Furthermore if you cast your mind back over the last couple of centuries the most appalling instances of intentional evil have all been perpetrated by humans. — Wayfarer
Of course there are also catastrophes, diseases and epidemics, but how would it be possible to have a physical world in which there were no such things? — Wayfarer
I also think it’s based on a misunderstanding — Wayfarer
Being Omniscient he created them with the knowledge that they are going to have evil intentions. — Yajur
Of course there are also catastrophes, diseases and epidemics, but how would it be possible to have a physical world in which there were no such things?
— Wayfarer
Why do you think such a world is physically impossible? Smallpox was eradicated in 1980 and we're just fine. — Yajur
The Christian faith says a single God created the whole universe. If he created it and knew how it would unfold, isn't he responsible for everything that happens? — Yajur
Of course there are also catastrophes, diseases and epidemics, but how would it be possible to have a physical world in which there were no such things? — Wayfarer
There would seem to be no logical reason why God could not have created a heavenly physical world if he was omnipotent, — Janus
Yes, it sounds a lot like heaven. There would seem to be no logical reason why God could not have created a heavenly physical world if he was omnipotent, and no reason why he would not want to if he was omnibenevolent.
If God created the world then logically catastrophes must be his work, either by commission or omission. — Janus
1. If there is a monotheistic God, she is omniscient and omnibenevolent.
2. God can not be both omniscient and omnibenevolent.
3. Therefore, there is no monotheistic God.
For my second premise, I make the argument:
a. Either God had advance knowledge that humans would be sinful (forbidden fruit, world wars, genocides, crocs, etc.) or she did not.
b. If God did not have this knowledge, then she is not omniscient.
c. If God did have this knowledge, and still made humans the way she did, then she is not omnibenevolent.
d. Therefore, God can not be both omniscient and omnibenevolent. — Yajur
P1 - we have no basis at all to believe we can make any statement at all about the nature of God.
P2. - any statement that any human makes that assigns any characteristic at all to the nature of God is by definition anthropomorphic and we have no basis at all to know if it is or is not true.
Conclusion - any argument that contains a premise about the nature of God fails, because there is no way at all establish the truth value of the premise. — Rank Amateur
We're all in heaven already, but we get bored singing hallelujah, So God has made us this totally immersive game full of goodies and baddies and difficulties and problems. The creator of Mario also created Bowser - it was no mistake or failure. — unenlightened
We can and do make statements about the nature of God all the time, — 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
and ants can communicate their understanding of their world to each other. And their perceptions of their world can be perfectly reasonable to their fellow ants who share the same perception of the world. And it can even be useful - they can tell them follow this trail and food will be there. And to any any other ant this world description is 100% true - but it has nothing at all in common with what our human view of the world is. — Rank Amateur
I'm not sure what your point is here. — Sam26
think my analogy is exactly the point i am trying to make - what is your basis for thinking our ability to actually comprehend the true nature of God is in anyway at all better than a 2 year old's ability to understand calculus ? Because we think we can ??? — Rank Amateur
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 don’t think I agree with your first premise; I don’t see why a monotheistic God must be omnibenevolent. That’d be great, of course, but I don’t see why ‘the one true God’ has to be on our side. Maybe God is cruel and omniscient; maybe God is fickle and omnipotent. Examples for both of those behaviors can easily be found in the Christian faith. I’d like to hear why you think a monotheistic God must be both omnibenevolent and omniscient. — lupac
here is skepical theist response — Rank Amateur
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
If God did have this knowledge, and still made humans the way she did, then she is not omnibenevolent. — Yajur
Just so you know where I'm coming from I'm a hardcore atheist — Terrapin Station
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