P: God exists
P2: God probably exist
E1: the fine tuning data provide strong evidence to favor the design hypothesis over the atheistic single universe hypothesis — KingOfTheSouthBay
Suffering, in some sense, is the purest form of truth. Even happiness can be faked. — Jonah Wong
Western culture has made the mistake of glorifying comfort. — Jonah Wong
If God ended suffering, humans would not know what it means to be separated from Him.
If humans did not know what it means to be separated from God, they would not know that they need to be rescued.
If humans did not know they needed to be rescued, they would have no reason to cooperate with God.
Suffering is necessary for humans to cooperate with God. — Jonah Wong
However, the point is, despite human effort, suffering is inevitable: and our mission on an individual level ought not to be to suffer as little as possible, but instead to choose to suffer in the hope that it develops character and brings us closer to God. — Jonah Wong
I think Tom Storm's second possibility, that there is no ultimate truth, is probably correct. — T Clark
There is very good evidence, I might say. We understand most parts of the universe, so why not the fundaments? What we will never understand is where the fundaments themselves come from. And that's where God comes walking in. — EugeneW
If you don't make this assumption you will never hit rock bottom — EugeneW
It's a proof of the gap argument. The assumption it can be closed is more reasonable than that it can't be closed. — EugeneW
1. For any possible limit, there’s a possible external explanation
2. Explanations aren’t entirely included in that which they explain
3. Having limits is a limit
4. Therefore, there is a possible explanation of having limits
5. The only possible explanation of having limits must be in terms of something without limits
6. Therefore, it’s possible that something has no limits
7. Whatever has no limits is of supreme nature
8. Therefore, it is possible that there’s a supreme being
9. A supreme being is either impossible or necessary
10. A supreme being is not impossible.
11. Therefore, a supreme being is necessary — tryhard
1. Jesus was either a lunatic, a liar, or lord
2. Jesus wasn’t a liar or a lunatic
3. Therefore, Jesus must be lord — tryhard
And what implications does your stance have here for the possibility of philosophically approaching the topic? — baker
The idea is that doing things that one finds pleasurable (in the broadest sense of the word) cannot actually make one happy. Ie. that it's in the nature of doing worldly things that they cannot satisfy. (This is also the theme in Ecclesiastes, so it's not some "esoteric Eastern" notion.) — baker
God is an all-loving being and people believe that God loves everyone on an equal level. We have come to this conclusion because we know that God has to love everyone according to the Christian bible — stressyandmessy
My experience is that when I am calm the mind is not "racing". For me it is the difference between a raging torrent and a gently meandering stream. But there's nothing to say we are all exactly the same. — Janus
Pascal’s wager is flawed because there are more options than believing in the Christian God there are also other religions that we would have to take into account. But the greatest flaw is that the logic is built on fear. The possibility of going to hell incites people to believe in God it is all fear-based. — stressyandmessy
I'm an atheist, and I can't make enough sense of the concept of God to motivate myself to even think "yeah, I should belief." Pascal may talk about infinite gain and infinite loss, but it's all so abstract and alien to me that I just can't feel the loss, not even — Dawnstorm
Someone claiming that the ultimate truth is organisms being machines programmed to pass on genes or memes has a loose screw somewhere in his machinery. Comparable to God psychotic schizo manias. — EugeneW
It is an incoherent position like blaming people yet claiming we have no freewill. — Andrew4Handel
I think Dawkins altruism phobia exists because of his desire to have a purely robotic, mechanical universe and to endorse the worst form of natural selection and ubermensch. Maybe he will post on here and enlighten us. — Andrew4Handel
Vague references and a lack of evidence will convince no one. — Philosophim
Isn't that the same? If the evidence is not reliable, is it good evidence then? — EugeneW
Then what's the evidence? A personal experience? God talking to us in our mind? What's your measure of evidence? Someone saying he/she has seen them? — EugeneW
Since there is no evidence of a universal mind, then it is false. — Philosophim
"Everything is all in the mind, there is no physical world." Of course, just because I can propose something that would potentially show it to be false, it does not mean it IS false. As it is clear that everything is not in the mind, and there is a world outside of our thoughts, this claim against physicalism which could show it to be false, is false itself. — Philosophim
I have a theory: Morality is, I believe, an unsolvable puzzle and God knows, very well, that humans will never get to the bottom of what good and evil are. Hence, he puts down one condition for citizenship in his kingdom of heaven: be moral, avoid immorality. — Agent Smith
Fortunately, in fact, Western "culture and philosophy" has been predominantly anti-foundationalist since the late 1500s CE (re: nominalism Copernicus/Galilleo, secularism, empiricism, Wallace/Darwin, pragmatism ...)
— 180 Proof
I don't know what that means. — T Clark
No, no such opposition. The idea is that doing things that one finds pleasurable (in the broadest sense of the word) cannot actually make one happy. Ie. that it's in the nature of doing worldly things that they cannot satisfy. (This is also the theme in Ecclesiastes, so it's not some "esoteric Eastern" notion.) — baker
Why are paradoxes/contradictions (so) important? — Agent Smith
Problem is, many of them hate religion and feel contempt for those who believe. That's not atheism, it's... I don't know, what is it? It's not reason. — T Clark
I've never seen an argument on either the atheist side or the theist side which I have found wholly convincing. — RolandTyme
Followers of religion never seem to present things in this way. They always seem to be happy to take God's side against humanity, trading on only the "bad people" being in hell. — RolandTyme
Thinking about laws of physics is often a sign of mental illness. — EugeneW
Likening religiosity to mental illness is taking it a little too far. — ToothyMaw
It's an idiom. — baker
The afore-mentioned assumption is that people should do things that they enjoy, that they are "passionate" about, and that one's whole life can and should be filled with such things as much as possible. — baker
Or maybe the widely held and tabooed assumption that life is for eating, drinking, and making merry, is not justified. — baker
