What would you do if it were proven...?

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Hi,
For those who are atheists - “What would you do if it were proven to your satisfaction that God does exist

Thanks for taking the time.
I didn’t bother wading through 50+ pages of replies, so I don’t know what twists the conversation has taken. But anyway.

If the Christian God were proven to my satisfaction, I’d be depressed, most likely. A choice between an afterlife of eternal suffering or one of eternal praise isn’t much of a choice, and if I have to make endless propitiations in THIS life just to be in the running for the lesser of two evils, that adds insult to injury.
 
I am not aware that God would demand us to kill our children. Also, its not our children. Given a truly christian understanding, each child is a creation of God, and thus they are Gods children. We are merely looking after Gods children. Also, hell, when the concept is properly understood, is a necessary consequence of freewill; we all have the freedom to embrace the opposite of love forever, and true loves respects peoples freewill.
For the life of me I can’t see how a destiny of eternal torture for the majority of human beings is a necessary consequence of free will. As a determinist, I technically do not believe in free will in the sense that there is some power of - to put in terms of your usename - “mind over matter”. The mind IS matter. Still, that does not rid us of responsibility for our actions (an actual philosopher of determinism can explain why; I just see no reason to believe in free will on scientific grounds).
I am not aware that this is true. This is not my understanding of the meaning of Catholic faith. It also depends on the context in which somebody expresses faith. First of all Human-beings, regardless of being agnostic atheist or religious, in general have faith in many things they deem either important to their humanity or in something that makes the best sense of their human nature. For example Gods existence makes the best sense of the existence of objective moral values, and people conclude this because it certainly appears evident that it is truly and objectively immoral to rape children. This is not a blind faith, but rather a faith based on human experience. This idea that practical faith merely applies to the religious is false.
Again, I am no moral philosopher, but the claim that faith is required to believe that there are objective moral facts is not accurate. Desire utilitarianism, for example, is an objective moral system that does not appeal to intrinsic value or other faith-based foundations for moral beliefs. Look it up.
I hardly think that Catholicism can account for objective moral facts either, though.
Secondly God favors faith if it allows a person to come close to God and he values it in that context alone; but he does not demand it as an absolute standard when approaching truth. Thirdly, when God speaks of having faith, he is speaking about Gods saving grace, that God at some point in history has come to save humanity. This is a different kind of faith in comparison to having faith in Gods “existence”. Proving Gods metaphysical existence does not do away with the necessity of having faith in Gods saving grace especially given humanities fallen state, effecting us both rationally and morally. If we doubt Gods existence, it is because we are irrational and not because Gods existence cannot reasonably be known. In fact there are places in the bible where Gods existence is said to be demonstratable, and that the intelligent atheists who believes that the universe is rational has no excuse.

I agree that proving God’s existence would not prove that God can provide “saving grace”. If that is the case, what reason do you have to think that faith in such a proposition is justified?

Yes, there are places in the Bible where God’s existence is clearly evident to humans, which makes me wonder God does not provide such evidence to people in post-biblical times. Does that mean I do have an excuse for being an atheist?
Unless you are are talking about “objective moral law”, the word “discriminatory” is morally meaningless, and its use in this sentence is just a deceptive attempt to create a false sense of wrong where none is rationally justified.
As I have already explained, this is not necessarily so. Morality is rationally justified in a naturalistic universe.
 
Assuming this is the Christian God we’re talking about here, I would probably never have children, for fear that God would demand that I kill such children to prove my “faith” to him (or send them to hell for whatever reason).
Yeah - that happens all the time. :rotfl:

It’s a bit like saying you’ll never have children for fear of them spontaneously combusting, but a bit less likely. You of course realise that the Christian God never actually fulfilled that demand? As for hell, well, it’s always up to us
🙂
On a lighter note, this reminds me of the part of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy in which God “vanishes in a puff of logic” when he proves that he exists, since God values faith over belief that he exists based on reason, so he would never try to prove he exists in the first place. Which makes one wonder why God values faith so much anyway. 🤷
Funny, but regardless of how reasonable an answer God may be, the idiocy of mankind leads us to invent appealing fictions to deny Him :eek: - His rude habit of not leaving a literal thumb print, at the end of the day. And, of course, the very nature of reality denies absolute knowledge for at least 99.9% of us.
You’re kidding, right? Atheism is anything but “socially acceptable”. Perhaps the non-religious lifestyle is, but not atheism itself. America, at least, is not atheist-friendly. There is “under God” in our national pledge (which is as discriminatory as putting “under Jesus” in the pledge). Some states don’t even allow atheists to hold government positions. And if you ever admit that you are an atheist in most of America, be prepared to be treated with as much disdain and condescension as the quoted poster does.

And please, stop with the “atheists are selfish, immoral hedonists” line. You’re free to claim that we have no reason to be moral (I would debate that, of course), but there are many morally sound, conscientious atheists. Bill Gates is an example.
Well, I’m largely talking about the nature of things in the UK, since this is where both Candide and I reside

Wasn’t particularly pushing the atheists are selfish, immoral hedonist line, was I??? But yes, I’ve yet to have a justified reason presented to me…

Bill Gates!!! The ultimate ruthless Capitalist, and Lord of the permatemps - moral?!? Anyway, I thought he was supposed to be agnostic…who else are you going to push - Carnegie???

:rotfl:
 
Yeah - that happens all the time. :rotfl:

It’s a bit like saying you’ll never have children for fear of them spontaneously combusting, but a bit less likely. You of course realise that the Christian God never actually fulfilled that demand? As for hell, well, it’s always up to us
🙂
Yes, but the lesson of that story is that a faithful person should be prepared to do whatever God asks of him/her, even if it is horrendously evil.

Funny that you simply brush the hell issue aside like it’s no big deal. If I were a parent, I would never forgive myself for bringing into the world a soul that would eventually be damned to an eternity of suffering. Especially if I were in heaven; how can you be joyful when you know your loved ones are screaming in agony to no avail?!

My parents are Catholic, and let me tell ya, they don’t seem eager to believe I’m “really” an atheist, or that I really will go to hell when I die. I don’t blame them. It must be extremely painful to watch one’s son become disillusioned of all one’s religious (and political) beliefs despite years of Catholic upbringing, knowing that he is walking down a path to hell. This is especially so if he is not the amoral monster one expected him to become after abandoning religion. I have not done anything immoral (by secular standards, of course) as an atheist that I did not do as a Catholic, yet my parents still probably believe I will be damned.

Maybe Jesus was right about the whole “family members will turn against each other because of me” (paraphrasing) saying.
Funny, but regardless of how reasonable an answer God may be, the idiocy of mankind leads us to invent appealing fictions to deny Him :eek: - His rude habit of not leaving a literal thumb print, at the end of the day. And, of course, the very nature of reality denies absolute knowledge for at least 99.9% of us.
“Appealing fictions”? Such as?

I don’t see why it is unreasonable for me to expect any more evidence from God than the paltry amount he has given so far. I’m not expecting a literal thumbprint, but I am expecting a tad more than hearsay, faith, and tricky logical proofs that are actually unsound (William Lane Craig, for instance, loves those). Perhaps a universe that actually appears designed to accommodate humans, rather than the other way around? Or a less wasteful process by which he could have created said humans than evolution by natural selection? Or a coherent, consistent holy book that is historically reliable, and that has not been verified as the written work of multiple (non-eyewitness) authors with different political and social goals that influenced such writings?

I am not expecting “absolute knowledge” any more than a jury in a trial is asking for absolute knowledge that the accused person is guilty. To suggest that the kind of faith that theists use to justify belief in God is ubiquitous in other areas of our lives is absurd.
Bill Gates!!! The ultimate ruthless Capitalist, and Lord of the permatemps - moral?!? Anyway, I thought he was supposed to be agnostic…who else are you going to push - Carnegie???
Now I know you’re kidding. Bill Gates is not a “ruthless capitalist”. He has used his wealth in order to make significant differences in the world by helping those less fortunate. Have you heard his commencement speech at Harvard? He has a huge heart. Rich people are not necessarily immoral.

You’re right, “agnostic” is the better word, but that doesn’t make my point any less valid.
 
For the life of me I can’t see how a destiny of eternal torture for the majority of human beings is a necessary consequence of free will.
Maybe you will find out why one day.
As a determinist, I technically do not believe in free will in the sense that there is some power of - to put in terms of your usename - “mind over matter”.
You have every rational reason to believe that your rational mind is not synonymous with any object that is made up of individual non-rational atoms.
The mind IS matter.
I see you like that idea; to bad that it doesn’t correspond to the reality of human experience, nobody has ever found a blue elephant in a human brain.
Still, that does not rid us of responsibility for our actions
Assertions don’t count as rational arguments.
(an actual philosopher of determinism can explain why).
Pretending as if there are philosophers or a system of philosophy which has proven your point without demonstrating this to be the case is deception.
Again, I am no moral philosopher, but the claim that faith is required to believe that there are objective moral facts is not accurate.
First, accepting the existence of an absolute objective being, an ultimate reality that is by nature objective eternal moral perfection which created all potential realities and sustains them in being, is required in-order for objective moral standards to exist.
Desire utilitarianism, for example, is an objective moral system
Its a subjective moral system based on desires; whether collective or otherwise. It has nothing to do with the existence of an objective moral standard or objective moral truth.
.
that does not appeal to intrinsic value or other faith-based foundations for moral beliefs.
Your right. Instead it appeals to the twisting of words and concepts in-order to present a false representation of objective moral values in-order to deceive people into thinking its something that it is not…
I hardly think that Catholicism can account for objective moral facts either, though.
I see that not being a moral philosopher does not stop you from expressing what you think you know or would like to be the case.
I agree that proving God’s existence would not prove that God can provide “saving grace”. If that is the case, what reason do you have to think that faith in such a proposition is justified?
I don’t think you want to know
Yes, there are places in the Bible where God’s existence is clearly evident to humans, which makes me wonder God does not provide such evidence to people in post-biblical times. Does that mean I do have an excuse for being an atheist?
I am wondering why you have taken what I have said out of context, and instead begun complaining about not having a direct experience of God. Back to the original context, as far as it being possible to rationally demonstrate the existence of God, the statement only applies to rational people who choose to approach reality as a rational object, rather than as an assumed free launch that popped out of absolutely nothing and exists for nothing else but the expression of their desires. If you are indeed a rational person, with a reasonable IQ and possessing the ability to think beyond your personal prejudices against Christianity, you will eventually come to understand why you should believe in the existence of God. If you don’t have the capacity to think rationally and thus find it difficult to understand why God must exist, if you are honest God will not judge you for your ignorance.
As I have already explained, this is not necessarily so.
You haven’t explained anything; you just asserted the possibility. Why you would want others to explain themselves rationally when you are evidently happy with mere assertions, is beyond me.
Morality is rationally justified in a naturalistic universe.
Another assertion which you dare not give evidence for, because you have none.
 
If my beliefs were proven “to my satisfaction” to be wrong, I supose that would change my beliefs. The way your question is phrased really leaves no other option.
 
Maybe you will find out why one day.
Gee, isn’t that a convenient way of getting out of the responsibility that you have to defend your position!
You have every rational reason to believe…
Any neuroscientist can explain to you why dualism is a dubious position. By your logic, my body can’t be a male human body just because it is not composed entirely of “male” cells. Chemical reactions in the brain do produce thoughts. That is a fact, and I am sorry that you are too blinded by your speciesist hubris to accept it.
I see you like that idea…
You don’t have to. That blue elephant that I may imagine in my thoughts doesn’t exist, but the chemicals that cause imaginative thought do exist, and I perceive those thoughts in my “mind” as a blue elephant. Just because you (or no other person) don’t understand how exactly naturalism can account for thought, it doesn’t mean anyone has any reason to think that there is an immaterial aspect to the mind. Time and time again, science is revealing the human mind to be nothing more than the product of chemical reactions. For instance, injuries to certain areas of the brain will prevent the injured person from accessing certain memories or thoughts, because those thoughts do not exist anymore. They require a functioning brain.

You show me a human without a brain who can think, and I’ll show you a blue elephant in a brain.
Assertions don’t count as rational arguments.
I can’t tell you how many times that thought crosses my mind as I debate Catholics!
Pretending as if…
I am not pretending. Ever heard of Daniel Dennet or Sam Harris? They are more than just spokesmen for “new atheism”; they are neuroscientists.
First, accepting the existence…
That is false for the same reason that it would be false to assert that there are no objectively good strategies for winning a game of chess just because there may not be any “absolute objective beings” to state such strategies. Morality is only meaningful as a concept insofar as it is a means to a certain end. Moral facts do not have to be as objective as mathematical facts to be considered binding on humans.
Its a subjective moral system based on desires; whether collective or otherwise. It has nothing to do with the existence of an objective moral standard or objective moral truth.
You still have provided no decent reason for me to consider Catholic morality an objective moral system, so I have no standard to go on that would tell me what you consider an objective moral system. An objective moral system is one that is true regardless of the opinions or preferences of any sentient beings, and desire utilitarianism is such a system. Regardless of whether I think murder is right or wrong, it is an objective fact that all people have desires-as-ends and desires-as-means that they want fulfilled and that motivate them do certain actions. The entire philosophy stems from that fact.

For any moral system, some subjectivity is required. In the Catholic system’s case, the subjective basis is God’s moral preferences and nature. God could have had any nature and any preferences possible. If he couldn’t, then that would imply that some greater being gave God his attributes for a specific reason. How else could God’s only - literally, only - attitude toward homosexual acts be negative?

Essentially, God’s nature is arbitrary, therefore morality is completely meaningless if God is the basis for it.
 
Your right. Instead it…
Again, this is true of the Catholic moral system.
I see that not being a moral philosopher does not stop you from expressing what you think you know or would like to be the case.
Pot, meet kettle.
I don’t think you want to know
You’re right, I don’t want to know, because I know that your answer will be just as unsatisfactory as that of the numerous other Catholics I have consulted on this matter.
I am wondering why you have taken what I have said out of context…
Strawmen galore.
I’m sorry if you think I have taken your statement out of context, but if you do not want that to happen, stop using ambiguous language. You said that parts of the Bible say that God’s existence is evident, and I agree. The Bible makes that point obvious. But its “proofs” of God are abysmal.
Secondly, if you are really going to insist on using the tired “atheism says the universe just randomly popped out of nothing and just happened to end up with the appearance of intelligibility” canard, we can end this discussion right here, because you clearly don’t understand atheism. Your statement is as dishonest as if I claimed that Catholicism says that God popped into existence out of absolutely nothing and used magic to make the universe. God does not get a free ticket out of having to be explained that the universe does not get.
If you are indeed a rational person…
Congratulations, you have officially established yourself as an arrogant debater who is not worthy of my time because you have the hubris to assert that I not only have “personal prejudices against Christianity” - rather than decent logical objections - but also an inadequate IQ! Christian humility at work, everybody! :rolleyes:
If you don’t have the capacity to think rationally and thus find it difficult to understand why God must exist, if you are honest God will not judge you for your ignorance.

You, sir, are the most intellectually dishonest and elitist Catholic I have ever communicated with.
You haven’t explained anything; you just asserted the possibility. Why you would want others to explain themselves rationally when you are evidently happy with mere assertions, is beyond me.
Will the hypocrisy never cease?
Another assertion which you dare not give evidence for, because you have none.
I did give evidence for it. You are just too blinded by your snobbery to give a care what a stupid atheist like me has to say.

Pathetic.
 
MOM2 - excellent post (#963). You sound very knowledgable and it was well written too.

Benedictus2 - you raise some good points, ask some good questions (as always :)) but I think you may be focusing a little too much on the randomness of evolution. Yes there is some randomness involved, but there’s a lot more to it than that. (Perhaps you do know this, but even a little bit of randomness is too much for you to accept?) Well anyway, that is just the impression I get from your last few posts.
But the randomness is what divides atheistic and theistic belief.

As I have explained, if there is no God (disregarding the totally illogical underlying premise that we therefore came from nothing) , then everything becomes completely random.

If you see a carriage then a steam powered vehicle then the latest Masserati, this upward complexity cannot have happened by pure chance no matter how long you give it.

But if there is God, then this upward movement from bacteria, to T-Rex to CAF-Poster, cannot be random. Such precision in “engineering” just cannot be put down to chance.

A simple example is putting all the components of a computer in a box and then jiggling it around for as long as you wish. Assuming that the parts don’t break in the rocking and shaking, what are the chances that at the end of billions of years you will come up with a fully functional computer?

And this is exactly the problem with evolution if we stick to Darwinian principles. Everythng happened by chance. That essentially is what evolution means.

Once you say that someone designed the parts and built into the parts the capcity to mutate, attract, select, etc,etc - well that is no longer evolution but design - super intelligent design.

I don’t think we can say of this upward movement towards complexity that there is such a thing as a little random or a lot random. Random is random. It is not like we can say this atom was allowed to move freely and this atom was held in placed waiting for the moving atom to get attracted to it, that is just non-sensical.
 
Secondly, if you are really going to insist on using the tired “atheism says the universe just randomly popped out of nothing and just happened to end up with the appearance of intelligibility” canard, we can end this discussion right here, because you clearly don’t understand atheism.
Then please show that our perception of atheism (that we popped out of nothing) is indeed canard.

How does atheism account for existence and intelligibility?

If you have already explained that in a recent post, please oblige me by citing post number. I have only had a cursory reading of your discussion with MOM2 and MB.
 
Gee, isn’t that a convenient way of getting out of the responsibility that you have to defend your position!
You got as good as you gave. In fact I gave you more than you deserved.
Any neuroscientist can explain to you why dualism is a dubious position.
That depends on what you mean by dualism, and their disagreement is based on their philosophical world-view, not science. There is evidence in science which gives evidence for a correlation between the mind and brain; they work together. However, There is nothing in science that necessitates the idea that the mind and the brain are one and the same thing, and it is not reasonable to think that they are since they clearly are not.
By your logic, my body can’t be a male human body just because it is not composed entirely of “male” cells.
That is a fallacious representation of my argument. Sexuality is an expression of information in correlation with the processes of bodily organs. We recognise a person as male in respect of that collective functionality. None of this requires for there to be individuals “male” atoms, since what makes a person male is produced and is accounted for by how atoms “behave” in correlation with objectively meaningful information. It does not require a fundamental change in the nature of the whole in relation to the nature of its parts in order to be what it is. Its mechanistic and teleological.

My argument was that you cannot reasonable deduce rationality from that which is made up of fundamentally non-rational parts. The mind is more than the sum of the physical brain. Hence my name.
Chemical reactions in the brain do produce thoughts. That is a fact, and I am sorry that you are too blinded by your specialist hubris to accept it.
You enjoy to no end making assertions, and that’s probably because you cannot back it up. It depends on what you mean by “produce thoughts”. The brain evidently processes information and stores it. This information has a correlation with our conceptual thoughts. That is what science says. But you and every other wannabe atheist on the planet go a step further beyond the evidence by saying that the brain and rational self knowledge is the same thing in nature.
You don’t have to. That blue elephant that I may imagine in my thoughts doesn’t exist,
So now you are saying that your imagination doesn’t exist. Is that you professional understanding?:rolleyes:
but the chemicals that cause imaginative thought do exist, and I perceive those thoughts in my “mind” as a blue elephant.
You cannot perceive absolutely nothing. Asserting something doesn’t make what you are saying any more rational then it was when you thought of it.
Just because you (or no other person) don’t understand how exactly naturalism can account for thought, it doesn’t mean anyone has any reason to think that there is an immaterial aspect to the mind.
Nobody has ever found a physical blue elephant in a human brain. Concepts are evidently not physical
Time and time again, science is revealing the human mind to be nothing more than the product of chemical reactions.
Science has never produced evidence that the mind is synonymous in nature to physical processes. Correlation or co-dependency is not the same as saying that the brain and the mind are the same thing. There is nothing about a process in and of itself that implies rationality. You are merely assuming that they are the same because of your commitment to naturalism; which has nothing to do with science.
For instance, injuries to certain areas of the brain will prevent the injured person from accessing certain memories or thoughts, because those thoughts do not exist anymore. They require a functioning brain.
The mind requires the brain in-order to process information. When a part of that processing unit is damaged, the brain loses its ability to access the information that the brain had stored. So what?
You show me a human without a brain who can think, and I’ll show you a blue elephant in a brain.
You seem to think that a Christian is of the opinion that a mind is not co-dependent on the brain in order to process information. I have never said that. I said that the brain is not synonymous in nature to the rational mind. There is a difference.
 
Ever heard of Daniel Dennet or Sam Harris? They are more than just spokesmen for “new atheism”; they are neuroscientists.
They also speak as philosophers of mind dedicated to atheism and the naturalist world-view which is intrinsic to a disbelief in God (even if they are too dishonest to admit it to themselves that they are doing philosophy and not science), and perhaps one day you will understand the difference.
That is false for the same reason that it would be false to assert that there are no objectively good strategies for winning a game of chess just because there may not be any “absolute objective beings” to state such strategies. Morality is only meaningful as a concept insofar as it is a means to a certain end. Moral facts do not have to be as objective as mathematical facts to be considered binding on humans.
Why do you keep asserting things without ever trying to produce a rational demonstration of your position? Oh i know, you don’t know what you are talking about.
You still have provided no decent reason for me to consider Catholic morality an objective moral system, so I have no standard to go on that would tell me what you consider an objective moral system.
I don’t care to give you any reason either cause I know what kind of person you are. If you cannot see that raping a small child is objectively wrong, and that therefore there is such a thing as an objective moral standard, there is not much hope for you.
An objective moral system is one that is true regardless of the opinions or preferences of any sentient beings,
Correct
and desire utilitarianism is such a system.
false; since preference is a matter of desire.
Regardless of whether I think murder is right or wrong, it is an objective fact that all people have desires-as-ends and desires-as-means that they want fulfilled and that motivate them do certain actions. The entire philosophy stems from that fact.
So if I want to rape a small child then I have the objective moral right to do so because its my desire? You’re sick and so is your philosophy!!!
For any moral system, some subjectivity is required.
Experience is certainly required in order to know right and wrong, just like experience is required to know that there is a physical reality. Just like a truly objective physical reality exists regardless of your existence, so does moral truth exist regardless of your experience, opinion or subjectivity. It is always true that raping a small child is wrong, regardless of whether or not human beings know or care to know about it.
In the Catholic system’s case, the subjective basis is God’s moral preferences and nature.
Moral law is an expression of Gods intrinsically perfect nature.
God could have had any nature and any preferences possible.
That is not the God that Catholics believe in, but I am sure that you enjoyed making that straw-man.
If he couldn’t, then that would imply that some greater being gave God his attributes for a specific reason.
Why? Arbitrarily stringing words together will not help your case.
How else could God’s only - literally, only - attitude toward homosexual acts be negative?
I don’t understand what you are saying here. Homosexuality is wrong because it contradicts our fundamental nature as sexual persons. True Sexuality, as an identity, begins with genda identity; not with attraction. In this respect, homosexuality is not a true expression of what we are insofar as we are men and women, and is in fact a disorder of what we are, because it does not fulfil the nature of being a man or a women. A part of being good, is to be true to your nature and to absolutely value your identity regardless of desire. To be absolutely true to what you are, the nature that God has given us, is what God asks of us because it is apart of Gods plan for the moral and existential fulfilment of the human race. To be true to you, is an act of honesty and gratitude. To do otherwise for the sake of attraction is selfish and thus it goes against Gods good plan and the fulfilment of humanity.
Essentially, God’s nature is arbitrary, therefore morality is completely meaningless if God is the basis for it.
Gods nature is not arbitrary.
 
And please, stop with the “atheists are selfish, immoral hedonists” line. You’re free to claim that we have no reason to be moral (I would debate that, of course), but there are many morally sound, conscientious atheists. Bill Gates is an example.
Bill Gates morally sound!!!:rotfl::rotfl::rotfl:

So you’ve obviously not heard of the foul practices of Microsoft.
 
That depends on what you mean by dualism, and their disagreement is based on their philosophical world-view, not science. There is evidence in science which gives evidence for a correlation between the mind and brain; they work together. However, There is nothing in science that necessitates the idea that the mind and the brain are one and the same thing, and it is not reasonable to think that they are since they clearly are not.
They clearly are. Your assertion that the mind is anything more than physical processes that we perceive as “thoughts” is baseless, because you have not demonstrated any evidence that this is so. Yours is an unfalsifiable hypothesis, just like the hypothesis of God in general. Therefore it is not scientific, but philosophical. If you are willing to admit that the only disagreement between us on this matter is philosophical, great.
My argument was that you cannot reasonable deduce rationality from that which is made up of fundamentally non-rational parts. The mind is more than the sum of the physical brain. Hence my name.
I see no reason to think that this is so.
You enjoy to no end making assertions, and that’s probably because you cannot back it up. It depends on what you mean by “produce thoughts”. The brain evidently processes information and stores it. This information has a correlation with our conceptual thoughts. That is what science says. But you and every other wannabe atheist on the planet go a step further beyond the evidence by saying that the brain and rational self knowledge is the same thing in nature.
That is not necessarily what I am saying. I’m saying I know that the mind is purely physical, but there is no evidence to my knowledge that suggests the contrary.
So now you are saying that your imagination doesn’t exist. Is that you professional understanding?:rolleyes:
You’re right. Strictly speaking, my imagination exists only as the physical parts that produce thoughts that I perceive as imaginary concepts. As far as I know, at least.
You cannot perceive absolutely nothing. Asserting something doesn’t make what you are saying any more rational then it was when you thought of it.
“You cannot perceive absolutely nothing”? What? Do you mean that it is impossible to perceive things that don’t really exist? I disagree with that.
Nobody has ever found a physical blue elephant in a human brain. Concepts are evidently not physical
Right, because concepts don’t really exist. My concept of a blue elephant doesn’t exist based on the typical definition of existence - that which is composed of matter or energy.
Science has never produced evidence that the mind is synonymous in nature to physical processes. Correlation or co-dependency is not the same as saying that the brain and the mind are the same thing. There is nothing about a process in and of itself that implies rationality. You are merely assuming that they are the same because of your commitment to naturalism; which has nothing to do with science.
My “commitment to naturalism” is justified, because everything we humans know about the universe confirms naturalism. Perhaps your inability to conceive of a naturalistic explanation for rationality is your own flaw, not the flaw of naturalism. Scientists are willing to admit that they don’t know everything. That does not mean that our ignorance is a justification for throwing naturalism out the window.
The mind requires the brain in-order to process information. When a part of that processing unit is damaged, the brain loses its ability to access the information that the brain had stored. So what?
If that is the case, then how can you justify your belief that your mind lives on in the afterlife, if it is dependent on a physical brain?
You seem to think that a Christian is of the opinion that a mind is not co-dependent on the brain in order to process information. I have never said that. I said that the brain is not synonymous in nature to the rational mind. There is a difference.
Then the mind is no more immortal than the brain.
 
Morality is only meaningful as a concept insofar as it is a means to a certain end. Moral facts do not have to be as objective as mathematical facts to be considered binding on humans.
Means to what ends and whose ends? And why is it not necessary for moral facts to be objective?
An objective moral system is one that is true regardless of the opinions or preferences of any sentient beings, and desire utilitarianism is such a system.
Huh? And how does desire utilitarianism become true regardless of any preferences of any sensient beings? First, off what exactly do you mean by desire utilitarianism.
Regardless of whether I think murder is right or wrong, it is an objective fact that all people have desires-as-ends and desires-as-means that they want fulfilled and that motivate them do certain actions. The entire philosophy stems from that fact.
And how does that make it moral? Isn’t morality a case of the rightness or wrongness of something?
For any moral system, some subjectivity is required. In the Catholic system’s case, the subjective basis is God’s moral preferences and nature.
Subjective means that the moral system is designed by the person that is supposed to espouse and act out that morality.

When the moral system is not based on one’s personal preference then that morality is no longer subjective. If I abide by your moral standards and I make you my moral compass then my morality is no longer subjective.
God could have had any nature and any preferences possible.
How is that so?
If he couldn’t, then that would imply that some greater being gave God his attributes for a specific reason.
Huh? Again, how is that so?
How else could God’s only - literally, only - attitude toward homosexual acts be negative?
How about because it is not what He created sexuality for?
Essentially, God’s nature is arbitrary, therefore morality is completely meaningless if God is the basis for it.
How is God’s nature arbitrary?
 
That is not necessarily what I am saying. I’m saying I know that the mind is purely physical, but there is no evidence to my knowledge that suggests the contrary.
Okay, if the mind is purely physical then please prove it to be so. And I don’t mean the brain, but the mind. If you know, then you must have some empirical evidence to support this knowledge.
My “commitment to naturalism” is justified, because everything we humans know about the universe confirms naturalism.
No it is not justified since not everything we know about the universe is not necessarily everything that can be known about the universe. For all we know, what we know about it is only 0.0002% of what can be known about the universe so what makes you so smug?
Perhaps your inability to conceive of a naturalistic explanation for rationality is your own flaw, not the flaw of naturalism.
So therefore you are similarly flawed because your explanation for rationality does not explain rationality either.
Scientists are willing to admit that they don’t know everything.
How refreshing.
That does not mean that our ignorance is a justification for throwing naturalism out the window.
No. It simply means that one must not worship at naturalism and think that naturalism is it. The scientific method is useful and good, the ism is not.
If that is the case, then how can you justify your belief that your mind lives on in the afterlife, if it is dependent on a physical brain?
Perhaps what MoM2 is saying is that the Mind uses the brain to express itself so long as that expression requires physical expression. So long as the physical body is alive then the mind needs the brain to communicate and to understand the physical world. But since in the after life, one has no need to communicate or sense the physical world, then it has not use for the brain.
Then the mind is no more immortal than the brain.
You come to this conclusion because of your faulty understanding of what MoM2 meant or at least in what I think MoM2 meant. He can of course correct me on that one.
 
They also…
The fact that their naturalism is philosophical and not strictly scientific is as irrelevant as the fact that the claims of Christian apologists are philosophical and not scientific. That doesn’t make either of their philosophies false. The difference between the person who believes in an immaterial mind that exists outside the brain, and the person who believes that the mind is synonymous with the brain, is that the latter view is more consistent with our prior knowledge about the world. Let me ask you this: Do you believe that the hominids that evolved into homo sapiens had immaterial minds as well? What about the first mammals? the first amphibians? Where exactly do you draw the line here between “strictly physical being” and “body-soul being”?
Why do you keep asserting things without ever trying to produce a rational demonstration of your position? Oh i know, you don’t know what you are talking about.
Once again, look at the pot who’s calling the kettle black.
I don’t care to give you any reason either cause I know what kind of person you are. If you cannot see that raping a small child is objectively wrong, and that therefore there is such a thing as an objective moral standard, there is not much hope for you.
Pure intuition and emotion. You have no proof that this is so; you’re just appealing to emotions to make me look irrational, when you are the irrational one here. Morals do not have to be objective facts to be binding (though I do think that objective moral facts exist as much as objective rules by which one should play chess effectively).
So if I want to rape a small child then I have the objective moral right to do so because its my desire? You’re sick and so is your philosophy!!!
This passage demonstrates a profound misunderstanding of desire utilitarianism. If you had actually researched the subject, you would realize that there is more to the philosophy than “if you desire to rape a child, go ahead”.

Rather ironic that you are the one calling me sick, considering that your moral philosophy says that God is justified in throwing innocent people into a torture chamber forever, just because he’s the most powerful being. That is sick.
Experience is certainly required in order to know right and wrong, just like experience is required to know that there is a physical reality. Just like a truly objective physical reality exists regardless of your existence, so does moral truth exist regardless of your experience, opinion or subjectivity. It is always true that raping a small child is wrong, regardless of whether or not human beings know or care to know about it.
Prove that last statement, using Catholic moral philosophy.
Moral law is an expression of Gods intrinsically perfect nature.
What evidence do you have that God is “intrinsically perfect”? What does the even mean? To call God intrinsically perfect is to call God good, which is completely redundant. But if God is good simply because he is God, then why should I worship him? He didn’t do anything to deserve his status as “God”. He can order whatever he wants and be justified. This leads us to the Euthyphro Dilemma. I still have never heard a decent theistic response to that.
That is not the God that Catholics believe in, but I am sure that you enjoyed making that straw-man.
All baseless assertions! Prove to me that God could not have been any other way than he is now.
Why? Arbitrarily stringing words together will not help your case.
Don’t blame me if you are the one who can’t understand my obvious point. A lack of understanding on your part does not constitute a logical failure on mine.

Simply tell me how God could have his nature for a reason without a reason-giver.
I don’t understand what you are saying here. Homosexuality is wrong because it contradicts our fundamental nature as sexual persons. True Sexuality, as an identity, begins with genda identity; not with attraction. In this respect, homosexuality is not a true expression of what we are insofar as we are men and women, and is in fact a disorder of what we are, because it does not fulfil the nature of being a man or a women. A part of being good, is to be true to your nature and to absolutely value your identity regardless of desire. To be absolutely true to what you are, the nature that God has given us, is what God asks of us because it is apart of Gods plan for the moral and existential fulfilment of the human race. To be true to you, is an act of honesty and gratitude. To do otherwise for the sake of attraction is selfish and thus it goes against Gods good plan and the fulfilment of humanity.
This is absolute gibberish that demonstrates a failure on your part to understand my point. I was merely using homosexuality as an example. How is it that God must have a negative attitude towards “sins” and a positive attitude towards “virtues”? Why couldn’t God have been “begotten” (using the Nicene Creed’s words) with a positive attitude towards homosexuality, for example?
Gods nature is not arbitrary.
How is it not? You are the one making baseless assertions here! Prove your point!
 
Okay, if the mind is purely physical then please prove it to be so. And I don’t mean the brain, but the mind. If you know, then you must have some empirical evidence to support this knowledge.
I’m sorry, I meant to put a “do not” in front of “know” there.
 
Hi,

I’m new here on CAF but thought I’d post a question which interests me.

For those who are theists - “What would you do if it were proven to your satisfaction that God does not exist

For those who are atheists - “What would you do if it were proven to your satisfaction that God does exist

Thanks for taking the time.
Odd question.

Accepting God includes accepting the notion that proof of God in the scientific, carnal sense isn’t needed, and maybe not even possible, unless you use your sense of spirit and give it more credence than all five senses of body. How do you prove nonexistence anyway?

Atheists already reject existing proof within their own heart, it’s sensible to assume they’d reject any other proof as well.
 
The fact that their naturalism is philosophical and not strictly scientific is as irrelevant
It is very relevant because it is deceptive. It masquerades as scientific when it is not. It is pretentious.
as the fact that the claims of Christian apologists are philosophical and not scientific. That doesn’t make either of their philosophies false.
True, but when science extends itself beyond its purview then we have a problem.
The difference between the person who believes in an immaterial mind that exists outside the brain, and the person who believes that the mind is synonymous with the brain, is that the latter view is more consistent with our prior knowledge about the world.
Prior knowledge of the world. Our prior knoweldge of the world is that is flat. Should we aim for consistency?
Let me ask you this: Do you believe that the hominids that evolved into homo sapiens had immaterial minds as well? What about the first mammals? the first amphibians? Where exactly do you draw the line here between “strictly physical being” and “body-soul being”?
Let me ask you this: where do you draw the line between deciding to eat an animal - Cows okay monkeys not, human beings may be?
Morals do not have to be objective facts to be binding (though I do think that objective moral facts exist as much as objective rules by which one should play chess effectively).
What makes them binding then?
This passage demonstrates a profound misunderstanding of desire utilitarianism. If you had actually researched the subject, you would realize that there is more to the philosophy than “if you desire to rape a child, go ahead”.
How about you explain what the more is
Rather ironic that you are the one calling me sick, considering that your moral philosophy says that God is justified in throwing innocent people into a torture chamber forever, just because he’s the most powerful being. That is sick.
You have clearly a profoundly impoverished understanding of Catholic theology. You have a caricature in your head.
What evidence do you have that God is “intrinsically perfect”? What does the even mean? To call God intrinsically perfect is to call God good, which is completely redundant. But if God is good simply because he is God, then why should I worship him?
How about because He is the Sum of All Goodness who created you out of Love?
He didn’t do anything to deserve his status as “God”.
If God is what we claim Him to be then “deserving his status” is about as illogical as you can get.
He can order whatever he wants and be justified. This leads us to the Euthyphro Dilemma. I still have never heard a decent theistic response to that.
The Euthypro dilemma was actually posed about gods not God.
All baseless assertions! Prove to me that God could not have been any other way than he is now.
Another ridiculous demand - requiring natural proof for something that is supernatural.
Don’t blame me if you are the one who can’t understand my obvious point.
I think MoM understands your obvious point and beyond. It is you who do not understand his obvious point because your understanding of Christian theology is minute to say the least.
A lack of understanding on your part does not constitute a logical failure on mine.
And the same could be said of you. This profound lack of understanding on your part is precisely why you think there is a logical failure on MoM2 part.
Simply tell me how God could have his nature for a reason without a reason-giver.
Unless I misunderstand your question, I’d say that that is idiotic. If God’s nature depends on a reason-giver, then obviously he is not God and that the one who is God is this Reason Giver.
 
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