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Evil means a Christian God cannot exist?

I disagree, on the grounds that the existence of the creator then demands an explanation, and any explanation for a creator can also be used directly as an explanation for the Universe's existence.

But that is what I am saying. No matter where you take this argument, there was SOMETHING that began existence. Whether or not that initial "creator" was a molecule in the universe as we now know it or the Christian God is the real question. However, it is quite evident, based on logic, that there was some original being, and that is what we call "the creator". I completely agree with you that logic cannot prove that this creator is the Christian God without a certain act of faith, however.
 
Okay so why would god create people with evil inside of them, why would he not create people who desire only good

I honestly don't know but if I had to take I guess I would say that it is impossible since it would result in a self-conflicting nature. No matter how kind this race would be there would be people who would want to be "more perfect", which would result in conflict.

I already replied to the OP and answered his questions. Do I win something?
 
we have to prove ourselves to God to show that we have followed his word and are worthy to be with Him in heaven. and everybody can live in a paradise if they choose to, its just that many people choose not to.

Oh, please, that's bullshit. Nobody chooses not to go to heaven. To claim that atheists choose not to go to heaven is both false and utterly insulting. I know what my own choices are, thank you very much.

the test is fair for them as well because if one has truly repented and regretted their actions, God will forgive them and they will be given a spot in heaven.

Oh, because somebody who truly repents and regrets their actions can never change their mind? If somebody truly regrets killing and raping a woman in 1990, does he lose his free will? If he does not, come year 2000, he could very well cease regretting his actions and kill/rape another woman, and so on, could he not? What's his repentance worth then? Here is the answer: jack shit.

Also, what if you truly repent and regret while you're burning in hell? Is it too late?

to give us contrast. if there was no sin/suffering, what would we have to enjoy in this world?

I can tell the difference between neutrality and happiness just fine, and I think that's plenty. Your argument is about as convincing as telling me I need to shoot myself in the foot to appreciate my own bodily integrity, suck on lemons before each meal so that by contrast I can enjoy it, and then rub sandpaper on my cock so that sex can cease being so dull.

I mean jesus fucking christ people, are you even aware of what goes on in this world? Right as we speak, hundreds of thousands of Haitians are homeless in the streets of Port-au-Prince for cause of an earthquake. Every goddamn day people get shot in the foot and consider themselves lucky for it. Every goddamn day people eat shit because they got fuck all else to eat. Every goddamn day people contract STDs that make sandpaper sound like a joy ride.

And then there's you. Me. Most people in this thread. I live in an apartment in a place that no natural disasters ever hits, I have no debts, plenty of good food to eat, I'm in good health. I guess I've suffered a little bit sometimes, and still do, but nothing particularly painful physically or emotionally - and certainly nothing life-threatening.

And now you twits are telling me that in order for me to live this relatively good life, people have to lose their lives, families and homes to diseases and natural disasters. That they have to suffer from crippling hunger (how else could I enjoy this delicious steak?) That children have to work in sweatshops (gee, how else could I get affordable shoes?) That women have to get raped (gee, how else could a woman enjoy her partner's company if not by comparing herself to rape victims?)

Get some fucking perspective. There's suffering and suffering. It's fine for some suffering to happen. But this world doesn't have "some" suffering. It has a shitload of suffering, and a lot of that suffering does not even have anything to do with free will: natural disasters, diseases, what gives? How do you justify these? Suffering in this world is neither moderate nor well-distributed: some people barely ever suffer, some others suffer immensely. How can you possibly think that God couldn't do better than this? You can't seriously tell me that some damage control here isn't better than the wild, tragic abandon we are witnessing.
 
He creates people with a human nature, in which there is absolutely no desire for evil. However, there are temptations in this world, which threaten our nature and expose us to the possibility of evil. As the Catholic Church teaches, evil is merely a privation(or a lack) of what should be there. So you see, God created humans entirely good, but with the capacity to reject their good natures and give in to temptation.
If people were entirely good they would never desire evil or give in to temptation

I honestly don't know but if I had to take I guess I would say that it is impossible since it would result in a self-conflicting nature. No matter how kind this race would be there would be people who would want to be "more perfect", which would result in conflict.

I already replied to the OP and answered his questions. Do I win something?
was not jesus a human who lacked evil?
 
Oh, because somebody who truly repents and regrets their actions can never change their mind? If somebody truly regrets killing and raping a woman in 1990, does he lose his free will? If he does not, come year 2000, he could very well cease regretting his actions and kill/rape another woman, and so on, could he not? What's his repentance worth then? Here is the answer: jack shit.

Also, what if you truly repent and regret while you're burning in hell? Is it too late?

The idea behind forgiveness is that if one is TRULY sorry, one is forgiven. Generally, if one is truly and actually sorry, they will not suddenly decide to "stop repenting". Also, if they do, it is not like initial forgiveness is some type of blessing. It is merely the return to the normal human condition, which, as you point out, is no great shakes, even in these relatively comfortable times(on the whole, I mean). Being forgiven is not a free pass into heaven. Being forgiven is an opportunity to start over as if one had not actually committed the atrocity that one atoned for. As for what constitutes "true" repentance, I would argue that it is a repentance of a nature that the repentant human would never think to commit that act again. That is only my belief as to what actually constitutes true repentance, however, and what God's idea of it is is as much of a mystery to me as it is to you.
 
One of the common problems people have with the "beginning" of the universe is this oft-quoted thing of "First there was nothing, then there was something."

This is possibly entirely untrue. Given that time and space are two aspects of the same thing, it is conceivable (even probable, given how well relativity has been experimentally verified) that there was no such thing as time except within the universe's existence. Therefore, the concept of "Before the universe was created", because there was no such thing as before. The universe has ALWAYS existed.
 
I agree bad shit happens, and often times it happens to the wrong people (Haiti)

But that doesn't disprove/prove that there is God. I do not know God's reasoning I am not God. If you want me to justify why everything happens in the world I cannot do it. I do not know God's reasoning and to expect someone to explain every detail of God's plan to you seems childish and stupid.

was not jesus a human who lacked evil?

Oh but he did have some temptations. Besides he was part human.
 
Why can it not simply be the Universe that we know? Why can our Universe not simply exist, and be all that there is?

Well, scientifically, our universe originally was simply a tiny, extremely dense speck of matter(I'm sure I do not need to explain the Big Bang theory to you, but I am merely establishing the grounds to which science can no longer help us). Now, what we must realize, is that matter cannot, inherently(and this is a scientific fact), cause itself to move or otherwise do ANYTHING of consequence without having action done on it by other matter. Thus, SOMETHING, something outside of our universe, be it a semi-cognizant molecule or the Christian God, moved first, and set off the expansion of the universe as we know it. It is a particularly difficult concept to grasp, and does not necessarily imply the Christian God, but it does imply SOMETHING. The real question is whether this something is really all that special, whether it deserves our attention and our praise, and whether it exists in this dimension or another one(almost certainly another one, based on the probability of striking an infinitesimal speck being mathematically 0). Alright, I am going to bed now, I hope I have answered your questions. I do not deny that it takes an act of faith to believe in Christianity. I do believe that it is obvious that there is something out there, however. Thank you for reading my comments, and good night.
 
But that is what I am saying. No matter where you take this argument, there was SOMETHING that began existence.

If that SOMETHING exists, then how can it "begin existence"?

Your argument is incoherent.

At best, you can say that some state of affairs had no predecessor and "just existed". This state of affairs might have "created" another state of affair, or simply evolved or transformed itself. Creation is not a metaphysical requirement to the existence of anything. There is no metaphysical requirement for anything to exist "outside" of the universe either.

The idea behind forgiveness is that if one is TRULY sorry, one is forgiven. Generally, if one is truly and actually sorry, they will not suddenly decide to "stop repenting".

Generally.

Being forgiven is not a free pass into heaven. Being forgiven is an opportunity to start over as if one had not actually committed the atrocity that one atoned for.

First, I've heard otherwise. That being forgiven is indeed a free pass.
Second... how many such opportunities do you get?
 
Well, scientifically, our universe originally was simply a tiny volume, extremely dense speck of matter(I'm sure I do not need to explain the Big Bang theory to you, but I am merely establishing the grounds to which science can no longer help us).
Nope, it was energy, not matter. If indeed such a distinction can be made at the earliest times in the Universe. In any case it wasn't anything like the matter we know today.
Now, what we must realize, is that matter cannot, inherently(and this is a scientific fact), cause itself to move or otherwise do ANYTHING of consequence without having action done on it by other matter.
On the contrary, quantum mechanics tells us that matter can move of its own accord - and allows us to calculate the probability of it doing so. Radioactive decay is an established example of matter doing something emphatically of consequence without any physical cause.

In the 'classical' Big Bang model, the expansion of space is as far as I know taken as a given. But in the newer inflationary theories (that address some problems with the basic Big Bang theory), there is a form of energy that itself has repulsive gravity and thus drives the expansion of space.

And in any case, that at the earliest point in time the Universe was small and hot, and it expanded and cooled over time, is just another of the Universe's many propertires.
 
Well, scientifically, our universe originally was simply a tiny, extremely dense speck of matter(I'm sure I do not need to explain the Big Bang theory to you, but I am merely establishing the grounds to which science can no longer help us). Now, what we must realize, is that matter cannot, inherently(and this is a scientific fact), cause itself to move or otherwise do ANYTHING of consequence without having action done on it by other matter. Thus, SOMETHING, something outside of our universe, be it a semi-cognizant molecule or the Christian God, moved first, and set off the expansion of the universe as we know it. It is a particularly difficult concept to grasp, and does not necessarily imply the Christian God, but it does imply SOMETHING.

Not true.

A given radioactive particle has a certain probability of decaying in a given time interval, described by it's half life. It does this without interacting with any other matter.

Furthermore, matter particles are created and destroyed out of energy spontaneously; indeed, they form the basis of numerous understandings of physics, e.g. the Casimir effect, lasers, all manner of things.

Self-interaction energies are commonplace parts of physical theory.

And there's even the possibility that electrons and positrons are the same particle(s) travelling forwards and backwards in time respectively. This implies that particles from the universes future could have retroactively created the interaction that destabilised the initial universe and caused the expansion.

The matter within the tiny speck of the universe at the time of the big bang could interact with itself and with each other.
 
Not true.

A given radioactive particle has a certain probability of decaying in a given time interval, described by it's half life. It does this without interacting with any other matter.

Furthermore, matter particles are created and destroyed out of energy spontaneously; indeed, they form the basis of numerous understandings of physics, e.g. the Casimir effect, lasers, all manner of things.

Self-interaction energies are commonplace parts of physical theory.

And there's even the possibility that electrons and positrons are the same particle(s) travelling forwards and backwards in time respectively. This implies that particles from the universes future could have retroactively created the interaction that destabilised the initial universe and caused the expansion.

The matter within the tiny speck of the universe at the time of the big bang could interact with itself and with each other.

But those particles had to have been created by something.

my_hair_is_a_bird.jpg
 
But those particles had to have been created by something.
Maybe, maybe not. the point is if something created the universe, then what created it? even if you keep coming up with explanations you will eventually come to a point where you have to say 'it just is.' I currently have no reason to believe that this point is any farther back than our universe.
 
I just said that particles are created out of nothing... And I explained above that it's possible they always existed....


Oh wait, your hair is a bird.


Exactly. :D

Maybe, maybe not. the point is if something created the universe, then what created it? even if you keep coming up with explanations you will eventually come to a point where you have to say 'it just is.' I currently have no reason to believe that this point is any farther back than our universe.

Unless something supernatural created the universe.


Now excuse me gentlemen, I must feed
 
If earth is so pointless why even create it at all?
Again: an exercise in creativity, and not necessarily a "proof". The most straightforward answer is "for a reason we probably never will figure out, God is smarter than us afterall." I mean, we don't even need to assume an omniscient and omnipotent God for that one: "just" a God thats smarter and more powerful than any human will be.

Which goes back to my "this whole thing is an exercise in creativity".

BTW: if you're arguing with my "logic" seriously, you're not reading it correctly.

Get some fucking perspective. There's suffering and suffering. It's fine for some suffering to happen. But this world doesn't have "some" suffering. It has a shitload of suffering, and a lot of that suffering does not even have anything to do with free will: natural disasters, diseases, what gives? How do you justify these? Suffering in this world is neither moderate nor well-distributed: some people barely ever suffer, some others suffer immensely. How can you possibly think that God couldn't do better than this? You can't seriously tell me that some damage control here isn't better than the wild, tragic abandon we are witnessing.

What if starving to death was not "true pain" in the context of the afterlife? What are days, weeks, months or years of torture compared to the eternal fires of Hell?

You can't win this argument. If you wish to disprove the existence of the supernatural, then you must accept the possibilities of supernatural suffering. God would think of pain and punishment on the supernatural scale, and not on the human scale.

I'm not going to go easy on the Catholics here either: your faith must be chosen firmly as well. I just haven't seen anything easy to pick on yet (ie: Thomas Aquantas's Proofs of existance. Those tend to be easy to pick apart...)
 
The answers given are probably going to be the same. But to answer 'The Bible', or any other religious book, to the former isn't really a valid answer IMHO, whereas to the latter it may be.
I agree that quoting scripture to answer a totally secular question is stupid. But since the original question had to do with what WE believe, I can't find a problem in me quoting something that WE believe in. The purpose of this thread is not for me to sway you to my belief using references you will find credible.

What I see in the OP is basically one sentence: God is not logical. My answer to that statement is, "of course, I know!" You're missing the point of faith.
 
Actually, faith is not generally considered to be belief-despite-logical-contradiction. In fact, this is largely considered to be a Bad Thing. It's also commonly known as stubbornness, pig-headedness, or stupidity.

Faith is generally belief-without-factual-evidence-to-support-the-conclusion.


In short: Faith is not denying something, it is believing it without support.


EDIT: @"Why Create Earth, Why Did God Do X": For one who believes in a supremely powerful (even if not omnipotent) deity, his divine plan may not seem logical to an observer on Earth, but that doesn't mean his plan is illogical. The supreme being in question is unknowable, so any question as to Their motives remains unanswered because we can't possibly know what Their values are. In fact, it doesn't even matter if the plan IS logical. The important thing is that it is unknowable, thus no definitive explanation for events can be worked out.
 
About paraconsistent logic
==========

At a glance, this kind of logic seems to be a pragmatic system to reason about complex systems that might not be consistent. Essentially, you cut off some of your options to prevent the system from degenerating completely, so that you can still infer useful things about it. All in all, though, this is a red herring. Logic - any type of logic - is a way to reason about the world, it has nothing to do with what the world is. "Or" in a system of logic might have a slightly different meaning than "or" in another system, but that only means they are two different concepts. Neither is the "right" or - when you say "or", you mean one or the other, and you just need to make sure that others know which.

To say that God is "omnipotent" can mean several things:

1) That God can do any possible action, in the space of actions.
2) That any proposition of the form "God can do X" is true.

1) is not equivalent to 2), because some propositions of the form "God can do X" are unintelligible and thus do not map to the space of actions at all. Conversely, it might not be possible to describe some possible actions, even though God can do them. Evidently, 1) is the most sensible definition of "omnipotence" and 2) is just nonsense, but many people get utterly confused between the two, leading them to think God can do something and its opposite. But that's a purely semantic confusion.


About the origins of the universe
==========

I sense some confusion here between "void" and "nothing". They are not the same thing. No laws of physics proscribe that something can come out of nothing, because that's unintelligible. Nothing is nothing. Nothing is not time, it is not space, it doesn't stretch, it cannot be said to exist, it cannot obtain, its only use is to palliate to deficiencies inherent to structured language. A void, on the other hand, is an empty space - a void is something.

The laws of physics describe the evolution of the universe from a state to another (or relationships between points in spacetime). It so happens that as we know them they will not make a state of void evolve to a state of matter. But "before the universe", there is no void, there is "nothing", and that's fundamentally different: it is a boundary, it is a hard limit. If you drop a rock in an aquarium, it will make water ripples, and when the ripples meet the edges, they will bounce back. The physical boundary of the universe or the beginning of time are a bit like the edges of an aquarium in that sense, and since we've never seen these edges, we can't tell what physics are like over there.

To everyone here: don't let your intuition mislead you - "nothing" is a very, very difficult concept to wrap one's mind around, and the only way most people know to interpret "nothing" is to equate it to a void. But a void is an empty space, and a space is something! "Nothing" is a lack of everything, including space, so it doesn't even make any sense to say that it is "empty". We have never observed an "edge" between space and non-space, nor between time and non-time, so any intuitions we might have regarding these are completely useless. If you have a programming background, imagine a linked list of five elements. Well, what's after the fifth element is "nothing" - it is not an infinite sequence of NULL elements, it's just nothing, there is no place you could step into, there is no interaction between the last element and a hypothetical element after it. It's a hard edge and most programs will in fact behave differently when they encounter it. Same goes for what's before the first element of the list. it is not zero, it is not NULL, it is nothing. And there too, special rules might be needed.

I agree bad shit happens, and often times it happens to the wrong people (Haiti)

But that doesn't disprove/prove that there is God. I do not know God's reasoning I am not God. If you want me to justify why everything happens in the world I cannot do it. I do not know God's reasoning and to expect someone to explain every detail of God's plan to you seems childish and stupid.

Look that's enough. "God's plan" is a cop out and it's a shitty one at that. You can very well have faith in your brother and lend him a grand so that he can open his own business, but after ten years of never getting your money back and never seeing any evidence that he has a business at all, to still believe that your brother has some grand plan to pay you back and do what he told you he was going to do, well, it's not faith anymore. It is stupidity.

If God does not exist, this world makes sense. If he sits on his ass doing nothing, and does not really care about our well being either way, this world makes sense. If he's an ass, this world still makes sense. If he is omnipotent/scient/benevolent, this world doesn't make any sense. Magical thinking has its limits. At some point you've got to go for theories that actually make sense, or you might as well believe in a God that's pure evil and reverse all your arguments to justify the presence of happiness.

Dragontamer said:
What if starving to death was not "true pain" in the context of the afterlife? What are days, weeks, months or years of torture compared to the eternal fires of Hell?

Okay so as if suffering down here wasn't bad enough, now it has to be worse? You're practically making my point here.

You can't win this argument. If you wish to disprove the existence of the supernatural, then you must accept the possibilities of supernatural suffering. God would think of pain and punishment on the supernatural scale, and not on the human scale.

Look this is just incoherent. As far as I understand it, God controls the supernatural, and he controls whether we get there or not. He makes the damn scale. You provide no justification for why supernatural suffering has to be worse than human suffering, let alone why it should even exist or why any human should be subject to it. No justification for why human suffering would be midway between mild happiness and the horrors of hell, which is inconvenient without even being formative.
 
I'm curious; are those Christians that claim that God is Omnipotent/present/benevolent also of the belief that homosexuals and homosexuality is wrong? (READ: "God hates (BAN ME PLEASE)"). [And also why would God create people who are naturally of a 'hated' 'wrong' orientation?]

Call me crazy, but I think that's a contradiction!
 
Okay so as if suffering down here wasn't bad enough, now it has to be worse? You're practically making my point here.
Perhaps this is one way to look at it. Another way to look at it is when you take away candy from a kid. That kid will moan and cry as if the world was going to end. But it is his own ignorance. In the great scheme of things, it isn't that bad.

Whats a few years of suffering in a universe measured in the thousands or millions of years? If you take things and measured them to a supernatural scale, it isn't that bad. Its only bad now because we humans are ignorant of the supernatural.

Note: I can choose the scale that fits my argument in a supernatural debate. Not you. Its my argument, I get to choose the rules of which you debate on. Get it? If not, here's a quote from my last post.

BTW: if you're arguing with my "logic" seriously, you're not reading it correctly.
This does apply to you as well.

--------------------------

Brain, here's a little help, with a Chess Analogy. The longest forced mate found in Chess at the moment is "Checkmate in 517 moves" (its somewhere on that page). From this position, there is no logic, there is no understanding: it is simply truth. The 517 move reduction into a winnable position is simply absurd, and there is no hope for a human to understand why.

"Greater Picture" becomes much easier as soon as you imagine a being who is slightly smarter than you.
 
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