luke warm, on Feb 26 2008, 11:25 AM, said:
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illogical how? irrational how? i'd say that your very ability to have opinions on these things presupposes my God... for example, the mind you are using to discuss these things (your mind), is it concrete or abstract? is it extended in space or not extended in space?
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I fail to understand the logic that connects my having (what passes for) a mind and the existence of your (or any other's) god.
it would help if you'd answered my questions re: the mind... concrete (suspended in space) or abstract (not SiS)?
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so if i believe that the nature of God is good, and the nature of man is evil, i've abondoned reason and resorted to superstition? are you not acquainted with any theist whose intellect and reason you respect, or do you consider your reasoning ability and intellect superior to all of them?
You have, in previous posts, conceded that it is not possible to positively demonstrate the existence of god. It is a matter of faith. A conscious choice to believe in the existence of that which cannot be shown to exist. Yes, I understand that religious believers argue that the evidence of god is all around us, but, as I have said repeatedly (and I do not for a second claim originality of thought here), it is illogical to argue that the existence of the universe implies the existence of a god that should be worshipped. We laugh at cargo cults.. feeling sorry for the ignorant islanders who conflated the trappings of western civilization with gifts with divine provenance. Yet, the same feelings that inspired the cargo cults underlies the feeling that the existence of the universe demonstrates the existence of a god whom we should worship.
Furthermore, since every religion has its own god or gods, few of whom are compatible with those of other religions, and since ALL believers can make the same argument... 'my god(s) has to exist, else how do we explain the universe'... most of them are wrong. Indeed ALL of them are 'wrong' according to the majority of religious people. I doubt that any one religion has held a substantial plurality of believers at any time over the past 5000 years or more.
Referring again to earlier posts, in my view, it was rational for our ancestors, dependent on their own senses and nothiing more, to infer the existence of supernatural powers. But as our ability to explore, conceptualize and experiment with reality has grown, as our understanding of the physical mechanisms that explain physical phenomena has grown, the realm of the 'not understood' has shrunk and continues to shrink.
A rational being would, I believe, now conclude that there is some chance that we, as a species, will continue to shrink the areas of ignorance. We may be incapable, at least in our current form, of grasping the essence of how the universe can to be, or what lies outside, but ideas such as brane theory are already allowing us to intellectually explore different universes even if the laws that govern the interrelationships between these universes make it impossible for the inhabitants of one to ever directly perceive another.
A rational being would, I believe, now conclude that there is both less need and less justification for the invocation of a supernatural god entity.
A rational being does not opt to replace a desire for evidence and logical argument based on evidence with 'faith' or an acceptance of a mental construction of the universe devised by scientifically-illiterate and ignorant writers or preachers 1000 or 2000 or 4000 years ago.
You do. I do not doubt your good intentions. I suspect, from your postings, that in our daily lives and in how we want to see people behave towards each other, we have a lot in common. And how we live our lives is, in the end, more important than the stories we tell ourselves about why we live them in that manner. So, despite the vigour with which I debate you, I want you (and other readers) to know that I respect you and your beliefs, even tho I think that you are misguided

And I accept that, from your perspective, I am the misguided one
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since you're on record as saying there's no such thing as good and evil, i'm not against using terms you feel more comfortable with... take a couple of examples... imagine a 16 year old who steals a candy bar from the local store... across town another 16 year old robs and kills the clerk in a local store
how would you categorize those acts?
The stealing of a candy bar is a silly, immature act. I know... I stole a candy bar when I was 15 and was caught. It was a prank... I had more than enough money on me to pay for it, but I wanted to see if I could get away with it.
The killing of the clerk is a horrible crime. There would, I am sure, be something profoundly wrong with the killer. Maybe he/she was high. Maybe he/she is a sociopath, devoid of empathy. Whatever the reason, the perpetrator should be caught, and punished. If he or she was so mentally impaired (not from temporary causes but congenitally) as to not know or appreciate the nature of the act, then he or she has to be isolated from society since otherwise he or she may well do it again. If he or she was addicted and driven to the act by a combination of the drug and the need to score, then he or she should be punished, should be required to do community service and should be forced to undergo counselling.. which may, of course, not work... note that I said 'punished' as well as treated.
By the way, I am NOT on record as saying there is no 'good'. I am on record as saying that I do not believe in evil in a religious context. I wouldn't object to the use of 'evil' as a descriptive word, to dennote particulary heinous acts, but only if we could remove, from the term, any religious or supernatural connotation.
I may sound inconsistent, but I don't, for whatever reason, perceive the term 'good' as carrying the same religious connotation. So I do see behaviours that I am happy to describe as 'good'. Often, I add, by atheists
As for your options for the description of mind, I frankly don't understand your point. I already stated that I see 'mind' as an emergent property arising from the topography and internal biological workings of the brain. Stop the brain, kill the mind.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari