Is Suffering Part of God's Plan?

So, if I have no knowledge of the car in my driveway, it doesn't exist?

if a jet engine fell off an airplane, and dropped on you and killed you, did it exist?

You are changing my question. I said no knowledge. That means you don't see it.

Apparently you can't answer my question and have to dodge it

i answered. just because you don't like my answer doesn't mean i didn't.
 
if a jet engine fell off an airplane, and dropped on you and killed you, did it exist?

:confused:

Is there even a point to that statement?

i answered. just because you don't like my answer doesn't mean i didn't.

responding to a question and answering a question are two different things. You responding to my question by changing the question. You did not answer my question.

Interesting that you don't deny the fact that you changed my question.
 
where did i change your QUESTION?
nowhere.

Now you are just being dense.

...a "red herring" is an answer, given in reply to a questioner, that goes beyond an innocent logical irrelevance. A "red herring" is a deliberate attempt to divert a process of enquiry by changing the subject.

a "red herring" argument is one which distracts the audience from the issue in question through the introduction of some irrelevancy

Weather or not you could go out and look at the car is irrelevant to my question.
 
You are changing my question.
was just answering your post.

Now you are just being dense.

i'm dense? i'm not posing a ridiculous question.

So, if I have no knowledge of the car in my driveway, it doesn't exist?

does the driveway exist that it's parked in?
maybe you would like to elaborate more on your question.
be a little more specific of intent.
 
Shag, all of hrmwrm's statements are meaningless. They are the result of random mutation and thus not a moral absolute at all and you are free to disregard them. If there is no God then there’s no reason he should care at all about logic, about love, about altruism, about morality, about society. His only imperative is to maximize the experience of his very short existence here on earth.

That’s the problem. If there is no God and what he enjoys most in life is raping and murdering, and he knows he can do it without getting caught, no one has given him a logical reason why he shouldn’t. All anyone can say is, well we just know its wrong, in which case it’s just your personal preference or, on a macro level, social convenience.

The murderer can say I know its right for me and he has just as much to back him up as the other. If there is no God, the Marquis de Sade is correct: whatever is - is right.
 
The murderer can say I know its right for me and he has just as much to back him up as the other. If there is no God, the Marquis de Sade is correct: whatever is - is right.

so, your trying to say only because of god ideas there are laws?
societal values?


That’s the problem. If there is no God and what he enjoys most in life is raping and murdering, and he knows he can do it without getting caught, no one has given him a logical reason why he shouldn’t. All anyone can say is, well we just know its wrong, in which case it’s just your personal preference or, on a macro level, social convenience.

you're trying to suggest that atheists are amoral?
you don't need god to know right or wrong.
 
so, your trying to say only because of god ideas there are laws?
societal values?

you're trying to suggest that atheists are amoral?
you don't need god to know right or wrong.
You cannot prove what is right or wrong without a basis for morality. Any morality without God is simply social convenience and can be argued either way.

I'm free to disregard and dismiss anything you say because there is no way to know if it's correct anyway. You're just a collection of random particles and mutations, and anything you type is just an end result of random mutations.
 
Shag, all of hrmwrm's statements are meaningless. They are the result of random mutation and thus not a moral absolute at all and you are free to disregard them. If there is no God then there’s no reason he should care at all about logic, about love, about altruism, about morality, about society. His only imperative is to maximize the experience of his very short existence here on earth.

That’s the problem. If there is no God and what he enjoys most in life is raping and murdering, and he knows he can do it without getting caught, no one has given him a logical reason why he shouldn’t. All anyone can say is, well we just know its wrong, in which case it’s just your personal preference or, on a macro level, social convenience.

The murderer can say I know its right for me and he has just as much to back him up as the other. If there is no God, the Marquis de Sade is correct: whatever is - is right.

What are you saying?
No morality without religion?
 
What are you saying?
No morality without religion?

Actually, that's a big question.
And far more difficult to answer than most might think.

Commonly,people argue that they can be a moral person while not being religion, but they forget that the culture and values that they were raised in, even if atheist or non-traditional, are influenced by traditional judeo-christian principles.

Do you think that morality is possible without the existence of religion?
Are there examples of a society that has no religion that has been moral, in terms we'd agree with?

I don't think so, maybe you know of an example?
 
You cannot prove what is right or wrong without a basis for morality. Any morality without God is simply social convenience and can be argued either way.

I'm free to disregard and dismiss anything you say because there is no way to know if it's correct anyway. You're just a collection of random particles and mutations, and anything you type is just an end result of random mutations.

until you prove your god, then they are societal values wrapped in the guise of religion.
so, i'm free to dismiss and disregard anything you say.
 
until you prove your god, then they are societal values wrapped in the guise of religion.
so, i'm free to dismiss and disregard anything you say.

Weather or not they are rooted in religion, they are social values that have stood the test of time and are intertwined in countless ways into the fabric of society.

Even if one rejects God and religion, it would be foolish, reckless and presumptuous to reject those proven morals simply because they are "wrapped in the guise of religion".
 
Even if one rejects God and religion, it would be foolish, reckless and presumptuous to reject those proven morals simply because they are "wrapped in the guise of religion".

? that was a redundant retort.
who said i rejected them.
what came first? society or religion?
just because one accepts religion, it does not make them religious values either.
 
Go back as far in time as you can in recorded history. Just about every moral standard we have stems from something given by religion.
that's an assumption. you haven't proven which was first. society or religion.
 
i know what will win this argument...................a dolphin rush!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

dolphin rush.jpg
 
Neither atheists nor agnostics believe in gods. Whether or not this lack of belief is itself a belief has long been debated and forms part of the disagreement between atheists and agnostics. The atheist confidently proclaims "God does not exist" while the agnostic admits uncertainty and believes nothing (for now). On what do atheists base their claim of nonexistence? Can atheists prove God does not exist? No. They cannot. In fact, it is impossible to prove any nonexistence claim. The reason why is well illustrated by James Randi's 'flying reindeer' experiment.

In American culture there exists a popular story of a man traveling the world one night every year delivering presents to children. This man makes the trip in a sleigh pulled by 8 flying reindeer. Because they lack wings and there is no other known way by which they could fly, flying reindeer appear to violate the laws of nature. What sort of experiment can I do to prove "Reindeer can't fly"? Let's take a bunch of reindeer to the top of a tall building and start pushing them off. How many reindeer must be pushed and killed before we consider the statement proven? After seeing the first few fall to their death I'm willing to accept the postulate without further slaughter but I would not have absolute proof. The possibility still remains that the reindeer we tested were freaks in their lack of ability to fly. Or, they could fly but either chose not to or were prevented from doing so by the features of the experiment like the building not being tall enough or it not being Christmas Eve and hitched to Santa's sleigh. Every reindeer on the planet could fail the test under any number of varying conditions without eliminating all uncertainty. It will always be possible to come up with explanations after the fact as to why the reindeer didn't fly while keeping the central tenet. Eventually as the failures build one must start doubting the entire set of hypotheses and wonder how the idea got started if it is so difficult to find evidence for it. It becomes easier to believe that someone in the past either imagined seeing a reindeer fly or made it up. Regardless, it caught the imagination or met the needs and desires of people and the story was passed on to subsequent generations. So I reject flying reindeer without rigorous proof.

I also cannot prove that ESP and UFOs don't exist, that a god doesn't interfere with the universe, nor even that there is no place on Earth where conservation of energy doesn't hold. There is enough evidence consistent and none inconsistent with these statements in my opinion to consider each highly probable. Therefore, until there is evidence to the contrary I'm willing to accept them as true while fully acknowledging the lack of absolute certainty. The believer, on the other hand, must accept flying reindeer without evidence, i.e. it becomes blind faith. The agnostic is left in the quandary of having to allow for the possibility of anything existing regardless of how outrageous it may be.

I feel justified in accepting or rejecting these claims because they all fall in the realm of the knowable. The reverse of each claim could easily be proven if true. It takes only one reindeer pulling out of its nose dive and soaring through the sky to prove reindeer can fly; only one 10-mile high cross hovering over Ithaca with the words "Believe or Burn!" to convert even the most dedicated atheist. Even without such extraordinary events some level of proof can be obtained through the many claims of religion (special creation of humans, world-wide flood, prophecy, etc). If any of these claims could withstand scientific scrutiny and not be more likely explained by delusion or deception, theists would have a large leg up on atheists. The level of scrutiny, however, is admittedly very high and some theists do cry foul. They would have us judge their claims based on credence of character rather than the weight of evidence. But by their very nature divine interventions violate the laws of physics. Therefore, claims of interventions carry the same demand for evidence as claims of violations of the conservation of energy. Theists' failure to verify or substantiate their claims and the clear disproof of many of them lead people to start questioning the whole theist paradigm. How could a god capable of creating the universe out of nothing be so incompetent when it comes to making its presence known? And why is the creator's handiwork so obviously absent from its creation? Atheists consider the failures of religion to be so complete as to justify rejecting the claim that a deity is influencing the workings of the universe and demanding our obedience and worship. This decision is not made with 100% certainty but rather a certainty near that for accepting the conservation of energy. So until I'm shown a perpetual motion machine that works only when a priest is praying nearby I'm confident a godless universe is so highly probable as to be quite certainly true. And, I'm willing to stake my imaginary, immortal soul on it.

On the other hand when asked how the universe came to be, the most intellectually honest answer is "I don't know" because there is absolutely no evidence upon which to make a judgement. There is no test that can prove, disprove, or even distinguish the different proposed origins. Cosmology can follow the universe back in time to a fraction of a second after creation but might never reach the actual instant of creation. Therefore, to claim as true an origin with or without a god is to step into the unknowable and to base one's beliefs on faith instead of evidence. The First Cause argument works its way back to creation and then defines God as "that which created the universe." One could just as easily define this as Uncle George or Proposition 3 of the Wilson Cosmological Principle. As such the First Cause god is purely definitional and meaningless. Likewise, a god that creates the universe and then sits around but never interferes -- a roi faineant, a do-nothing king -- is meaningless because it is indistinguishable from the First Cause god. The agnostic holds this unknowable god as the hole in the atheist's argument. While a roi faineant is completely consistent with all the evidence (or lack of it), this is not the god in which unbelief defines the atheist. Disbelief in this god is an extra step made on faith that the atheist need not make.

Atheists and agnostics differ in where they draw the line between probable but uncertain and sufficiently probable to be very certain. Because the atheist's position can never be proven, this division is unavoidable. For the theist, however, the two may as well be one since both demand the theist provide evidence for God's existence. The burden of proof is clearly on the theist.
 
Any more propaganda/wall of test you want to spout?

FYI: that little diatribe still makes the same atheist flaw of assuming materialism without justifying that assumption. There is still that atheist leap of faith that makes that, in the case of this cut and paste job makes Mr. Wilson's article worthless outside of an audience that shares that materialist assumption; atheists.

If you cannot justify that materialist assumption then it is obvious that all you are doing is spouting atheist propaganda.

Maybe, instead of dancing around that materialist assumption, you should do a little research and try to justify it. This article certainly doesn't justify that materialist assumption. It simply assumes materialism and ignores and/or disparages any other possibility. If all you have is condescension, you have nothing.
 
It simply assumes materialism and ignores and/or disparages any other possibility.
no, it just doesn't assume blind faith as correct.
but then, you can prove the supernatural?
that still leaves the null point.
 

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