree so far?

Now, lets imagine I would believe in an uf(unfalsifiable)-nc-immaterial that would want me to do something with the life of other people. If you agreed with the above statement, since it is an uf-immaterial, the point of view that he exists is just as valid as he doesn't ergo relativism, ergo I do have the right to act on my belief.
 
I always thought that logic was basically common sense.

JetLeg's quote : But immaterial entities CANNOT be in fact proven to exist

Wrong again. Did a human write this?

As for the sentence in bold: Therefore they don't.


Whatever cannot in principle be proven to exist, does not?
Are you sure?


-1- We humans have limited capacities of knowedge. How can we know, perhaps something exists, and we just will never be able to prove it? For example, ants might never be able to prove the eixistance of atoms. So can an ant come to a conclusions that atoms never exist.

-2- uf(unfalsifiable)-nc(nonconsequentail)-Immatareial entities cannot be proven. So WHY EXACTLY does it follow they do not exist???
 
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