Just so you know where I'm coming from I'm a hardcore atheist — Terrapin Station
I don't care about that, just because I think all your gods are fake, that does not mean I actually believe I will be able to change your mind on such a topic. I have little desire to actually convince believers that their gods are not real. I understand how fruitless that task is. — Jeremiah
You say that because of the stakes being so high, you ought to take P very seriously indeed. But because of its general form, P amounts not to one proposition, but to an infinitely large family of propositions, which can be obtained by varying C (we could also vary T, R and U, but for the purposes of practical decision-making that won't make much of a difference, provided that T is sufficiently far in the future). So what are you to do? How would you go around studying all of those propositions? — SophistiCat
Considering all this god crap is made-up human nonsense — Jeremiah
That would be quite a useless and unnecessary premise, since it is a trivial tautology — SophistiCat
P: At some future time T one of two things will happen: either you will be rewarded with inconceivably great rewards R or punished with inconceivably great punishments U. — SophistiCat
God of the Catholic religion (or at least something like it) - or atheism. But is this so? — SophistiCat
Here's a solid argument against skeptical theism:
1. If one accepts skeptical theism, then one asserts that humans (non-omniscient beings) cannot make a reasonable judgment about what God would do in any given situation.
2. If one cannot make reasonable judgments about what God would do in any
given situation, then one cannot make claims about any other tenets of religion (e.g. the idea of heaven and hell or if God is actually omnibenevolent in the first place).
3. Therefore, a skeptical theist must remain skeptical about all other religious beliefs. — Yajur
Suggestion: accept what you know by faith AS LONG AS it does not conflict with reason. G — Relativist
It seems to me the 3 things do indeed conflict at times. — DingoJones
1. If you have a religious faith, then you need to explain how your belief system answers the problem of evil. — reasonablewave
I'm making the point that natural rights do not exist. Never have and never will. — LD Saunders
People instead first figure out what is morally good, and then make up legal rights to accomplish what is morally good. It's only after people figuring out that freedom of speech is a good thing that it then becomes a legal right. Rights are always governed by a larger moral system — LD Saunders
I'm making the point that natural rights do not exist. Never have and never will. — LD Saunders
How does the concept of god NOT conflict with fact or reason? — Harry Hindu
Having knowledge itself isn't proof of anything. Knowledge can be wrong - just like faith. To say that "I know" is to say that "For the moment, this is what I believe". And I'm sure you've had situations where your faith in someone had failed you — Harry Hindu
How does "faith" differ from "hope" or "delusion"? — Harry Hindu
First, a two year old has no conception of what calculus is, that is, they don't understand the concept calculus, or the concepts used in calculus, so they may as well be talking gibberish. — Sam26
I'm not sure what your point is here. — Sam26
and the basis for these statements have to do with the concepts we use. Now one might argue that the concept God has no instance in reality, but I think it's incorrect to say that "...we have no basis at all to believe we can make any statement at all about the nature of God." — Sam26
We can and do make statements about the nature of God all the time, — Sam26
Nation states have no moral goodness associated with them if morality is about caring about human beings in general. Nation states are about "us" and "them", you'd have to be a fantasist to think otherwise. — Kippo
First of all, how can you say everyone has "rights"? — LD Saunders