BradCube
Active Member
Ha ha, me too! I'm feeling the ice crack beneath my featSchroedinger said:brad I must admit I'm worried for the charred remains of your arguments againt natural morality from biological psychology when cat gets home.
Ha ha, me too! I'm feeling the ice crack beneath my featSchroedinger said:brad I must admit I'm worried for the charred remains of your arguments againt natural morality from biological psychology when cat gets home.
I suggest you contribute something other than what you've contributed for the last 5 pages.3unitz said:no i highlighted the fallacy in his argument; one could argue in the exact same way that evolution is false because it devalues the human worthiness, and there are countless examples in religion where this is indeed the case. until brad presents evidence of a divinely inspired moral law, it is just an opinion and impossible to rebuttal.
what exactly do you suggest i contribute to the discussion which is of value? if he is of the belief atheists are "less moral" than so be it, i'm just pointing out that a conclusion to "therefore this implies the christian god exists" (let alone just for a god to exist) is incoherent.
Aha, be careful though as I was not arguing that human worthlessness makes it false. I was arguing that under this view, moral sentiments are worthless. It could very well be that human morality is worthless, but it is this which so many atheists seem to struggle with here.3unitz said:no i highlighted the fallacy in his argument; one could argue in the exact same way that evolution is false because it devalues the human worthiness, and there are countless examples in religion where this is indeed the case.
I hope I'm not being too picky here Sam. Just wanted to clarify that I don't think atheists are less moral. Only that under their beliefs, morality has a very different definition and value system. Also, I think that without definitive proof of objective morality, then the jump to Gods existence from that is also incoherent.3unitz said:what exactly do you suggest i contribute to the discussion which is of value? if he is of the belief atheists are "less moral" than so be it, i'm just pointing out that a conclusion to "therefore this implies the christian god exists" (let alone just for a god to exist) is incoherent.
Despite the fact that I distinctly remember spending at least three pages in this thread explaining that we have a "system of morality" that is indeed an evolutionary one, I'll summarise here (and oversimplifying, I know):BradCube said:But why do I empathize and feel sorry for anyone else but myself under an evolutionary system of morality? Does a fish feel sorry for another fish when it is caught?
Howdy Katie - I was in Melbourne for a conference of sorts.katie tully said:Where is KFunk
Well, I do. Though it is of course incorrect to assert that all atheists share my brand of moral nihilism.katie tully said:How can there be so such thing as good deeds? OF COURSE THERE ARE. ATHEISTS DO NOT LIVE IN THIS FANTASY WORLD WHERE GOOD AND BAD ARE MERELY FIGMENTS OF OUR IMAGINATION.
This strikes me as a strange kind of statement to make. I think it is because the concept of 'worth' itself is morally charged. The acts of an atheist are worthwhile from within their respective moral framework (whether they view it as objectively valid or not). I'm not sure that it matters much if their acts fail to be worthwhile with respect to a religious moral framework given that their position requires that they deny the existence of any god-dependent morality (they are atheists, after all).BradCube said:Under the atheist view, these acts are worthless. At best they satisfy some personally conjured up sense of morality.
Probably not? Arguments for the evolutionary development of morality generally apply to creatures with a more sophisticated social structure (though if anyone knows otherwise please correct me on this).BradCube said:But why do I empathize and feel sorry for anyone else but myself under an evolutionary system of morality? Does a fish feel sorry for another fish when it is caught?
Empathy is derived from the desire for self preservation. Without feeling cares for other people I sincerely doubt you would bother with any (apparently altruistic) acts at all, yet people all around the world do so, never really expecting they'll get anything back in return from it or that they themselves could rationally find themselves in the same situation.zimmerman8k said:But I think morality is also derived from the desire for self preservation as well as from empathy.... Assume everyone felt no empathy and was intent only on maximising self interest.
I was asking other people for assistance, my own interpretation happens to be the same, after growing as a christian.kate tully said:But by asking other people, you're accepting another persons interpretation of the verses. Not your own.
It seems pretty clear to me that faith without deeds is worthless, so it's safe to assume that good deeds are necessary for acceptence into heaven.
If you disagree with this, are you agreeing that it's possible to get into heaven as a Christian without ever demonstrating tangible acts of faith?
Leave this thread. If somebody really must 'defend' Christianity, let it be somebody who doesn't make it look barbaric and retarded, such as BradCube.emytaylor164 said:I was asking other people for assistance, my own interpretation happens to be the same, after growing as a christian.
When i say that good works are worthless i mean to get into heaven with.
I think they are good to do on earth for the following reasons:
-for atheists or non-christians- to simply help people, they are good on earth but no merit to get into heaven
- For christians
- to show Gods glory to people on earth
- to demonstrate your faith
- to be a faithful witness
I think that christians should do good works but not to get into heaven, as the bible tells us that entry into heaven is not based on deeds, but by faith in christ Jesus.
Source: To Be A Jew, Rabbi Hayim Halevy Donin.Of course, one cannot offer scientific proof that G-d exists, or that it was through His will that the world was created, or that He is concerned with the perfection of that which he created. But neither can it be proven that He does not exist. The use of rational methods to "prove" or "disprove" G-d's existence, after the fashion of the medieval scholastics, may appeal to some. Since the dawn of modern philosophy, however, these proofs have been seriously questioned. Contemporary arguments pro and con are equally futile. That is why the acceptance of G-d's existence is a metter of faith (emunah)...He is infinite and man is finite. Not only is man finite physically, but his perceptual and intellectual abilities are also finite. If G-d were part of the framework of man's five physical senses, such a "G-d" would have to be someone or something more restricted than the omnipotent, the omniprescent Spiritual Being in whom we express our faith. Such a G-d would indeed not be the one, universal G-d at all, but yet another of many deities to whom men over the centuries ascribed supernatural powers and to whom they paid allegiance.....
Let it be said that the rejection of G-d's existence ought to strain man's rational credibility even more. We must then assume that the functioning of the world under the sort of mathematical precision that we can only today fully begin to appreciate is a result of coincidence, and that the intricate coordinate functioning of life, from the very lowest forms to man himself is a matter of chance.....
In our time Aetheism seems "sophisticated" and timely. So did the worship of Baal in its time.
i am only saying what i believe as a christian, i dont think i am making it look barbaric and retarded at all.Slidey said:Leave this thread. If somebody really must 'defend' Christianity, let it be somebody who doesn't make it look barbaric and retarded, such as BradCube.
Someone knows jack-shit about jews.katie tully said:Why the hell do you censor the word God?
I think that is because jews will not say the word God completely because they believe it is blashemy ( i could be wrong)katie tully said:Why the hell do you censor the word God?
yeah, for lack of careEnteebee said:Someone knows jack-shit about jews.
and you go off at me because i find science boring i think it is more important to know about world religions then about sciencekatie tully said:yeah, for lack of care
i see.emytaylor164 said:I think that is because jews will not say the word God completely because they believe it is blashemy ( i could be wrong)
http://www.wisegeek.com/why-do-jews-write-g-d-instead-of-god.htmThe general concern with writing G-d in its true form is that it might be erased, defaced by being crossed out or scribbled upon, torn, thrown in the trash, or ravaged in some other way. Writing G-d instead of God communicates the writer’s idea effectively, but since G-d is incomplete, there is no risk of defacement.
no.emytaylor164 said:and you go off at me because i find science boring i think it is more important to know about world religions then about science