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Pieman333272
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It’s very relevant. Your own type of people complain endlessly when I offer an emotional response to your argument. I’m reversing the argument. All this is is your opinion, your feelings. Nothing more valuable than the subjective words of an angry atheist. Give me hardcore logic or philosophy or science or admit it’s just what you think.The “emotional” aspect is not relevant.
I agree. How does that pose a problem?The deductive type of an argument presupposes that we can agree on a set of starting points (as axioms) and base the logical argument on them. (Without axioms there can be no deduction, I am sure you are aware of that.)
And here is the first stumbling block. Can we agree on the definition of such a simple concept as “benevolent”? In my vocabulary the word “benevolent” is very well defined. It designates a person who cares about others, who helps others, who is not aloof about other people’s pain, health, hunger etc. That person does not “outsource” the helping to others, but performs the help himself (as long as he is able to do it). No excuse that right now there is no help, but “later” there will be some reward.
I was about to say your definition was loaded then I saw that second paragraph. Anyway, I guess I could go along with that, if it leads into what I want to see.Now, it may happen that this person “stays his hand”, and does not perform the expected help, but in that case he (or his advocate) must explain very clearly and sufficiently why the route of “non-help” was preferable. Not just mumbling that “maybe” there is a very good reason, why the help was withheld, but we are unable to know that reason. That is not an argument (in everyday vernacular it is called BS-ing), and I want to make sure that you are aware of this, before we even start (if we ever get there).
Fine. Let me add that when one says, “maybe”, they often mean it works as an explanation but we can’t confirm it. If that’s what you mean, that’s a unfair because virtually every solution cannot be confirmed. If you mean them offering the sort of mystic quasi-knowledge “you can’t know God’s plan”, then I agree.Can we agree that this is the bare minimum for the definition of “benevolent”? If we cannot, there is no common ground, and we shall talk past each other. Can we agree that there is BS-ing in the form of “maybe”?
I’ve never done that. Thanks for the steryotype.I am not hopeful. When a conversation like this ends, and the believer runs out of arguments, he/she will invariably say: “How dare you to question God? Whatever God does to you is just, right, moral and fine, because God is the Creator. The (absolute) moral rules do not apply to God, since he is the rule-maker.”
As I said, I’m fine with that definition of benevolence but only with the latter definition of “BS-ing”.So, my friend, I will decline your challenge, UNLESS we can agree on the starting points and the rules of the conversation. If we can, then I will be happy to engage in a friendly dialog with you. The ball is in your court. As I said I am not hopeful. So far it never happened that the prospective opponent would have agreed to these terms. Not that these terms are unfair to either party. But for whatever reason they do not want to agree. Beats me, why?
Ad homenims don’t either. I’m offering hypothetical solutions. I never promised they were the case, I said they work.A perfect example of an unacceptable baloney. You must spell out exactly and precisely why is not rendering help is preferable to the help. “Maybe” simply does not cut it.