By the way, are you aware of how many times you've contradicted yourself in this discussion? On the one hand, you claim to be unable to comprehend god, and on the other hand, you make claims about the nature of god - sometimes implicitly (e.g. "evil that cannot be prevented or avoided has divine purpose") and other times explicitly (e.g. "God (if he exists) has empowered us enough to prevent some forms of evil, but not all"). Or have you just been playing devil's advocate? — Sapientia
I haven't contradicted myself. — TheMadFool
If you can't comprehend the nature of God, then many of your claims relating to God in this discussion and others are unwarranted, — Sapientia
I'm only exploring the possibility of evil being compatible with god by questioning the authority of rationality. This I do because the atheistic approach to god is, to say the least, rational.
Atheists construct and present arguments that conclude by denying god's existence or diminishing god's greatness. In such behavior and certainty of claims there is an unseen, very important, extremely relevant assumption - that rationality is perfect and infallible.
It is this key assumption that I question. Isn't it fair ? Isn't it justified? Isn't it natural? The judge of rationality must be itself judged by the exact and stringent criteria that it imposes on others.
That's all I'm saying. — TheMadFool
Obviously, you can't argue against rationality using rationality, because that'd be self-defeating, since it would necessarily amount to a performative contradiction. — Sapientia
No, rationality can't be irrational, since that'd be a contradiction in terms. — Sapientia
For a being that can create the universe I only have my imagination to understand. — TheMadFool
Isn't it clear that that only provides evidence for claims about your own mind then? — Terrapin Station
You're telling us something about what you imagine. Not what any putative gods are like. — Terrapin Station
Do you mean that other minds have a better, more complete understanding of the matter? — TheMadFool
All I want to say is rationality may be wrong about the whole god issue. — TheMadFool
No. I'm just saying that if claims about a god's mind are solely based on what you're imagining, you're really just telling us about your own mind/your imagination. — Terrapin Station
All I want to say is rationality may be wrong about the whole god issue. — TheMadFool
I feel the problem of evil is a good counter-argument to god. However, it is, at its heart, a rational argument and rationality itself has a rather shaky foundation. — TheMadFool
Christianity traditionally addresses evil with free will, by the way. — Terrapin Station
What is "the atheistic problem of evil"? — Terrapin Station
Again, mere logical possibility is irrelevant to truth claims unless we are talking about deductive proofs (arguments that prove necessary truths or show logical contradictions and impossibilities). — Chany
I have pointed out that the situation is not very analogous because a) the lack of ability of the parent to explain to the child is not present with God, b) the cognitive limitations that the person is supposed to have towards God should not be there without special reassurances from God about the very specific reasons he cannot reveal right now. — Chany
At least certain types of theists seem pretty confident in their ability to decipher God's wishes, and have historically and currently even been willing to torture, kill, and oppress in the name of these supposed wishes and commandments.Given the hard facts above wouldn't it be utter hubris and foolish to boot to claim one can understand god's mind? — TheMadFool
At the point rationality is completely thrown out the window, we can throw out the entirety of philosophy, science, and every other intellectual pursuit. — Chany
I wasn't suggesting that you were, and in truth my comment was more of a general proclamation. I should ask, though, as you believe that God's mind is inscrutable, do you adhere to the notion that we cannot say what God's wishes and wants may be on any matter?I'm not endorsing any religion. I'm only suggesting that caution is necessary in this matter. — TheMadFool
I'm not an extremist. At least not yet. Rationality has its uses and it is the most productive human tool ever. I just think its deficient in key respects when it comes to god — TheMadFool
Given the hard facts above wouldn't it be utter hubris and foolish to boot to claim one can understand god's mind?
Does this argument refute the problem of evil?
God moves in mysterious ways...Cowper — TheMadFool
I'm not claiming anything about god. — TheMadFool
Isn't the problem of evil (which I'm refuting) a deductive argument. If what you say is right (about the relevance of possibility in deduction) I'm on the right track. — TheMadFool
Also to make matters clear let us take a legal example. Perhaps it'll drive the point home. A person is being charged with murder. It is then the prosecutor's solemn duty to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt. In other words there should not be a shadow of doubt that the accused committed the crime. Even the slightest possibility of innocence will affect the verdict. Our situation here is similar. — TheMadFool
I will not pursue quantum mechanics further, as I am not a physicist and all my information on it comes from people using it for whatever philosophical argument they want to bolster at the moment. I doubt you are a physicist as well, as whenever I hear a physicist talk about quantum mechanics, they seem to not freak out over it like it’s some impenetrable entity destroying our reality. And what of paradoxes? It’s not like we do not have potential solutions to them. They are problems, yes, but we still parse through them, and solve some of them. And the vast majority of philosophy does not involve paradox. Lastly, you really do not understand atheists, their reasoning, or their arguments that much, as you demonstrated over the course of the thread.To further elucidate my concerns about rationality we can take examples from quantum physics and even well known philosophical paradoxes - they are all instances of the inability of rationality to grasp these phenomena. And these are rather mundane matters compared to the mind of a god that can create a universe. How then can atheists be so confident, so dead sure, so definitive about god e.g. by relying on rationlity to deny god's existence. It perplexes me as it should you. — TheMadFool
Lastly, you really do not understand atheists, their reasoning, or their arguments that much, as you demonstrated over the course of the thread. — Chany
I should ask, though, as you believe that God's mind is inscrutable, do you adhere to the notion that we cannot say what God's wishes and wants may be on any matter? — Arkady
No, because it begs the question.
You claim one cannot understand God's mind. Yet by saying so, you claim to understand an aspect of God's mind - it's apparent inability to be understood. — darthbarracuda
It doesn't prove anything definitively, it just shows that it's not entirely incoherent. — darthbarracuda
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