I honestly think you (and other progressives) don't understand what love means. You seem to think that love is some sort of all-encompassing benevolence combined with pink-flying unicorns that give you lots of kisses :sStop talking when the holy dude answers your question about hell by cupping his hands together and saying that religion is about loving another person. — Mongrel
Arguments for God always beg the question. — Mariner
If by begging the question you mean the petitio principii fallacy, then I disagree. There are plenty of arguments for God that don't commit this fallacy. Even the ontological argument, if phrased in a certain way, can avoid it, despite being the classic example of an argument that allegedly commits said fallacy. If by begging the question you mean that they fail to define God, then I agree. A lot of arguments are vague on what it is they're proving. — Thorongil
Would you say that the necessity of X logically requires the existence of X, in the sense that the two are one and the same? Can X be necessary and non-existent?Curiously, only the ontological argument (which intends to prove the necessity of X) would escape this verdict :D. — Mariner
Why do you think that existent means just what is perceptible by the senses? Number 2 is not perceptible by the senses, but clearly it exists, albeit in a different way than a chair exists.Mathematical proofs refer to [the necessity of] non-existent relationships, if we are using "existent" to mean "perceptible by the senses" (which is one way to use that word). — Mariner
They beg the question as much as any argument that intends to prove the existence of X (rather than the possibility of X, the necessity of X, or the impossibility of X) must necessarily import, with its premises, some extraneous info about the existence of X. Arguments are not instruments to prove the existence of anything. — Mariner
The idea here is to condense your experience of religious discussions in very short aphorisms, intended to summarize some recurrent traits of these discussions. — Mariner
Yeah, that statement is clearly false. Lots of things exist (are not nothing) that are not perceptible. — Thorongil
Why do you think that existent means just what is perceptible by the senses? Number 2 is not perceptible by the senses, but clearly it exists, albeit in a different way than a chair exists. — Agustino
The solution to this clash of beliefs? Maybe God only knows. Even so, we best hazard an educated guess. Flexibility? Compassion? Non-literal interpretations? Another possible view of the "holy writ"? Something else? Your educated guess is as good as mine. — 0 thru 9
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