It makes sense to explore scenarios, sure. What I have explored has not led to any reason to believe in a God, but who knows if I may one day find something — PhilosophyRunner
However if I did believe in an omniscient God, perhaps the bitterness would be palatable and I would avoid the arguments I was making. Funny that. — PhilosophyRunner
Maybe it's time to give up on notions of being guided by some benevolent, all-powerful, cosmic father-figure? I honestly think we are on our own. — ToothyMaw
What an odd thing to say. I doubt God would suddenly intervene now of all times. — ToothyMaw
Indeed. I just really doubt that a good God exists — ToothyMaw
If God desires to even be ethical, that is. — ToothyMaw
It would be arbitrary if God said what is ethical is ethical merely because he says so. — ToothyMaw
1. If God is just then there should be no injustice
2. There is injustice
Ergo,
3. God is not just [1, 2, MT] — Agent Smith
if you take God to be omniscient then God has a better understanding of what is just than you do (as your knowledge is not perfect, God's is). And as such it make no sense for you to judge God's actions as unjust, this is merely your limited human mind not being able to comprehend true Godly justness. — PhilosophyRunner
I don't know. Besides, I think that's a psychiatric problem and not a philosophical question. — 180 Proof
Two good points. So, 15000 child deaths per day, from preventable events cannot be allowed to continue. We all share the responsibility for this imo. — universeness
In every culture "the devil" is portaryed as a being of utmost "civility". Folk instincts in this regard are instructive. All that glitters is not gold ..., etc. Such inhuman folk, it seems to me, forfeit the right of inclusion in any human community. Put out both of their eyes and permanently exile them to the remotest place on Earth — 180 Proof
That being said, the worst thing a person can do is hurt a child. — T Clark
I think the most heinous evil is to truly believe that YOU are the most important object in the universe and to act 100% in accordance with that belief. Adolf Hitler was one of the most evil humans who has ever lived and I think his narcissism was at a 100% level or as close to it as a single human can get. — universeness
Both are just as likely to break free. Despite the conditions inside, another factor such as curiosity will enter the equation — introbert
. For examples see the US's southern border, the border between Russia and Kazakhstan, and the Mediterranean Sea between northern Africa and Europe — T Clark
We don't have technology advanced enough to create a simulation potentially good enough to trick the human mind — dclements
It is irrelevant. We are not living in a simulation — I like sushi
The problem here is that this buys into the romantic myth that we are all essentially solitary "self-actualising" agents in life. The truth is that humans are socially constructed. The idea that we are individual "egos" with the private drama of moral choice is itself a social script. — apokrisis
When we most need to explain and defend our fears, the mind returns to this undefined place in an attempt to free itself from external stimuli that no longer meet its structural demands. — kudos
But all is not what it seems. The person who appears to have the 'biggest' ego and the most assertive sense of self may well be a fragile individual, with low confidence and high vulnerability. The self being a role one adopts to project a preferred identify, a form of compensation — Tom Storm
. Is there any good evidence that the mind heals the body — Tom Storm
He was hardly ever sick in his life, was always content and well into his 90's, he looked to be around 70 - vigorous and physically active. I suspect that a long happy, healthy life is probably down to luck and there's fuck all we can do about it. — Tom Storm
I don't think it is. I don't think any evidence has been offered, except brain reactions to the environment. Of course, since the brain works on a stimulous-reaction basis — Alkis Piskas
Sounds circular. What does it even mean for a concept to be physical vs. Non-physical? — Harry Hindu
How do physical things and concepts interact, or how do physical things come to possess concepts? — Harry Hindu
Materialism deals with both matter and energy: "All existence is made up of energy in some form. Matter is a form of energy. All things that exist are made of energy, atoms, molecules, forces and other entities that consist of energy. There are no non-physical or non-material existents." — Alkis Piskas
And then lost traction when science discovered that the world is not as it appears and that observers might actually influence what is observed. — Harry Hindu
Physical = matter & energy are physical. — Agent Smith
Matter = Mass + volume — Agent Smith
A philosophical understanding is possible if we try to conceive it as provisional, limited, conditioned, imperfect, rather than ultimate. — Angelo Cannata
Is this lack of results maybe an indication of a failure in this area --the mind-- and that this area is not an area for the conventional, totally materialistic science to get involved in?
I strongly believe it is. — Alkis Piskas
So, without further heating, a hot cup of coffee does not become a cold cup of coffee? — 180 Proof
The problem is deceptively simple. Physical = Existence. These two terms have the exact same definition and that implies nonphysical = nonexistence! :snicker: — Agent Smith
That's exactly the reason why we cannot trust our understanding. The very concept of "understanding" is undermined by the fact that we try to understand what we are part of. — Angelo Cannata
I wonder why EMP doesn't fry our brains like they do electronics. — Agent Smith
Can another kinda particle take the place of the humble electron — Agent Smith
we put us as a reference point to understand the universe: — Angelo Cannata
Would a universe without consciousness have any states-of-affairs? Would there ever be a now, a present moment in such a universe, in which a state-of-affairs could exist? — bert1