I'm curious about the opposite; what proof would you need, to accept that you are wrong about the existence of God?What experience would you need to have a belief in God?
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I'm curious about the opposite; what proof would you need, to accept that you are wrong about the existence of God?What experience would you need to have a belief in God?
Hm... why do you even ask?
I could give you a very explicit scenario that would at least start to "satisty" my need for a "proof" for your claim that the Christian God exists.
And I can already tell you: if I were to tell you this piece of "evidence" that I would require - which isn't excessive or inappropriate - all I would get is excuses why I won't get it.
My statement wasn't directed at you. It was in response to a different post:
I'm curious about the opposite; what proof would you need, to accept that you are wrong about the existence of God?
Oh good grief...
I’ll try you once more....and then I’ve had enough of the tedium.
If you tell me that you have $5 million dollars in cases under your bed, but you can’t show me any evidence for your claim, I’m not going to accept it. I will withhold belief until you do.
However, I am not justified in saying that you definitely don’t have that money. There is a chance, no matter how tiny, that you might be telling the truth.
There...it’s as easy and straightforward as that. I can reject the claim for the existence of the money, while simultaneously not claiming its non-existence...
Now, unless you have something other than silly semantic games...?
Hey hey allandavid..
Would you come into my bedroom and see for your self?
Looks like you can defend your position. I may have another feather in my title soon. Kylie is looking very lonely by herself.
Cheers
Good grief....take it....I’ve got some paint to watch drying...
Hey hey
That sounds boring. I gave you opportunity to defend your position. You could not so kylie now has a friend in my title.
What u think?
Wanna try and get it removed? Go back and answer the questions you ignored.
Cheers
No mate....you have fun in your little fantasy world. Off you go...
Hey hey my dear
Well you answered a question i directed at someone else, lets call it even
Please indulge me. How am i totally wrong about salvation through christ?
Cheers
Honestly, I haven't really scrutinized all of these posts. Perhaps you can indulge me a bit. I know Christians can sometimes vary in their doctrinal views. What exactly is your belief about salvation?
Our minds and souls will definitely be changed in Heaven, but your mistake is framing this as a bad thing. After all, you're a much different person than you were as a baby, and as a toddler, a child, a teenager, etc.
In each case your mind expanded and your capacity for understanding increased.
Your argument would mean it would be immoral for children to grow up.
True, but at all stages I am fundamentally human.
The sort of change involved with not finding eternity boring is not of the same sort.
No, those aren't the sort of changes I'm talking about. It would be more like choosing to become a cat.
I recommend reading this article to get a deeper view of what I mean:
There’s a big problem with immortality: it goes on and on | Aeon Essays
The key takeaway of the article is this:
The moral philosopher Samuel Scheffler at New York University has suggested that the real problem with a fantasy of immortality is that it doesn’t make sense as a coherent desire. Scheffler points out that human life is intimately structured by the fact that it has a fixed (even if usually unknown) time limit. We all start with a birth, then pass through many stages of life, before definitely ending in death. In turn, Scheffler argues, everything that we value – and thus can coherently desire in an essentially human life – must take as given the fact that we are temporally bounded beings. Sure, we can imagine what it would be like to be immortal, if we find that an amusing way to pass the time. But doing so will obscure a basic truth: that because death is a fixed fact, everything that human beings value makes sense only in light of our time being finite, our choices being limited, and our each getting only so many goes before it’s all over.
Scheffler’s case is thus not simply that immortality would make us miserable (although it probably would). It’s that, if we had it, we would cease to be distinctively human in the way that we currently are. But then, if we were somehow to attain immortality, it wouldn’t get us what we want from it: namely, for it to be some version of our human selves that lives forever. A desire for immortality is thus a paradox: it would frustrate itself were it ever to be achieved. In turn, Scheffler implies, once we’ve reflected carefully on this deep fact about ourselves, we should junk any residual desire to live forever that we might still have.
eudaimonia,
Mark
True, but at all stages I am fundamentally human.
The sort of change involved with not finding eternity boring is not of the same sort.
No, those aren't the sort of changes I'm talking about. It would be more like choosing to become a cat.
Really. How?It improves their well being, their families well being, their friends well being, the environments well being?
Or you could stop asking stupid questions.Or you can ask another question which is should an atheist remain an atheist even when this results in the worst possible suffering for them and every thing else in the universe?
Believe whatever you like. Just don't tell me that my non belief in any God of any description has a detrimental effect on my family, friends or the world in general.I ask this because I believe that belief in God, being a christian does actually improve your well being. Which can lead to a trickle down effect across the world. Because atheists always try to say they want to behave in a way in which there is the least amount of suffering, if belief in God does lead to the least amount of suffering then shouldn't they believe?
Hey sir
So you believe the Christian God is man made. How do you know this?
Cheers
Hey sir
If you dont know in any conclusive manner then how did you come to your conclusion?
Cheers
I was addressing this idea atheists have that they shouldn't have to deal with the consequences of their lack of belief, yet they all seem to believe that if God was perfect then they should have eternal life like believers even if they reject him.
And it's not so much a punishment as it is a direct result of unbelief and a lack of salvation which leads to eternal life.