R
Russell_SA
Guest
My humanity and self-worth is not for sale. I perform my ethical actions because I have been convinced they are ethical. The positive reward is from the benefit I see that it has in the people around me. If this deity rewards me or sends me a punishment, then that’s on it for not convincing me that my actions were unethical. I am not a trained pet to perform actions without knowing if they are ethical or not. I will stand up and fight against a celestial North Korea regardless if it actually makes a difference or not in the end because I value bravery and see that as a virtue. But since there’s no difference than that deity’s existence and an empty sack at this point, I can’t even have a conversation with it to see what it’s standards are or not. I have to be able to have something that I can point to, to see if there is something there at all or not.Well, I think you would act a lot differently. If there was purpose in the ever-after for you, and that purpose came from God, it would mean you would live with God after your life, and that your life came from God.
The first huge difference would be for you to show gratitude. You would thank God for the opportunity to live forever.
Secondly, you would wonder and seek what it is that God wants for you.
To do this, you would use time to communicate with God.
Thirdly, you would make much different choices about what you do because you would realize that God wants some things that are different than what you would want on your own.
We all know the loop holes in the religion that allows people to be as selfish as they want and still walk through the gates in the end. Religion presents their deity as basically a computer program that they are trying to hack so that they can find the line to be as selfish as they want and still get through the gates in the end. I’ll be as decent a human as I have the ability to do and let the chips fall where they may, regardless of some eternal reward or punishment. If I don’t know that my actions may have bad results, that’s not my problem because I could not know that was a problem. If I knew that was a problem and didn’t mitigate the process, then it becomes my problem. There is a problem about how I want to be remembered and what legacy I want tied to my children. Ex: some of the germans that were part of the SS refused to have children because of their legacy and the fear that their practices were somehow genetic and did not want that to be passed on, regardless of their belief or disbelief in the supernatural.The difference here is that both views have to make changes now and apologize now. … One last though, you may think what you’re doing for your children is the best for their future. But do you really know? …
Sure, but that’s what you would expect from evolutionary processes though.That does seem to be right about how the evolutionary view works. However, there are a lot of problems.
Sounds like you are discussing Hard Solipsism, which no one has an answer to, even the solipsism people as well. To claim that you can not know something without absolute knowledge argument. But that’s not how we live our lives, use science, etc. If knowledge is soo loose about what is true or not, why not go to work tomorrow by walking out your 5th story window and fly to work? Science works, the process for understanding our reality works. It is repeatable, independently verifiable, falsifiable, etc. So is solving a problem with pi to the 4th decimal place and having ~100% repeatably repeated accurate results not solving the problem because we didn’t use the infinite value of pi? If problem A was solved with solution A and then with solution B, but there was no change in the answer, are we justified in claiming that solution A was better than solution B? No, no we are not. We have to have a way to tell the difference between which was better. So since we are not having a measurably different result by not using Hard Solipsism as the path to truth, that does not seem to be an actual problem for living our lives.I would say that faith is required even to know the truth about things, to use logic, to argue and use reasoning, to decide what to do, to establish a purpose. In fact, using methodological naturalism is an act of faith.
To say that the New Testament is not true is an act of faith.
You don’t know if God exists or not. But by faith, you choose to believe that God does not exist. By faith, you trust your own judgement about many things that you cannot know about.
How is that not the exact practice and application of “credulous”? To keep acting in the world for an idea of something that has yet to present itself as any different than a wished for reality, instead of actual reality? People follow all kinds of myths that lead them to be better people based on the idea of that thing, but is it actually there or not is what needs to be established to me first. Right now I can’t tell the difference between the imagined idea of the deity and the deity not being there at all. We have to actually be able to tell the difference between the two.God made life on earth an adventure. It’s a drama and a search. It is a love story.
It says a lot about God and why He created us. Yes, there is hiding and seeking. As we seek, we grow. We stretch ourselves. We learn virtue. We practice goodness.