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jay_a2j wrote:hey if any1 would like me to make them a signature or like an avator just let me no, my sig below i did, and i also did "panther 88" so i can do something like that for u if ud like...
chang50 wrote:b.k. barunt wrote:Aradhus wrote:john9blue wrote:but atheists tend to ignore both the positive effects of religion and the negative effects of a lack of religion.
not saying other worldviews don't do the same thing, but it's too idealistic. there's a reason religion has been a feature of many different civilizations across many millennia. and it's not because of people in a smoke-filled room looking to control the uneducated masses. religion benefits society.
That's utter bunk. Because people do something repeatedly that makes it inherently good? The perception is that religion benefits society. How can you accurately guage if there's a benefit if you don't have access to a world where no religion exists, where it hasn't permeated into every crack of existence infecting everything like a virus.AAFitz wrote:
Now, I must concede that if there is a creator, and He has actually inspired religion, than of course it benefits society.
Why? this creator could be a total jackoff who just likes fucking with people. Or religion could be his, or its, test, where the people who pass are the people who reject it.
Wow. Most of your posts seem to indicate a bit of intelligence so i'll assume you've imbibed in an excess of holiday cheer on this one. To disbelieve in a supreme being is understandable, seeing that many consider it a mark of superior intellect and "free thinking", but to assert that if there is a supreme being he "could be a total jackoff" is something that defies rational thought - that's the nicest description i could think of for such a conclusion. To be honest, it doesn't strike me as a conclusion at all, and is reminiscent of times back on the playground when the bad boys (yeah ok i was in that group) would try to outdo each other on the most outrageous and obnoxious bit of rebellious blather.
Because the evidence for any kind of supreme being is somewhere beween negligible and non-existent, its difficult to imagine what would make any particular version thereof any more likely than any other.You might not like the terminology 'total jackoff',or the FSM,as is more often used to illustrate this point, but I think there is a valid point being made here by Aradhus,which deserves consideration and should not be dismissed so quickly.
Aradhus wrote:You're kinda foisting your assumptions onto me, Bk. I don't assume that if this universe is created by a being that that being is the most powerful being that exists. Just taking a look at how things work in this little universe I think that it's almost a safe bet to assume that if god exists he's at best incompetent, at worst malevolent.
Army of GOD wrote:Not all "Supreme" things are inherently good
b.k. barunt wrote:chang50 wrote:b.k. barunt wrote:Aradhus wrote:john9blue wrote:but atheists tend to ignore both the positive effects of religion and the negative effects of a lack of religion.
not saying other worldviews don't do the same thing, but it's too idealistic. there's a reason religion has been a feature of many different civilizations across many millennia. and it's not because of people in a smoke-filled room looking to control the uneducated masses. religion benefits society.
That's utter bunk. Because people do something repeatedly that makes it inherently good? The perception is that religion benefits society. How can you accurately guage if there's a benefit if you don't have access to a world where no religion exists, where it hasn't permeated into every crack of existence infecting everything like a virus.AAFitz wrote:
Now, I must concede that if there is a creator, and He has actually inspired religion, than of course it benefits society. [/quo
Why? this creator could be a total jackoff who just likes fucking with people. Or religion could be his, or its, test, where the people who pass are the people who reject it.
Wow. Most of your posts seem to indicate a bit of intelligence so i'll assume you've imbibed in an excess of holiday cheer on this one. To disbelieve in a supreme being is understandable, seeing that many consider it a mark of superior intellect and "free thinking", but to assert that if there is a supreme being he "could be a total jackoff" is something that defies rational thought - that's the nicest description i could think of for such a conclusion. To be honest, it doesn't strike me as a conclusion at all, and is reminiscent of times back on the playground when the bad boys (yeah ok i was in that group) would try to outdo each other on the most outrageous and obnoxious bit of rebellious blather.
Because the evidence for any kind of supreme being is somewhere beween negligible and non-existent, its difficult to imagine what would make any particular version thereof any more likely than any other.You might not like the terminology 'total jackoff',or the FSM,as is more often used to illustrate this point, but I think there is a valid point being made here by Aradhus,which deserves consideration and should not be dismissed so quickly.
Do i really need to point out the absurdity of calling a "supreme being" a jackoff? A supreme being determines and defines reality. Does the creation question the creator? Such arrogance boggles the mind. Jesus told the Pharisees (religious hypocrites of the day) that they were like children playing in the marketplace saying "we have piped to you and you have not danced; we have mourned and you have not wept" (Matthew 11:17 and Luke 7:32).
As far as "evidence for a supreme being" goes, you might want to look up the word "supreme". Aradhus wasn't questioning His existence, he was questioning His character if He did exist. Like i said, look up the word "supreme" in your dictionary, then ask someone on the street (the Brits have the best understanding of such but they use the word "wanker") to define the term "jackoff". I would say that the word "supreme" and the term "jackoff" are diametrically opposed. A "jackoff" is a loser, a failure and a wannabe pretender to what he is not. How can a "supreme being" translate as such? Sorry, but i really can't give such a shallow bit of idiocy any serious consideration, and i have to say that only a jackoff would come up with such.
jay_a2j wrote:hey if any1 would like me to make them a signature or like an avator just let me no, my sig below i did, and i also did "panther 88" so i can do something like that for u if ud like...
pimpdave wrote:Pretty sure omnibenevolent isn't a real word.
b.k. barunt wrote:My reference to a "shallow bit of idiocy" was not directed at you, as you did not make the "jackoff" comment. I've really been trying to curb my my irascible tendencies, but the "jackoff" comment was a bit to much. It was also way beneath Aradhus' intelligence, which made it insulting. The profound issues that you refer to are certainly not attained to by such comments. Notice that i use the word "comment" in place of "observation".
One might opine that the supreme being is malevolent, benevolent, or a mix of the two. Any "profound philosophical questions" through the ages have pretty much stayed within those parameters. If you seriously think that the term "jack off" could apply to a being who created the universe, then we're on different planes of perception. I stand by my observation that the comment was a shallow bit of idiocy.
Btw, not sure what you mean by "omnibenevolent" - never heard that term before.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
b.k. barunt wrote:Meh, your word was "creator" - a being who was able to create this world would not be a supreme being? Mmmkay.
Army of GOD wrote:Good and evil are relative
2dimes wrote:Again this over simplifies things but is the direction I'm suggesting.Army of GOD wrote:Good and evil are relative
I'm not thinking relative, I'm thinking more we can't see everything involved in running the universe so we think something is evil because we can't know the whole purpose behind it.
Like rehab, it can be really horrible to take away the substance a person is addicted to yet they must in order to save the person's life because they are being poisoned.
MeDeFe wrote:Anyway, taking a definition that says god is good, and from that concluding that god (should this being exist) is good, is circular reasoning at its finest.
So, bk, I'm not buying it.
b.k. barunt wrote:MeDeFe wrote:Anyway, taking a definition that says god is good, and from that concluding that god (should this being exist) is good, is circular reasoning at its finest.
So, bk, I'm not buying it.
My point is that a supreme being, i.e. one who created everything would define reality seeing that He creates it. For us, the creations, to attempt to contradict His definition of good and evil would be rather stupid and certainly arrogant. If a parent tells a child that it is wrong/bad to hit his siblings and the child refuses to accept such, the child is punished.
Take the human body for example. What if the white corpuscles suddenly decided that it was bad to fight diseases? What if they deemed the harmful bacteria good? For the creation to argue with the creator is madness. In short, the creator has power over His creation - whatever is good for the creator is good and whatever is bad for the creator is bad. If the creation becomes bad for its creator, simple logic would dictate that He would destroy the creation and start over. The Scriptures use the example of a potter (Isaiah 64:8, Jeremiah 18:4, Romans 9:21), who would naturally have power over the pots that he creates. What the potter desires in a pot is good and what he desires not is bad. The pots are created or destroyed according to his will. So yeah, in such a reality you could definitely say that God is omnibenevolent. Circular logic?
Symmetry wrote:2dimes wrote:Again this over simplifies things but is the direction I'm suggesting.Army of GOD wrote:Good and evil are relative
I'm not thinking relative, I'm thinking more we can't see everything involved in running the universe so we think something is evil because we can't know the whole purpose behind it.
Like rehab, it can be really horrible to take away the substance a person is addicted to yet they must in order to save the person's life because they are being poisoned.
Surely the same argument can be applied in the other direction equally, Assuming that a God or gods exist, they could equally be pure evil and we merely don't see their purpose. I'm not making that argument here, but do thing it's a bit weak as a justification for arguing that God is good. It could equally work for an argument that God is evil, ambivalent, or whatever else.
The only evidence we have, further assuming that he is omnipotent and omniscient, is how He acts.