• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

Atheism, Rival Conception of God.

Brimshack

Well-Known Member
Mar 23, 2002
7,275
473
59
Arizona
✟12,010.00
Faith
Atheist
Nice quote

Some thoughts on meaning...

Consider happening upon two different objects while taking a walk through the woods: A hammer and a hammer shaped branch that has apparently fallen from a tree.

Does the hammer have purpose? Sure it does. It was created for a reason. Does the branch have purpose? Well, it can be used for the same purpose as the hammer, but it was not created in the same sense that the hammer was so it can't have purpose in the same sense. What is the determinate factor? Whether or not the object was created.

The atheist cannot allow himself to see purpose in the universe unless he is willing to ponder the possibility of the existence of a creator.

Aside from the fussy psychologism of the conclusion, it actually contradicts your opening analysis. You draw an interesting distinction in your opening paragraphs only to erase it in your final conclusion.
 
Upvote 0

Eudaimonist

I believe in life before death!
Jan 1, 2003
27,482
2,738
58
American resident of Sweden
Visit site
✟126,756.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Atheist
Marital Status
Private
Politics
US-Libertarian
Does the hammer have purpose? Sure it does. It was created for a reason. Does the branch have purpose? Well, it can be used for the same purpose as the hammer, but it was not created in the same sense that the hammer was so it can't have purpose in the same sense.

Does purpose lurk inside the hammer like a ghost?

The atheist cannot allow himself to see purpose in the universe unless he is willing to ponder the possibility of the existence of a creator.

Purposes do not require a creator. If I use the hammer-shaped branch to drive in a nail, then I am using it for a purpose. I did not need to create the branch for it to have purpose.


eudaimonia,

Mark
 
Upvote 0

Sojourner<><

Incoherent Freedom Fighter
Mar 23, 2005
1,606
14
45
✟24,385.00
Faith
Non-Denom
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
Does purpose lurk inside the hammer like a ghost?



Purposes do not require a creator. If I use the hammer-shaped branch to drive in a nail, then I am using it for a purpose. I did not need to create the branch for it to have purpose.


eudaimonia,

Mark

If this is true, then a hammer has no more purpose than a hammer-shaped branch, or a pencil is just as purposeless as a hunk of graphite. And yet, these man made objects have some quality about them that distinguishes them from the natural objects in addition to the fact that they were made - it's that they were made for a reason - a purpose. This quality is what I am grasping at and is what I find to be inherent in a reality that supports life when I consider the possibility that it was made for that purpose - a proposition that requires a maker.
 
Upvote 0

David Gould

Pearl Harbor sucked. WinAce didn't.
May 28, 2002
16,931
514
54
Canberra, Australia
Visit site
✟36,618.00
Faith
Atheist
Politics
AU-Labor
If this is true, then a hammer has no more purpose than a hammer-shaped branch, or a pencil is just as purposeless as a hunk of graphite. And yet, these man made objects have some quality about them that distinguishes them from the natural objects in addition to the fact that they were made - it's that they were made for a reason - a purpose.

Do they? Imagine that we discovered a hammer-shaped object in an archeological dig. Scientists say that the hammer-shaped object looks as though it was used to hammer in nails - it has a purpose.

Then a different group of scientists examine it. They point out that it looks more like as though it was a piece in a wall, and that the hammer shape is an accident. This becomes the consensus - the hammer-shaped object suddenly has no purpose.

Where did the purpose that we originally assigned it go?

My point is that purpose only exists in our minds. It never exists in the objects themselves.

This quality is what I am grasping at and is what I find to be inherent in a reality that supports life when I consider the possibility that it was made for that purpose - a proposition that requires a maker.

In your mind, there is a purpose for reality; in my mind, there is not. If God exists, then the purpose for reality is in his mind. There is no purpose inherent in reality, however, even if it was made by God.
 
Upvote 0
R

RigalCygnos

Guest
Atheists only excel at autopsies. Everything is without spirit and feeling for them. For explanations of inanimate objects or primordial slime, inquire of them.

Christians excel at life and inspiration. For joy, hope, delight, or love, consult them, or the Holy Bible, New Testament.

"And that because of false brethren unawares brought in, who came in privily to spy out our liberty , that they might bring us into bondage...."Galatians 2:4
 
Upvote 0

quatona

"God"? What do you mean??
May 15, 2005
37,512
4,302
✟182,802.00
Faith
Seeker
Atheists only excel at autopsies. Everything is without spirit and feeling for them. For explanations of inanimate objects or primordial slime, inquire of them.

Christians excel at life and inspiration. For joy, hope, delight, or love, consult them, or the Holy Bible, New Testament.
We love you, too.
 
Upvote 0
R

RigalCygnos

Guest
SpiritFilled.gif
 
Upvote 0

Sojourner<><

Incoherent Freedom Fighter
Mar 23, 2005
1,606
14
45
✟24,385.00
Faith
Non-Denom
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
My point is that purpose only exists in our minds. It never exists in the objects themselves.

Fair enough. I think that the object that has purpose is in essence the physical manifestation of an idea. In order to recognize such an idea there must be an intelligent mind. Depending on how intelligent that mind may be, it might even be able to deduce that there must have been some other intelligent mind in order to manifest such an idea.
 
Upvote 0

Brimshack

Well-Known Member
Mar 23, 2002
7,275
473
59
Arizona
✟12,010.00
Faith
Atheist
Atheists only excel at autopsies. Everything is without spirit and feeling for them. For explanations of inanimate objects or primordial slime, inquire of them.

Christians excel at life and inspiration. For joy, hope, delight, or love, consult them, or the Holy Bible, New Testament.

"And that because of false brethren unawares brought in, who came in privily to spy out our liberty , that they might bring us into bondage...."Galatians 2:4

I think it's safe to say RC's post constituted its own refutation
 
Upvote 0

David Gould

Pearl Harbor sucked. WinAce didn't.
May 28, 2002
16,931
514
54
Canberra, Australia
Visit site
✟36,618.00
Faith
Atheist
Politics
AU-Labor
Fair enough. I think that the object that has purpose is in essence the physical manifestation of an idea.

But the purpose of any particular object can change. If you make a hammer, and I use it to make music, does the object suddenly become the physical manifestation of the new idea?

A purpose of an object can only be determined by its use - the hammer can be used to hammer in nails, or it can be used to provide a thumping beat.

My argument is that if God exists then he is not using anything on earth in any way that we can detect. As such, there is no way that we can detect purpose. And that means that purpose cannot be used as an argument for God's existence.

In other words, for us to see purpose, we would have to see God. And that would mean that using purpose as an argument for God's existence would be superfluous, as his existence would be evident.

In order to recognize such an idea there must be an intelligent mind. Depending on how intelligent that mind may be, it might even be able to deduce that there must have been some other intelligent mind in order to manifest such an idea.

The idea, again, can only be seen in use. Without use - or evidence of use - no idea can be seen.

Think of the hammer-shaped object. Was it the physical manifestation of an idea? In who's mind was the idea: the viewing scientists, not any creator of it.
 
Upvote 0

Brimshack

Well-Known Member
Mar 23, 2002
7,275
473
59
Arizona
✟12,010.00
Faith
Atheist
Fair enough. I think that the object that has purpose is in essence the physical manifestation of an idea. In order to recognize such an idea there must be an intelligent mind. Depending on how intelligent that mind may be, it might even be able to deduce that there must have been some other intelligent mind in order to manifest such an idea.

Again, this is in direct contradiction to your initial analysis. As your tree/hammer dictinction clearly shows some purposes are not created, at least not with the object itself, but rather recognized as a possible property of an object. It is possible that all the world too is actually created as you suggest, but there is no sense in which such a position could be said to be deduced from the recognition of purpose in an object. Even with hammers, the inference is inductive, at best.
 
Upvote 0

Eudaimonist

I believe in life before death!
Jan 1, 2003
27,482
2,738
58
American resident of Sweden
Visit site
✟126,756.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Atheist
Marital Status
Private
Politics
US-Libertarian
Atheists only excel at autopsies. Everything is without spirit and feeling for them. For explanations of inanimate objects or primordial slime, inquire of them.

Christians excel at life and inspiration. For joy, hope, delight, or love, consult them, or the Holy Bible, New Testament.

Christians may very well excel at these, but not armchair psychologizing, apparently.


eudaimonia,

Mark
 
Upvote 0

Eudaimonist

I believe in life before death!
Jan 1, 2003
27,482
2,738
58
American resident of Sweden
Visit site
✟126,756.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Atheist
Marital Status
Private
Politics
US-Libertarian
And yet, these man made objects have some quality about them that distinguishes them from the natural objects in addition to the fact that they were made - it's that they were made for a reason - a purpose.

What "quality" would that be? Yes, we may deduce that a hammer was created by an intelligent being, but this is mainly due to our experience with creating tools. It's a judgment call on our part, not some quality intrinsic to the hammer, aside from the tell-tale signs of intelligent creation. It seems like you want it to be something more than this.

Would artificially created diamonds have some "quality" unlike naturally occuring diamonds? Let's say these were truly excellent reproductions.

I'll grant that hammers are created and hammer-shaped branches are uncreated (at least to be hammers). However, nothing in the universe seems to be created for a purpose, except for those things that human beings have themselves created for their own purposes.

This quality is what I am grasping at and is what I find to be inherent in a reality that supports life when I consider the possibility that it was made for that purpose - a proposition that requires a maker.

Okay, but I see things differently. I don't see why reality requires an "inherent quality" in order to support life. Life merely sprung up in satisfactory conditions. ~99.9999999% (or so) of the universe seems to be inhospitable for life.


eudaimonia,

Mark
 
Upvote 0
R

RigalCygnos

Guest
I think it's safe to say RC's post constituted its own refutation

Bollocks.

Good grief, Tenka, extra effort to misspell my nick! How sweet.

Superb responses. And highly characteristic. Such perfection of the techniques of debate, distortion, and prejudice.

Thanks for the compliments. I am highly recommended by the caliber of my opponents.

:blush:
 
Upvote 0

Sojourner<><

Incoherent Freedom Fighter
Mar 23, 2005
1,606
14
45
✟24,385.00
Faith
Non-Denom
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
What "quality" would that be? Yes, we may deduce that a hammer was created by an intelligent being, but this is mainly due to our experience with creating tools. It's a judgment call on our part, not some quality intrinsic to the hammer, aside from the tell-tale signs of intelligent creation. It seems like you want it to be something more than this.

Actually I think you pretty much nailed this one. It's the evidence of intelligent thought that distinguishes the hammer from the hammer-shaped branch. The evidence isn't found within the composition of the object but in the form and function of the whole.
 
Upvote 0

The Nihilist

Contributor
Sep 14, 2006
6,074
490
✟31,289.00
Faith
Atheist
I'm not sure what you mean by form, exactly, but I'd be real careful when talking about the function of a thing. Keep in mind that a thing's function is whatever it is used for, and so might not even really be anything at all.

On a side note, let me announce my triumphant return to the internet. My wireless was down for maybe a week, and I was too lazy to fix it until today. I'm sure everyone has missed being mercilessly ridiculed, so I'll do my best to make up for lost time.
 
Upvote 0

Eudaimonist

I believe in life before death!
Jan 1, 2003
27,482
2,738
58
American resident of Sweden
Visit site
✟126,756.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Atheist
Marital Status
Private
Politics
US-Libertarian
Good grief, Tenka, extra effort to misspell my nick! How sweet.

Superb responses. And highly characteristic. Such perfection of the techniques of debate, distortion, and prejudice.

Thanks for the compliments. I am highly recommended by the caliber of my opponents.

:blush:

If fish swim only to the level of the bait, whose fault is that? The fish, or the fisherman?

The point is, whether the bait was intentional or not, a low-caliber post invites low-caliber responses even from high-caliber people. You cannot say that an entire group of people lack "spirit or feeling" and expect no offense to be taken or displayed.


eudaimonia,

Mark
 
Upvote 0