Well this is precisely what Heister was objecting to, he was saying that sex did not exist, except after the Fall. But if sex didn't exist, how were Adam and Eve meant to procreate before the Fall? — Agustino
You can, but then you're arguing for global skepticism, not agnosticism. — Michael
This is ridiculous. So Adam and Eve are the only people on Earth (cause God had just created them) and one of the first commandments is to be fruitful and multiply virtue by evangelizing non-existent human beings in Paradise (cause the Fall hadn't occurred yet) :s Utterly absurd. — Agustino
but I am against procreation as there are no good reasons enough that convince me that it's necessary, for anything. — Heister Eggcart
Read Genesis 1:27-28 — Agustino
I don't deny that we can do good, only that I cannot divine up an instance wherein procreation is necessary. — Heister Eggcart
No harm can happen before birth. To suggest otherwise is silly. — Agustino
Also, I'm not denying that I may live a better, more moral life by being a Christian, but that, as I said, religion isn't a foolproof system that ensures you, me, or anyone else from living poorer lives. — Heister Eggcart
When the child is born it is forced. — schopenhauer1
A chair is not in existence, but then a chair is made.. It was caused. — schopenhauer1
I remain unconvinced that any religion, including Christianity, enables people to live significantly better lives. — Heister Eggcart
Because most religious folks are more concerned with issues of an afterlife instead of, "spending [their] heaven doing good on earth." — Heister Eggcart
I would, if you were worthy of some attention. — Banno
Belief is an attitude which accepts a proposition as true without evidence. — Galuchat
If it's to be an insinuation, then I won't. (Did you really miss the joke? I'm about to lose all the newfound respect I had for you.) — Srap Tasmaner
For the record I don't think I was particularly vague. Whether it was an insinuation, well, who's to say? — Srap Tasmaner
As for Obama and Trump, I don't actually care that much. I do care about institutions. I believe it is important that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth. — Srap Tasmaner
Yeah, about the same... not. — Banno
I could ask that question on a psychology forum but that doesn't mean it requires a psychological answer does it? It was a simple question so it's a bit dubious you can't make yourself clearer than vague. If don't want to say 'no', I can understand the dissonance. You don't need to deflect, or go on about subjectivity and interpretations. Do you think he has a good understanding of them? — WhiskeyWhiskers
I never said Obama 'told no lies', but I see zero evidence that Obama was the spectacularly mendacious bullshit artist that Trump is. — Wayfarer
Well one interpretation of your posts would be that you don't give a shit, and for some reason don't think anyone else should either. The world's a snakepit and we should all just accept it.
But maybe you're a serious conservative, or whatever you are. Maybe you've got some values. So I took a guess at what those values might be, and asked, in all seriousness, how you think our little experiment is going.
If you care, I would honestly like to know what you think. If you don't, I won't pester you anymore. — Srap Tasmaner
That's a reasonable distinction. I'll look closer. — Srap Tasmaner
It pisses me of when you pull this "oh you naive little lambs" crap — Srap Tasmaner
So, the founding fathers, they knew people could be right bastards. But freedom is worth having. Justice is a necessity. So you try to craft a system that will provide justice and freedom but won't depend on people being virtuous. They weren't writing the charter for a commune.
Has it worked? How's the republic doing? If it's gone wrong, why? Have we blown it, or could it still be fixed? We still think freedom's worth having, right? We still think justice is a necessity. And we still think everyone has a right to freedom and justice, don't we? So what do we do? — Srap Tasmaner
I prefer the general terms Divine, Source, Creator/Creation, etc. I usually try to avoid the "G" word so as to sidestep self-contradiction — 0 thru 9
As you say, you cannot inflict harm or suffering on a non-conscious object. A foetus is not conscious, therefore you cannot inflict harm on it. Its cognitive abilities are irrelevant. — sackoftrout
Actions of moral relevance can only be carried out in physical reality. — sackoftrout