was this what offended you? Because I said that God and man are similar? Look, as I already stated in this case, the difference is in what authority God has verses man's authority. Like an employer vs. and employee, or a mother vs. a father. Both will behave similarly, but that doesn't mean they are identical. How is that offensive? both a mother and father care for the child, love the child, instruct the child, and yet both are different. Just because man was created in God's image doesn't mean they do everything exactly the same, however, it does mean that there are some basic similarities that we cannot ignore. But we are off topic again. More ad homs I imagine.
Try again. This time, actually respond to what I wrote, okay?
not sure what you are having a problem with here. The paragraph shows how a God who sets things in motion is totally in character to also keep his hand in the mix. Just as someone starting a family or a career would do, they would start the ball rolling and allow certain things to be out of their control all the while remaining in the process, working within the boundries that they cannot control. The point is that it is in character for a being (God or man, since they are similar) to create something, and let it run, all the while manipulating certain parts, how do you think we became so advanced technologically?
We became technologically advanced by improving on old ideas. Wy would an omniscient God need to do that. Or do you hold that God is not omniscient. By the way, in that whole paragraph, you did not actually answer my question.
Hum, again I am stumped by your problem here. No wonder you didn't want to respond...
There you go again. I did not want to respond because I saw the first signs of rudeness from you. I have discussed issues with you before, Razzel, and I know how those discussion generally devolve. As it is doing here. I will respond to this post once more. If you cannot respond in a decent way, I see no reason to continue discussing with you. Clear? Good.
let me see if I can clear this up for you. Let's say that I invented running water and a bathtub for that water source. Now all of a sudden you can take a bath indoors. Is that a good thing? Of course it is, but what if someone used it to drown someone else. Is the problem in the creation, or in the application of the created thing?
Let's see, another example, I create a new recipe, it's the most delicious choc. cake you have ever eaten. I make the cake and take it to your house for you to eat and enjoy. But after the cake arrives at your house, someone sneaks in and places poison in it. So when you eat the cake, instead of it giving you enjoyment, it gives you sickness. Was the fault in my creation or the use of that creation?
Likewise, according to Gen. God created a perfect world, but sin messed it up. Sin came along and put poison in the perfect cake that had been made and brought for you to enjoy. Was the fault in the created world or in the application of that world? Pretty much so everything in this world has potential of being used for evil, no matter what good it was created for.
Irrelevant to the topic at hand, which is that reproduction + finite world - death = no room. Can we keep on topic?
admittedly and one you don't need to address unless you want to tackle it in an apologetics thread. But as you bring it back around to the topic in the OP. What you are missing is the logic of your statement. limited space + reproduction - death + command to stop reproducing = plenty of room. Your problem is that either way you look at it, there is no problem for creation, at least as logic goes. So you have one of two logical choices.
I have never said that the reasoning was not logical. How many times do I have to say this Razzel, before it gets through to you?
1. limited space + reproduction + command to stop reproducing - death = creation or
2. limited space + reproduction + fall of man bringing death into the world = creation.
Either way you want to look at it, logic dictates there is not problem here for creation. Which though this is supposedly an ad hom argument, is exactly what the OP is talking about.
Where did I state that the problem was one of logic Razzel? Can you start addressing my actual argument? Please?
wow, you get upset over the strangest things, take that as an insult if you want, it wasn't intended as such, it was intended to say to you, you get upset over the dumbest things.
And this isn't an insult either, I suppose. As I said before in this post, if your attitude does not improve in your next post, this discussion is over. Second time I've said it now.
The evidence shows that A. reproduction and death are part of life. It also shows that B. reproduction without death equals a need to stop reproducing. But what does the logic (remember here we are limiting our discussion to logic and not personal preferences) say from a creation stand. That being the bible and not individual interpretations thereof. It says, 1. the fall of man brought with it death, and 2. if man had not fallen, God had the authority to command life to stop procreating.
Sure. The problem is that this is a nice statement, but not one with evidence behind it. How many posts do I have to make saying: "the YEC position that God could have ordered reproduction to stop is a logical one, but that the problem is that there is no evidence for it whatsoever" before you stop pretending I am arguing that the logic is flawed? How many times Razzel?
It seems to me that what you are missing here is this idea of how long ago the text was written. In other words, the pureness of the text and what it understands is so incredible from the standpoint of what we know in science that it is amazing on that level alone. In other words, thousands of years ago, if this text is fiction and fiction alone, the people knew enough to build into the story the arguments that you are trying to levy against it. That's some pretty cool stuff.
Again an off-topic part. I am tempted to respond, really, but I won't.
oh, so this is the insult you are referring to. Your post show that you don't really think about what you are saying, but I best not point that out to you. Sorry, I'm bad. I won't point out your mistakes again, I hope I can remember.
Third time in a single post. I never said the discussion was what irked me Razzel. You can point out my "mistakes" (well, in theory you could, though so far all you seem to be doing is pointing out strawmen of my argument), but you can do so without implying that I am not thinking through my posts or calling me dumb, don't you think?
No, logic is not evidence, however, logic is based on evidence. That is the flaw in your claims here.
No, logic is not necessarily based on evidence. Logical reasoning can proceed very well without it. Philosphers do it all the time, so do theologians. This is exactly the case here. The statement that a God who is all powerfull and who can order organisms to procreate can also order them to stop procreating is logical. It is not a logical statement based on evidence, however.
except that isn't what we see humans doing and as discussed already, man was created in God's image. Therefore you are removing evidence that we do have, so that you can create a new conclusion. The only logical conclusions that can be made are those that are based out of evidence. No matter whether we agree or disagree. For example, we cannot draw any conclusions on our stories alone, there has to be some form of evidence to look at. In the case of the OP. The evidence has to do with authority. In the case of your argument here, it has to do with the nature of things that are created or done.
But humans
are trying to automate as many processes as possible. Sure, we have to watch those automated processes, but only because we are not good enough designers. Many processes that we create, we try to make as independent as we can. That is the evidence.
again ad hom arguments from you.
That was not an ad-hom argument. I never related the statement to you Razzel. If you want to accuse me of ad-homming, at least pick statements where I actually do so.
For example the computer you are sitting at right now would not be the same computer if man had created a computer then walked away and let it do it's thing. Sorry, the evidence shows that man is a hands on kind of being and as such, the logical conclusion is that God is too. Now that is if you believe that God exists and is the pattern for which man is created from. But that is a totally different story all together. Our current discussion is about a God who is similar to man and what that would look like in a created universe. The logical conclusion and the only viable conclusion is that that creator God would watch it work, but also be involved in it's function give even one example of what evidence you use to draw this conclusion. Not everything we change is flawed to begin with. Look at your computer, it doesn't need to be flawed to improve on it.
In our computers, everything we do not directly want to do is automated nowadays. That is the story of human civilization. For every thing that we do not want to do, we create things that do them by themselves. The reason we need to be behind a computer is because we want to use it as a user interface between us and whatever functions it has. If I wanted the computer to portray a maintenance-free aquarium, I could presumably write a code for that and leave it standing in my room in a pretty spot, if possible for all my life, if not eternity. If that were my goal of using it, it would be pretty bad if I had to sit behind it all day, wouldn't it?
Wow, and you accuse me of tangents and ad homs. What the heck do you think this whole paragraph is?
An analogy. Like you used in your post. Like you use in all your posts. What else would it be Razzel? An analogy for the world as an automated process or the world as a thing God would constantly try to meddle in. Can you now actually respond to that?
But quickly since you don't seem to want to actually talk about the OP.
I
am talking about the OP, Razzel.
Changing something or working within it's framework doesn't have to be about something being wrong or broken. Sometimes it's just change and sometimes it's about making it safer from misuse. Take your computer, if I add parental protections is it because the original computer was flawed or broken? What was its flaw, it's problem? Was the problem not with the application of the original creation?
The OP makes the valid point that the absence of God would necessitate God to again take action on his creation at some point. As I have said, and I'll say it again, from some creationist perspectives it can be logical to say that he would do that. As I have also said, I think the OP's argument is not very strong, exactly for that reason. However, as I have also said, I think that it has some merit because of two reasons. (1) that this argument ignores the observable evidence that we have even further. (2) The second reason being that it would seem more logical to create as much of the processes in creation as an automated, running process instead of a process that needs to be constantly interfered with.
I make the following observations regarding your posts so far.
A) You seem to be hung up on the idea that I think the "creationist" position as I have described it above is not logical. Nowhere have I said such a thing, I have explicitly stated that it is a logical position. I have also explicitly stated that the argument as presented by consol is not a very strong argument.
B) Regarding my argument (1) above, I note that you have so far brought nothing to the table against this argument. I see no reason to abandon it for exactly that reason.
(C) Regarding my argument (2) above, everytime you have asserted that humans do not want to use automated processes, you have pointed to:
(i) processes where humans use machines to do something for them (computers); I have noted in this post and a previous post, that humans do indeed try to automate any and all functions that are peripheral to the thing they want to achieve. If humans are like God, one would think that God works the same way.
(ii) processes where an event cannot be foreseen in all cases (parental control in case of mass-produced computers, or raising kids); one would think that this does not apply to God since he is presumably omniscient.
(iii) I noted another possibility, God as a devine hobbyist, who likes to tinker just for the tinkering. So far, you have not responded to that argument, but I would presume it is not really in line with the Christian idea of God.
(iv) I noted that all these problems get to the same central weakness. If God needed to be actively involved when the creation was "perfect", how come it can run on it's own after the Fall? This seems to be to be rather odd. You have not responded to that yet either.