You’re not fooling me. With all atheists it starts out as personal. Only after finding reasons to hate God do they then rationalize that there is no God. — Noah Te Stroete
With all atheists it starts out as personal. Only after finding reasons to hate God do they then rationalize that there is no God. — Noah Te Stroete
That's not true Noah. Some atheists... the militant ones... may hate God, whatever that means. Not all. — creativesoul
So, there's no point to it then? I mean, if we can call it as "gratuitous suffering", then the presupposition is that it was in excess to some rationale. Yet, God remains silent, so what's the rationale here? — Wallows
But I think one answer is, it is an inevitable aspect of physical existence. — Wayfarer
I think you could trace the lineage of that to having possessions and language which enables a sense of what is yours, and so what can be lost, and a way of conceiving of the meaning of loss and grief. In other words it is something which evolves with the human condition. — Wayfarer
In any case, the religions teach that to 'rise above' suffering is not simply to be anaesthetized to it, but to realise a higher identity. — Wayfarer
You’re almost being religious in your stubbornness. — Noah Te Stroete
Did you ever want to be persuaded, or are you trying to persuade others? — Noah Te Stroete
Being stubborn is alright for the right matter. :halo: — Wallows
With your belief system, you are in continuous agony and fear of suffering. Suffering owns you. You are not free. — Noah Te Stroete
The sentiment seems to point towards a future, where suffering is completely eliminated. — Wallows
What do you mean by that? — Wallows
But, the fawn still burned alive. — Wallows
I don't see value in pain and suffering. This sort of ties back into one of my old threads, about the inherent worth of suffering, if there is any. I don't think God suffers along with the burning fawn, or does He? One might even be inclined to agree that God is quite cruel. — Wallows
I don't see value in pain and suffering. — Wallows
I get what you’re saying, but just because you don’t see value in pain and suffering, doesn’t mean there is no value in pain and suffering. There isn’t value from the fawn’s perspective. There isn’t from your perspective - indeed, from the perspective of much of humanity, there is no value in the pain and suffering of the fawn. I agree with you there. — Possibility
I have tried to look at the notion of pain and suffering from a broader, universal perspective - and my philosophy tends towards a form of panpsychism, so the idea that all matter has some level of awareness (ie. relation to the world) is a key part of my thinking, as well as the notion that ‘God’ is the most objective relation to the universe and all existence that we can imagine. — Possibility
Pain is not necessarily ‘cruelty’. — Possibility
We judge that if someone has sufficient information and capacity to reduce the potential for pain or loss of life in a situation, they are morally obligated to act. — Possibility
But to isolate a fawn in a forest fire is to ignore the rest of the information contributing to that situation - including decisions the fawn and its parents made prior to the incident, the events leading up to the fire, etc - most of which you may not be aware of. It’s also possible that the fawn’s mother had been recently hit by a car, or that the fire had been deliberately lit by an arsonist or a carelessly tossed cigarette. With this information, is God cruel or are we simply ignorant of our own capacity to minimise pain and suffering? — Possibility
But you see value in the faun. Do you think there can be a faun that does not grow old and die, or dies young? Is not the fragility of the faun, the vulnerability, that gives it value? An eternal indestructible mechanical non-suffering faun would not have the same value. No one would care about it. — unenlightened
So, you're basically saying that suffering and pain has its own value? — Wallows
No. I'm saying that to value something is to be vulnerable to suffering. — unenlightened
To value nothing is to be indifferent to suffering. — unenlightened
If I have no conception of pain, — Wallows
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