The Sparrow
Graduate Poster
....this is my hobby.....
Very telling.
So your hobby is to be endlessly proven wrong?
Why not try music, model ship building, fishing? Something useful.
....this is my hobby.....
jond,
- I try to answer Dave as much as possible, but this time he gave me numerous points to answer, and the best I can do is probably one or two at a time. Consequently, I put him off for the time being...
- I have 2 or 3 hrs a day to commit to this forum; I use those hours; this is my hobby;and, what you see is the best I can do under the circumstances. The less you say, and the friendlier you are, the more likely it is that your questions and objections will be answered. I only have so much time, and I use it all.
this is my hobby.
What, exactly, is your hobby?
Running a few cycles of the one program. When deadlock threatens, let the watchdog timer reset.
"- I think that I can essentially prove immortality using Bayesian statistics.
- If this belongs in a different thread, or has already been done, please let me know. Otherwise, I'll present my case here."
- Jabba
Thread Zero
LL,Jabba:
Here's a question that hasn't been asked in a while: What practical difference does it make if your argument were true? If souls existed and were assigned to bodies who received them like radios, how would that influence any action anybody takes ever?
LL,
- I hope this doesn't affect your responses. But, if it doesn't, you're probably stuck with me for awhile -- most everyone else is just insulting me these days.
- By the time I was 11, God (much less Jesus) wasn't making any sense to me -- and without a God, when I died, that would be it. That really scared me. And, the adults around me couldn't answer my questions or assuage my fear. I didn't want to cease existing for ever and ever...
- But, I kept studying the issue -- being especially interested in consciousness. Consciousness didn't seem to make sense either -- but, there it was.
- When I was 14 I had an epiphany (right or wrong) which I am currently trying to explain. Whatever, it made a big difference in my life -- I no longer feared death (except for the separation from loved ones). For those of us who would fear non-existence (you guys don't seem to), my epiphany (if understood and accepted) should take away that fear and, thereby, greatly influence their actions.
LL,What, exactly, is your hobby? 1)Is it philosophizing about the metaphysical? 2)Is it sparring with a group of atheists to sharpen your rhetoric? 3)Is it engaging in critical thinking about subjective feelings? 4)Is it spreading the gospel of Jesus Christ, o our Lord and Savior, through whom we have eternal life?
Because you're not really doing any of those.
Dave,And the responses I made to it were similar to previous responses I've made to previous versions.
How about responding to my responses this time?
A reasonable human being should fear death. It's one of the things that keeps us from doing something truly idiotic, like drinking anti-freeze.
What a reasonable human being shouldn't fear is non-existence.
...most everyone else is just insulting me these days.
Consciousness didn't seem to make sense either -- but, there it was.
It's sparring with a group of atheists to see if we can actually get somewhere in debate.
2) It's sparring with a group of atheists to see if we can actually get somewhere in debate.
2) It's sparring with a group of atheists to see if we can actually get somewhere in debate.
Your answer betrays more than I think you realize. An argument is not a sparring exercise, it is a crucible. One must be willing to recognize criticism and adapt or abandon one's position. By admitting to sparring, you seem to say that your position is unchangeable. To you, it is a game of somehow keeping your ideas alive in the face of criticism. That's just ... not very good.
- I hope this doesn't affect your responses. But, if it doesn't, you're probably stuck with me for awhile -- most everyone else is just insulting me these days.
By the time I was 11, God (much less Jesus) wasn't making any sense to me -- and without a God, when I died, that would be it. That really scared me. And, the adults around me couldn't answer my questions or assuage my fear. I didn't want to cease existing for ever and ever.
But, I kept studying the issue -- being especially interested in consciousness. Consciousness didn't seem to make sense either -- but, there it was.
When I was 14 I had an epiphany (right or wrong) which I am currently trying to explain. Whatever, it made a big difference in my life -- I no longer feared death (except for the separation from loved ones). For those of us who would fear non-existence (you guys don't seem to), my epiphany (if understood and accepted) should take away that fear and, thereby, greatly influence their actions.