Can't devote much time here anymore.
Started working on my Thesis Paper, so I'm devoting my time and effort on this than here.
I'll see if I can find time to spare to spend 4 hours researching and writing up a post here.
Cheers
Yanoda
Bueno wrote:Hey everyone. Come on up up and away to 100 pages. What's wrong why isn't anyone debating more.
Bueno wrote:I don't think the last few posting have been about what you were saying. Darth Crater hates Honestar and Homestar hares Darth Crater.
Homestar even popped his stitches fighting with him That was a joke Col.
Darth Crater wrote:Alright, since Homestar doesn't seem to grasp such basic points as that I'm using homosexuality as an example rather than discussing it directly, that a Bible passage talking about the murder of infants talks about killing without cause, or that even if we agreed on the abortion issue it wouldn't er...
Darth Crater wrote:If you understood that I was using homosexuality as just one example of personal traits that cause persecution, you would not have brought that "hate the act, not the person" stuff into it. I was not debating whether it is good or not. I was saying that homosexuals are persecuted, which is verifiable, and using that as a basis for my argument. If you'd prefer, I could point to the Holocaust victims, or to victims of natural disasters, or anyone at all who has ever suffered and died.
You still don't read what I said. It was a discussion Wulf and I were having, I was not responding to your views on homosexuality, please keep things in context
If I agreed that abortion was the killing of infants, it would have no bearing at all on the fact that the Bible justifies and does not condemn acts involving the killing of infants. Suppose, pending further research, I agree with you on abortion. From this standpoint: does, or does not, that passage indicate that God is willing to cause and allow the slaughter of infants?
No it does not show that god is causing and allowing the slaughter of infants, what it meant was that the people were no longer under his protection because of the choices they made. The consequences were that they would have to defend themselves against other armies that would come against them. That passage was a prediction, of what would happen to them at the mercy of other nations. Sort of like if I told a child, "if you don't listen to me and you run across the street, you'll get hit by a car" I'm not saying its ok or condoning a car hitting the child, a very simplistic example but it explains my point. The scripture is a warning of actions and consequences
Unfortunately, your reasoning is utterly backward on your final point. I believe there is no God, and thus I do not believe it has a place in our lives. It does not work the other way around - whether I want a god to have authority over my life has no effect on whether there is one. I'd love for there to be some omnipotent authority laying down rules for me to follow, but I don't see any. You should not base whether you believe something exists on whether you want it to exist. As I've said before, I believe in God, because of the evidence I see. You should not base whether you believe in something does not exist on whether you don't want it to exist
Col. Homestar wrote:You still don't read what I said. It was a discussion Wulf and I were having, I was not responding to your views on homosexuality, please keep things in context
Col. Homestar wrote:what it meant was that the people were no longer under his protection because of the choices they made.
Col. Homestar wrote:As I've said before, I believe in God, because of the evidence I see. You should not base whether you believe in something does not exist on whether you don't want it to exist
Darth Crater wrote:I see. Let me return to the original point, then. Assume that the Christian god, as a consequence of creating the world, created homosexuals. Homosexuals are often tormented or killed (for religious reasons, though that's not relevant to the argument...). Why would a benevolent creator give humans a trait that results in harm to them?
Darth Crater wrote:Exactly. He did not protect these people, and as a direct result, many infants were killed. Infants who had not made these choices, or had the opportunity to choose or to flee. In what way is this desirable?
Darth Crater wrote:Correcting for grammatical error
Darth Crater wrote:you seem to be in agreement with me on belief here. Let's restate it more generally: "How badly you want a belief to be true or false has no bearing on whether you should believe it". You were implying that I chose not to believe because I did not want God to exist, which suggests a misunderstanding of informed atheism. Hopefully this is now cleared up. (Note that there are probably some people who do think in that way - people who hold a belief don't always do so for the right reasons)
Darth Crater wrote:If we are both rational, or relatively so (it's hard for humans, and I'm far from perfect), then we should come to the same conclusion given the same evidence. What evidence do you see, which I have not, that favors an involved creator?
Col. Homestar wrote:Uh thanks? How about you respond to comments without becoming an elitist arrogant poo.
Isaiah 13:15-18 NIV wrote:Whoever is captured will be thrust through; all who are caught will fall by the sword. Their infants will be dashed to pieces before their eyes; their houses will be looted and their wives violated. See, I will stir up against them the Medes, who do not care for silver and have no delight in gold. Their bows will strike down the young men; they will have no mercy on infants, nor will they look with compassion on children.
Darth Crater wrote:As soon as you actually respond to any of my points, I'll get right on that.
Darth Crater wrote:For the final time - the homosexuality was an example. This means that it was not, in fact, the basis of my argument. Let me attempt to restate it. You claim the Christian god created the universe, and thus humanity. Many humans are born with conditions that, for one reason or another, cause them to suffer. For example, some are born with mental deficiencies (such as Down's), physical deformities, or more subtle flaws like hemophilia. Why, if the creator was benevolent, would he allow these things to occur?
Darth Crater wrote:I'm not talking about Leviticus, or about children growing up. Since you can't be bothered to go back two pages despite constantly demanding I do so, here's the scripture in question again:Isaiah 13:15-18 NIV wrote:Whoever is captured will be thrust through; all who are caught will fall by the sword. Their infants will be dashed to pieces before their eyes; their houses will be looted and their wives violated. See, I will stir up against them the Medes, who do not care for silver and have no delight in gold. Their bows will strike down the young men; they will have no mercy on infants, nor will they look with compassion on children.
This line, by your own admission, states that God is allowing the murder of infants who have done nothing wrong. Why would a benevolent deity allow this?
Darth Crater wrote:I believe everything in the mentioned post has been satisfactorily refuted, and thus is not valid evidence. That you have not dismissed it and reconsidered your beliefs accordingly suggests one of the following:
-You are fundamentally irrational, unwilling to change your mind regardless of evidence (or willing to twist what you view as valid evidence to fit your favored belief), and useless to debate with any longer.
-You are unwilling or unable to fully read my posts for some reason, and are not actually absorbing the evidence. Also useless to continue debating, though I might be able to fix this by putting things in simpler terms.
-You have counterarguments you have not given, which disprove my (and Yanoda's) points. In this case I desperately need to continue the debate, so that I can hear and consider them.
Darth Crater wrote:Considering my time isn't worth much right now, I have to gamble that it's the third, at least long enough for you to reiterate your arguments and me to find any applicable counterarguments. We also both need to minimize the possibility of miscommunication. Would you mind reposting any evidence you still believe favors the existence of a deity who both created the universe, and involved itself measurably after its creation?
Col. Homestar wrote:And until then you continue sounding like a douche I joke of course, except when I'm really serious, which is some of the time but not all.
Cypher wrote:If I am correct in assuming you take an athiestic view of the world (correct me if I am wrong), then you take a strictly physical/material approach (matter is all that is important, supernatural does not exist).
Cypher wrote:Note: I am not in the least implying that any athiest takes a ruthless view of the world (I hope not at anyrate), but I would like to know where your concept of morals/ethics/right-wrong come from.
Cypher wrote:In your system, why is it wrong for infants to be killed? What makes that wrong? Doesn't survival of the fittest imply that the weaker ones will die so that only the strong survive? Where does the concept of "wrong" come from? Was it produced by the Big Bang? Any why is it wrong for there to be deformities if evolution predicts that this will happen.
Col. Homestar wrote:If you were to call the police on somebody who was doing wrong, and through the course of events that person is mistreated by the police officer, are you guilty because of the officers actions?
Col. Homestar wrote:did you explain how DNA molecules came about by chance?
Col. Homestar wrote:What caused everything to begin?
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