R
R_Daneel
Guest
Imitation is the highest form of flattery.I’m always highly amused when I come across anyone equating incomprehensibility with **total **incomprehensibility.
Imitation is the highest form of flattery.I’m always highly amused when I come across anyone equating incomprehensibility with **total **incomprehensibility.
Not if it is ironic…]Imitation is the highest form of flattery.![]()
You fail to recognise that there are degrees of (in)comprehensibility just as there degrees of intelligibility…But adding the word “total” to incomprehensibility is just poetic, flowery language, and does not add one iota of information to it. If something is partly comprehensible, then it is not incomprehensible.
“freezing” indicates **a specific degree **of coldness whereas incomprehensible does not. Since its literal meaning is “unable to grasp completely” it does not necessarily rule out all comprehension. It is defined as “impossible or very difficult to understand”…If you say it is freezing cold outside, you don’t need to add “icy, freezing cold”.
The freezing part already contains all the necessary information, the addition is just unnecessary “fluff”, or “filler”.
You are the one who introduced the distraction by evading the question with direct reference to the OP:And don’t start another distraction about the beauty of poetic, flowery language!)
An understanding of true love and it relationship to free-will would go a long way toward eliminating the “seemingly hypocritical attitude”.R_Daneel, I think a better question to ask would be: “If you change anything in the world, or even a great many things, what would it or they be?” If people have a different answer from the original question then they are being inconsistent.
What’s at the core here is reconciling the obvious flaws in the world with the “God has a perfect plan” idea. What I find most astonishing is that so many people say they would change nothing, and then go about their lives trying to improve their condition and that of those around them. I’d like to know how they harmonize this seemingly hypocritical attitude.
Explain.An understanding of true love and it relationship to free-will would go a long way toward eliminating the “seemingly hypocritical attitude”.
I’m one of those people, Locke. And while not agnostic or atheist, I do not believe in the Christian presentation of God. It is too shallow and materialist, enabling such questions as the OP to be even thought of. And as people tend to have a misconception of Eternity as having a factor of duration, so they imbue the God with personality and both the ability and motivation to intervene in human affairs. This is patently silly from a perspective more congruent with Reality and only believable at a certain order of awareness, even if the individual is very highly developed otherwise. There are good reasons for this.What I find most astonishing is that so many people say they would change nothing, and then go about their lives trying to improve their condition and that of those around them. I’d like to know how they harmonize this seemingly hypocritical attitude.
You actually read the whole thing?In Spiration: argument no workee.
The assumption behind the thread is definitely silly; the treatment of the thread as a whole so far, I’m afraid, is still serious. I was hoping to change that, since it shouldn’t get such credit.Silly thread? Maybe.
I couldn’t possibly have any idea what you’re talking about here. And if I could and did, I wouldn’t know why you think and say such about it. Of course, if I somehow did grasp the reason why, then it’s not like I’d know what it is your idea refers to – in any sense or on any real level whatsoever.But God is not amenable to logic or intellection.
YeppersYou actually read the whole thing?
I think that it brings out an interesting feature endemic with faithers: they believe God to be a person, and therefore can actually have such considerations as this and take them quasi seriously at least.The assumption behind the thread is definitely silly; the treatment of the thread as a whole so far, I’m afraid, is still serious. I was hoping to change that, since it shouldn’t get such credit.
That’s OK, don’t fret about it. I wasn’t talking to you. To someone on the same page as what I said it would be abundantly clear what I meant. Such are fora.I couldn’t possibly have any idea what you’re talking about here. And if I could and did, I wouldn’t know why you think and say such about it. Of course, if I somehow did grasp the reason why, then it’s not like I’d know what it is your idea refers to – in any sense or on any real level whatsoever.
I was calling you out on what I considered a cheap shot - calling the Catholics position hyprocritical.Explain.
I think I explained myself clearly enough. What was cheap about it? (Or did you just not like the content?)I was calling you out on what I considered a cheap shot - calling the Catholics position hyprocritical.
Well the world is hardly perfect, is it? And this is what I pointed out, the inconsistency between intellectually maintaining that the world was created perfect and living out a life that says otherwise.God is a perfect being. He created the world and it creatures. By definition, the way way He created must be perfect. One aspect of this perfection is the provision for reciprocol love (mutual self-giving for the benefit of the others). This aspect requires that we be free to love. For love not freely given is not love.
It then follows that freedom to love includes the freedom to not love. Any improvements that humans pursue are attempts at increasing our choices to love as opposed to not loving.
That is human’s doing by exercising his free will.I think I explained myself clearly enough. What was cheap about it? (Or did you just not like the content?)
Well the world is hardly perfect, is it?
And it appears that you are unwilling to make the distinction between God’s creation and the human decisions that have caused the imperfection.And this is what I pointed out, the inconsistency between intellectually maintaining that the world was created perfect and living out a life that says otherwise.
Then you must offer a definition of these terms or ask for them.On a side note: You can’t just throw abstract phrases like “true love” and “free will” into a one-sentence rebuttal in a philosophical discussion and expect to be taken seriously.
Firstly, you ignored my question.That is human’s doing by exercising his free will.
And it appears that you are unwilling to make the distinction between God’s creation and the human decisions that have caused the imperfection.
No, sir, the onus is on you since you used them in a deliberately vague context. And you still haven’t brought “true love” into your argument, making me suspect it was pure obfuscation.Then you must offer a definition of these terms or ask for them.
How so?Firstly, you ignored my question.
Yes. Point?Secondly, can a perfect construct make itself less perfect?
Yes. It’s called sin.Could God’s creation, perfect in and of itself, decrease its own perfection?
No. Just a execise of the human will against God’s will.That would require imperfection, wouldn’t it?
See post 152.And by perfect I mean “being complete of its kind and without defect or blemish.”
No, sir, the onus is on you since you used them in a deliberately vague context. And you still haven’t brought “true love” into your argument, making me suspect it was pure obfuscation.
Well I was wondering how I was making a cheap shot, but that’s irrelevant now I suppose.How so?
So you’re saying that a perfect creation/construct/whatever can sin. I’m not sure I follow you. It seems a contradiction in terms. If something can sin, it’s not perfect. Furthermore, the logical conclusion is that God is capable of making himself imperfect.Yes. It’s called sin.
Which is imperfection in your view, is it not? So a flaw in a perfect creation.No. Just a execise of the human will against God’s will.
I don’t know what equivating means, but if you’re trying to conflate the terms “true love” and “perfection” I simply can’t let you get away with it.I believe you are equivating the meaning of perfect.
is a quote of great excellence an accuracy. Thank you.The most savage controversies are those about matters as to which there is no good evidence either way. Persecution is used in theology, not in mathematics because in mathematics there is knowledge, but in theology there is only opinion. - Bertrand Russell
Your final point is without evidence. You have failed to engage in the points made. It appears that you care not to understand the explanations given.Well I was wondering how I was making a cheap shot, but that’s irrelevant now I suppose.
So you’re saying that a perfect creation/construct/whatever can sin. I’m not sure I follow you. It seems a contradiction in terms. If something can sin, it’s not perfect. Furthermore, the logical conclusion is that God is capable of making himself imperfect.
Which is imperfection in your view, is it not? So a flaw in a perfect creation.
I don’t know what equivating means, but if you’re trying to conflate the terms “true love” and “perfection” I simply can’t let you get away with it.
My final point would be this: philosophical argument aside, there’s simply no evidence for your position. Free will can only account for moral evil. Humans have only been around for, at most, 200,00 years, while disease, predation, and natural disasters have been around for billions more. All you have is an argument from religious authority. At best you make the case that an initial perfect creation was logically possible. (and at this point I don’t find us reaching that conclusion)
Don’t shut down so quickly, at least explain a little. What part of my final point is without evidence? What points have I failed to engage? (Remember, disagreeing with you is not the same as failing to engage)Your final point is without evidence. You have failed to engage in the points made. It appears that you care not to understand the explanations given.