completely disagree - theism is not illogical — Rank Amateur
Is there another reasonable solution to the problem as it is defined? Flip a coin, perhaps, or just leave the train running down whichever line it happens to be on.... I won't say choosing the left track is worse than leaving the outcome to chance. For my scruples it seems like the best course of action, however we might seek to justify it with moral models. — Cabbage Farmer
I wouldn't call it "condoning killing" to choose the left track or to condone that choice, in the example as you've defined it. — Cabbage Farmer
It's a reasonable attempt to do the least harm in a terrible situation. — Cabbage Farmer
I expect the evaluation of utility is an open question. — Cabbage Farmer
If you treat the utilitarian calculus as a rulebook to abide by, then the differences between deontologists and consequentialists kind of gets blurry. A little. — Posty McPostface
God's mind it can evolve into mathematics — EnPassant
but utilitarianism is more practical or flexible than kantian imperatives. So, under such an assumption it seems like utilitarianism is superior to categorical imperative moral decision making. — Posty McPostface
The explanation for why anything exists is going to run into an infinite regress, brute existence, or unknowns. — Marchesk
As a matter of fact, there is agreement between, for lack of a better term, "religionists" and "atheists" on that point: God is not the kind of being that we can sense. The divergence then is, what kind of being is God? Atheists reply, "an imaginary being". (Note that this is not the same thing as "nothing"). Religionists reply, "a transcendent being". — Mariner
Namely how do you devise such an awesome calculus to define what is moral? There are so many things to factor in that decising such a calculus is hopelessly complex and impractical. — Posty McPostface
Not sure there is a logical argument that if God exists, we would be able to understand God's nature. — Rank Amateur
I think if 'GOD' isn't fictitious — BrianW
Is this that important? Won't the quality of the biases produced that way depend largely on how you approach things on a daily basis? Sometimes on weekends I wake up just at the time when the alarm-clock would ring on weekdays. May be an analogy. — Heiko
Existence' is what 'transcendent' is transcendent to. — Wayfarer
According to classical theology, God is not complex. I know that seems counter-intuitive, but it's part of the specification. — Wayfarer
God ever put us in a state of free will? Less good comes of it because it results in some good souls unnecessarily experiencing evil done to them on earth, and it results in some souls choosing evil and not receiving a good, eternal life with God. — Relativist
But does the designer need a designer? — EnPassant
There exist contingent free-willed souls in heaven who do not sin (e.g. the departed souls of faithful Christians). (Christian doctrine). — Relativist
Therefore God's omnipotence entails the ability to directly create free-willed beings that do not sin. — Relativist
So, at a very basic level, the idea of free will is flawed for the reason I outlined above. — TheMadFool
You later referred to concepts. Do they exist? How do they exist? Compare "British" and "Seven". Can we say that Seven existed before there was any mind that could count up to seven? Will it still exist if all of those minds are extinguished? And how about British (or, British-ness), did it exist before the Big Bang, and will it exist after the heat death of the universe?
We get back to how do X's exist, come into existence, and fade away. — Mariner
Validation is an epistemological matter too. Look back at my first reply to you. Empiricism, Experience, and Evidence -- that should be the order of inquiry. Is reality restricted to what can be perceived with our senses? What is the status of experiences? And what counts as evidence? We are getting to the second question now. — Mariner
If we can't, does that mean that X does not exist? Is "apprehensibility" a requirement for existence? (Note, you can say yes or no :D. Both possibilities are in play). — Mariner
If we cannot see X, does that mean that it is not real?
Search for counterexamples. I'll give you a few members of the class of "stuff which cannot be seen, but which is real". Justice. Seven. British. — Mariner
Ontology must come first -- we must get to the heart of what exists, how it exists, how it comes into existence and ceases to exist, before we approach the question of how do we know about it. — Mariner
"my problem with God" (not "with other people's interpretation of God", or some similar expression). — Mariner
But the real question is not about X' (our interpretation of X), but rather about X. — Mariner
also believe the social security that came with all believing in a higher being for those that needed a group to feel inclusive is another valid reason for why God exists. — Donny G
do you agree with me that science is not entirely correct in its methods and principles. — TheMadFool
But the point was that we cannot find this continuity in the wall, we cannot "walk around" the wall because there is a break in it, and that is the present. See, there is a wall to the past of us, and a wall to the future of us, and these two walls have completely different features. — Metaphysician Undercover
Because it is evident that we can think, feel, fear and so on; if you have to doubt yourself, you would still need a mind to be able to do that. You can't experience the mind directly, but it's clear and obviously that the mind exists.If the mind is non-conceptual and non-experiential, then how do you know for certain that it exists?
I disagree, we are not sure for certain that material things exist. So it woule thus be foolish to ask why the would.I think it's more pertinent to ask, "why are there material things?"