Je n'avais pas besoin de cette hypothèse-là (I had no need for that hypothesis). — Pierre-Simon Laplace/Siddhartha Gautama
If what god wishes is good then if good wishes rape & murder, rape & murder are good. Unacceptable. — Agent Smith
What do you do with a book that you've read — Agent Smith
Why do you keep it, the book? — Agent Smith
Some keep it in a library, others lend it to friends, etc. but the point is you don't need the book anymore — Agent Smith
I see that you got really involved with dilemmas! :smile:Is it that what god wishes is good OR is it that god wishes what is good? — Agent Smith
Right. Yet, don't forget this very important fact: It's we who have created the concept and characteristics of God. So, whether he is an "authority on ethics" on ethics or not, depends on our description of him.If god wishes what is good then god is not the authority on ethics. Unacceptable. — Agent Smith
That's why I like Buddhism! :smile:Siddhartha Guatama (founder of Buddhism) opts to remain tightlipped about God, neither affirming nor negating god's existence — Agent Smith
I can question the "essence of God", but this would be outside the point.but then he went on to, in a sense, extract the essence of God (ethics + system that tracks our moral trajectory, records sins & virtuous acts for later accounting purposes, karma). Karma as you can see is a fully-automated system that replaces God. — Agent Smith
Re: "The Euthyphro" – God is irrelevant (vide Epicuus). :fire:Buddhism is a hundred times as realistic as Christianity it is part of its living heritage that it is able to face problems objectively and coolly; it is the product of long centuries of philosophical speculation. — The Antichrist
If it's a profoundly good or funny, then I'll need to read it again ... and again ... and again — 180 Proof
I have some books I have read many times over the years. I still have not "grokked" them. In some cases, I am losing ground — Paine
When, a few years ago, I heard for the first time the well known question "Has God created Man or has Man created God?" I found it cute, even if the answer was obvious to me. But I now find this question just silly. You see, well some established ideas take a long time to be faced openly and the truth about them --i.e. their nature-- get revealed.Well, this isn't about us to tell you the truth. It concerns God & ethics, whether the former is necessary/desirable. — Agent Smith
Right.Necessity is the mother of invention i.e. God doesn't "exist" for no rhyme or reason — Agent Smith
I'm not sure if I get that right. Do you mean that Euthyphro is wrong --and hence there's no dilemma-- because God is neither a necessity nor desirable?Euthyphro's dilemma is designed to clarify that as far as ethics goes, God is neither necessary (ethics is independent of God) nor desirable (ethics is God's whim &fancy). — Agent Smith
Siddhartha Guatama (founder of Buddhism) opts to remain tightlipped about God, neither affirming nor negating god's existence
— Agent Smith
That's why I like Buddhism! — Alkis Piskas
Siddhartha Guatama (founder of Buddhism) — Alkis Piskas
OK, I can certainly accept "should".reasons why God should exist — Agent Smith
Where is this based on? Isn't it true that it is us who we have established both concepts (God & ethics)?1. Ethics is dependent on Him — Agent Smith
Right. It is us who want Him to exist. But there are a lot of things that are desirable to us: a Superman, who can save people in danger, and all sort of superheroes fighting crime and administer or restore justice. And we have indeed created such heroes. But we know that they exist only in our imagination. Some small children prey to their heroes to help them and do this and that. They also prey to God, of course. But both entities are in their mind, as they have been described to them by their parents or as images of entities the have created themselves from books and movies. The difference between the two kinds is that God is described a having much more power and different powers --in fact he can do anything (omnipotent)-- whereas the superheroes have only special, limited powers. So the attraction on feels about God is much greated in proportion.2. God's desirable (we want Him to exist) — Agent Smith
OK.Euthyphro's dilemma, what it does, is inform us that neither is acceptable, based on ethics and ethics alone. — Agent Smith
OK.When I say ethics is independent of God (God is unnecessary) , I also imply false that ethics is/can be God's whim and fancy (God is undesirable). No contradiction. — Agent Smith
↪Alkis Piskas I believe we're on the same page albeit on different paragraphs. We're cool. — Agent Smith
Same here. The possibility exists that god exists. Despite all probabilities that arise from what we (as a species) know.As for atheism, I don't have to "take a plunge". I consider myself already an "atheist", since I don't believe in God, esp. the God that is created by Judeo-Christians-- or any supreme being in particular. But this does not mean that I exclude the existence of some Supreme Being or Supreme Power, in general. — Alkis Piskas
No, Buddhism is not created by Buddha. You might find some who say so, but it's inaccurate. Buddhism is founded --we don't know by whom- based on the treachings of Buddha.But would it not be the Buddha who had founded Buddhism? After all, it was Christ who founded Christianity, Marx who founded Marxism .... — god must be atheist
No, it is not Christ who founded Christianity. (... etc.) — Alkis Piskas
There is nothing better than settling philosophical arguments by the fireside, with Cuban cigars and a fine Port, agreeing to disagree, or to lull oneself into a state of pleasantness in which agreement is more important than triumphing by using nothing but the tools and daresay weapons of logic alone. — god must be atheist
That's a wise desision! :grin:But I can't raise an intelligent argument against it, so I accept your position. — god must be atheist
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