Also, any effect some other being has on my actions would mean that they are inseparable from the same world I am part of. They would be part of the same causal chain that I am part of, which would lead one to ask who created the creator? How does something come from nothing? — Harry Hindu
An important thought seems to be left out here and that is any effect some "God" would have on my life includes me being created. Every thing I do would be the result of being created by this God. The actions of my children are somewhat caused by me for they would never do the things they do if I had never created them with my wife. — Harry Hindu
There are actually a couple of other possibilities, both of which eliminate the possibility of a necessary creator.
1) That there actually isn't a first thing to exist. Causation could continue on forever in both directions. An infinite regress is possible.
2) There is a loop of causation - that the ending is actually the beginning and vice versa. — Harry Hindu
Thus comes the problem with evil, Why would he allow evil to exist if he is an 'all-loving being' it would be expected that he would want the best for us all, and therefore eliminating all evil. — GreyScorpio
I sit and wonder how and why would it be possible for 'an all powerful being' to exist if we, ourselves, have not seen him. — GreyScorpio
i. For the moment the test of thingness is if in principle it can be felt, seen, smelled, heard, or tasted. Here, at least, neither numbers, love, justice, nor any ideas at all, are things. — tim wood
Question for you - if you believe that is the case, why bother saying anything? Whatever you say must be like everything else - meaningless. — Wayfarer
Obviously theism and atheism can't be explained in terms of rationality. It's like two people put in the exact same environment (our world) and one sees God and the other doesn't. Clearly the fault is not in logic. — TheMadFool
By suggesting God has a chance to exist you are actually claiming that God currently does not exist but that a future event will give God a chance to exist. — Jeremiah
It is possible that there are an infinite number of realities with an infinite number of constraints on how many/what kind of simulations they run, and thus, you can't argue that it is more likely that there are more simulations than realities.I considered that thought. The short answer is even if there were multiple realities, each would run more simulations than itself, ultimately, there would be more simulations than realities. — TheMadFool
Morality is inherently subjective. On Earth alone there are a plethora of different cultures with different views as to what is evil and good according to their socio-cultural background. Take, for example, the Letin Clan of Indonesia, which practices Cannibalism regularly. In this tribe Cannibalism is perceived as something which is not evil, whereas in other Western societies, it is.An advanced civilisation would not simulate this reality because it would be utterly immoral to do so. — tom
Individual genetic 'defects' mean nothing evolutionarily unless they come to define a species as a whole.
.if the results of evolution happen to be a bunch of intelligent apes who can invent things like seat-belts that happen to save lives, then so be it - they are the species best adapted to survival in their environment.