P
PRmerger
Guest
Not at all.I think that this Kolbe example is clouding the waters. It seems to be to come down to: fulfil the requirements that PR has outlined and we will accept that an atheist can sacrifice himself for others. That is, one can be moral without a recourse to a deity. Except that the requirements (as laid out in such detail by PR) are such that they preclude anyone who actually is an atheist from being able to do so. Apparently courage, heroism, altruism are not enough. Or even the act itself.
I have made my assertion. It is the atheistic equivalent of “I don’t believe in a god because there is insufficient evidence of its existence.”
That is: I don’t believe in the existence of the PAK because there is insufficient evidence of his/her existence.
Now, Christians counter the atheistic assertion with proofs for God’s existence, with evidence and arguments that we find compelling.
You* remain unconvinced. Your threshold, it appears, is exquisitely high here.
I am asking you to take the Christian position, so to speak, and attempt to counter my atheistic position and offer your evidence for the PAK’s existence.
And I trust that you will not object if I have the same demanding threshold that atheists have for the proofs we proffer for God’s existence.
I am open to the arguments for the PAKs existence, just as you all assert that you are open to the arguments for God’s existence…but I will take no less than the threshold of evidence that you demand for God’s existence.
And I will, of course, offer refutations to your evidence (provided that you give me the evidence–please, please, please!) that follow the atheistic paradigm.
Sound fair?
*You = non-believers