I mean, do you really think it is that futile? — ToothyMaw
The purpose of the argument contained in the problem of evil and my argument is to show that god cannot be what they think he is; their very idea of god is contradictory. — ToothyMaw
It is only a false premise if you can verify that it is not true — ToothyMaw
You wouldn't claim that every thought experiment or counterargument is false merely because it assumes certain premises - which are often derived from another's arguments - would you? — ToothyMaw
That's just human beings projecting, like they have a habit of doing. It could very well be that God just has a different sense of humor and laughs every time a so-called "injustice" befalls someone — James Riley
Maybe some bacteria needs something to eat and it can't chow down so long as those pesky anti-bodies are standing in the way. Thus, God is omnibenevolent and allows that car accident or cancer or murder to occur so that bacteria can eat, unmolested. God is, after all, a God of bacteria; not humans. Bacteria are the center of the universe. Bacteria are the measure of all things. — James Riley
1) If god existed he would not allow injustices to occur — ToothyMaw
1. If God (an omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent person) exists, then he would not suffer innocents to live in ignorance in a dangerous world — Bartricks
I should add that the mental asylums in my country cannot permanently keep people there, they can only keep them there about a month or 20 days, as I said before. — Amalac
Do we know whether the observer is impacted by reality? — Hanover
the other profound to the point of incomprehensibility. — Banno
I'm beginning to have second thoughts about the truth. I no longer believe such a thing exists. Still the myth persists - I wonder why? — TheMadFool
Well, "the truth" is imaginary, thereby a denial (E.Becker) or distraction from (L. Feuerbach) the real — 180 Proof
Go to the heart of any religion and you will find philosophy. What we have come to know as religion is simply an exoteric representation of a philosophy, because the nature of philosophy is such that it cannot necessarily understood by everyone. — Tzeentch
What is the void, is it an absence of belief, or something else? — Jack Cummins
The void is even beautiful in its way, a vast open space — hanaH
You just moved me to laugh internally. If people actually have an "a priori transcendental need" they are generally astonishlingly piss-poor at satisfying it, and that truly is a shame. — praxis
"Metaphysical need?" "Existential void?" These are problems to be addressed and endured (like being embodied), not solved or "cure". There simply is no viable escape from existence. — 180 Proof
Philosophy replaces religion inasmuch as you decide it does. If there is a philosophy which has a spiritual or mystical aspect which is appealing, then you could use than instead of religion. — Manuel
I’m not at all religious, btw, but still feel moved in the midst of religious rituals. — praxis
I always preferred to believe that the derivation from ‘re-ligare’, ‘to bind or unite’ was superior to the derivation ‘religio’ as ‘peity with respect to the gods.’ It says something about two aspects or facets of religion, the first being usually overlooked on the grounds that the second is what religion ‘really means’. — Wayfarer
And that's an insignificant difference for you? I — praxis
More prejudiced? Why so defensive? — 180 Proof
it's your conceptions of what we are doing (or trying to do) when we practice "religion" or "philosophy" which make no sense in the light of the historicities / genealogies of their respective roles in 'the life of the mind — 180 Proof
Okay, don't answer; or rather, your nonanswers, dimo9, persuade me my suspicions are correct. — 180 Proof
I'm curious why you're so intent on drawing a parallel between philosophy and religion. :chin: — praxis
Apparently, I misinterpreted what you were asking. Maybe if I read the previous content it would have been clearer with that context. — praxis
Not necessarily, some are raised within a religion and belong to it their entire lives — praxis
They may of course privately question it, but to publicly question doctrine is to risk — praxis
Whether or not that's beneficial to the individual it's not beneficial to the religion because it loses support. — praxis
It isn't really available in religion because to belong is to not question the dogma, and it's all about belonging. The function of philosophy is not to bind communities with shared values, norms, and narratives. — praxis
And I disagree that those "religious questions" which you mention also belong to philosophy — 180 Proof
Why, you think moral questions are easy and self-evident? Or that what you or I think are obviously the correct answers? Or just you?
Ok.
So an easy universal issue is that killing other people is wrong. Huge agreement with that, when we say it like that. But how about self-defense? When is it morally right to use lethal force for self defense?
Is it right or wrong to kill other animals? Is it harmful that human society has advance from the hunter gatherers to what we are today? A lot of species have died and there's global warming, yet for "human ecology" our way to mold this planet to serve us has been a great success story. Or how about issues with sex? Or substance use? Abortion?
All those issues that we now see as 'political' and where we see 'cultural divides' emerging on how people answer them. — ssu
should not be confused with religion as (the) "alternative" to confessional, or spiritual, practice. — 180 Proof
Like I said, immortality is a fairytale. — GraveItty
I ended up to that conclusion because of your language (as I explained implicitely): "atheists will be radically reduced". — GraveItty