elman doesn´t believe in hell.
I believe in hell but I believe it means death, not life in pain.
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elman doesn´t believe in hell.
Why do human beings want children and have them, when using a little thinking and observation, you know that your children are going to disobey you and are probably going to reject the family values and the religion you try to instill in them, and that they are going to use up your money, sometimes squandering it. Why?Why does a loving God create a person, knowing that they will reject Him and go to Hell?
But that was not my question.It seems loving to me to give someone a gift and if they use their gift in a loving way, give them another gift.
I used to think that love was to give everyone what makes him happy, as opposed to handing out limited gifts, although the stock of love and gifts is unlimited. Well, I must have been mistaken, then.I don't see love meaning I have to give the ones who are unloving with what they have been given the same second gift I would give to the loving. The first gift of physical life has its own dead line. That is simply part of the gift.
Oh ,well, if you insist on adding confusion by redefining terms....I believe in hell but I believe it means death, not life in pain.
For me, the Lords Prayer helps to explain the nature of God. In it, Jesus prays, Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven. [Source: Matt 6:10, King James Version] In this prayer, Jesus acknowledges that Gods will is done in heaven. However, Jesus also indicates that Gods will is not always done on earth.I'm a Christian. Always have been. But I've always liked to think of myself as pretty free-thinking.
Lately I've been wondering, if God knows everything, He must have known when he created Lucifer that he would rebel against Him. And when He created mankind and gave us free will, He knew that the fall of man would follow.
So my question to everyone is: Why does a loving God create a person, knowing that they will reject Him and go to Hell? And do we really have a choice in whether we accept or reject God, or does it all just come down to the way He chose to create us?
If anyone could shed some light on this for me I would greatly appreciate it.
LOL. So much for all that brave talk about "everything we believe needs to be based on reason."BushwigBill said:In essence we are talking about an event which has no cause, or which is its own cause. This may seem to be a logical impossibility, but I think it is necessary if we are to be any more than puppets or machines.
Although there may be no evidence that we are free (other than perhaps the feeling of revulsion one experiences when imagining our existence as a predetermined puppet show), I think that when basing one's decisions on one's beliefs, one must first assume that such a thing as a "decision" really exists in its own right, and not just as a culmination of causes.
I am neither a theologian nor a Christian so I'll confine my arguments to the logical status of this particular statement. From a determinist point of view, it is utter nonsense. One does not have the capacity to love or not love, one loves or does not love and - as the case may be - the disposition is absolute. Likewise, a rock does not have a 'choice' to be in Maine or Texas, it is simply where it is. It does not 'require' the other option, since the other option is deterministically impossible.He knew from the beginning that giving us the ability to love required that we also have the ability to not love
LOL. So much for all that brave talk about "everything we believe needs to be based on reason."
This is sooo typical of the religious mind-set: "I know it doesn't make sense, but I need it to be this way. " My condolences for your loss of reason.
I´m still not sure I understand your argument. To me it sounds like "If we couldn´t choose we couldn´t choose. Therefore we choose."I am not saying that I "need" to believe in anything. I am merely suggesting that in choosing what to believe, one must assume that choice exists, otherwise you aren't "choosing" to believe anything. In order for this to be possible, it seems to me that there must be such thing as an event without a cause.
I´m still not sure I understand your argument. To me it sounds like "If we couldn´t choose we couldn´t choose. Therefore we choose."
What am I missing?
Agreed. Predetermined or random. "Freewill" isn´t even a reasonable third option.Maybe more like: If we have no free will, whatever conclusions we come to are predetermined
Could you explain how you get from "predetermined" to "essentially meaningless"?and essentially meaningless anyway,
Practical in which respect and in regards to which purpose?so it would be practical to assume that we do have free will (whether this is the case or not).
Agreed. Predetermined or random. "Freewill" isn´t even a reasonable third option.
Could you explain how you get from "predetermined" to "essentially meaningless"?
Practical in which respect and in regards to which purpose?
I think quatona is looking for is an explanation as to the way in which our thoughts and actions are meaningless. Why, just because our actions are determined, are they therefore meaningless ? Or, to put it another way; why, if our actions are NOT determined, do they therefore acquire meaning? Our weather is not a random condition, but arises because of many atmospheric determinants, and I think you would agree that just because it is determined it doesn't loose its meaningfulness.Well if you go with predetermined or random, the bottom line is that we really have no control over anything we think or do. It just happens. I would say that makes our thoughts and actions meaningless although I suppose that's a subjective term.
And I don't believe anyone has said we do. For the most part those of us who are determinists don't act as if our thoughts and actions are determined. This is not a matter purposeful self deception, but an inherent self deception we've been conditioned to operate under. I readily blame the guy for tailgating me on the freeway just as if he could choose to do differently, and all because that's the way I've been emotionally conditioned. It isn't logical to do so, but it's something, just like all my other responses, that has been determined. I can no more not automatically respond irrationally---failing to take into account the driver could not help tailgating---then I can freely choose to do anything else.To me it seems silly to base your actions on the belief that you have no control over your actions.
This is a theological question raised from a philosophical perspective. Let's look at the construction of it... You're saying if God knows everything, He must have known that Lucifer would rebel against Him. Now let's ask ourselves: How would God know such a thing? The answer is He would only know it because it happened, but don't let the past tense form fool you. The fact that it occurs in a time scale which God is not bound by doesn't mean that God knew about it before it happened. To God, it already did happen. But the happening relies on our actually doing it. We should be using God's frame of reference to address this question instead of the human frame of reference.Lately I've been wondering, if God knows everything, He must have known when he created Lucifer that he would rebel against Him. And when He created mankind and gave us free will, He knew that the fall of man would follow.
He knows by creating people that invariably some will go to hell, but He doesn't know which ones before they're created. The term 'before' is a little tricky. God knows because they're created. If they hadn't been created, there would have been nothing for Him to know about it. The creation part was an essential component of His knowledge about it. He couldn't know about something that didn't exist. That's antithetical.BushwigBill said:Why does a loving God create a person, knowing that they will reject Him and go to Hell?
The whole fact that God doesn't force us all to follow in His path gives us a good indication that there's an agent of decision making involved at the lower levels. I see no justification for why a God would force some people to heaven but not others. A more reasonable approach which follows in with His attributes is that He allows people to be themselves, and provides everyone the tools to be their best selves. Some accept it, and some reject it.BushWigBill said:And do we really have a choice in whether we accept or reject God, or does it all just come down to the way He chose to create us?
Well, I personally am convinced that all my actions are determined - and they seem to be anything but meaningless to me.Well if you go with predetermined or random, the bottom line is that we really have no control over anything we think or do. It just happens. I would say that makes our thoughts and actions meaningless although I suppose that's a subjective term.
It´s your prerogative to refuse to hold notions that you don´t like, but calling them "silly" goes a step further. On top of it, "it seems silly to" does not qualify as a good argument. Particularly when you have already - although half-heartedly - agreed that the opposite is a logical impossibility.To me it seems silly to base your actions on the belief that you have no control over your actions.
How about not leaving all the work to me, but do your part yourself?I can't imagine that to be beneficial in regards to any purpose.
I'll go along with Merriam-Webster:BushwigBill said:Washington, I think we are going to run into trouble in attempting to define the term "meaning". Any suggestions on where we might start? To me it seems intuitive that determined actions are not meaningful but I grant that this may be entirely subjective.
Never gave it a thought, but off the top of my head, I imagine it's because we seldom consider the roots of any thoughts and actions, and only trace them back to the most immediate cause: the individual, and then stop there. And this is far more expedient than bothering to go any further. Once the most immediate cause has been established, for practical purposes there is little need to go on. Any action directed toward the cause is seldom enhanced by delving into further causes. So, if nothing else, as a practical matter I think we've developed a filtering mechanism of cause/effect that tends to regard one's acts as a product of oneself. Stopping there, we call this cause "the will," and because we prefer to ignore the determinants of the will, we choose to hide the fact behind the notion of "free." To say the will is not free is to admit there's more behind the curtain that needs to be considered, and how much easier it is to declare that we've identified the culprit and call off the chase.As for your second point, I'm interested to know where you think the notion of free will that you've been conditioned to believe might have originated in a world where no such thing exists.
I don´t find it particularly offensive, and I am not here to take offense anyways.Quatona, if you find the word "silly" offensive I'll be sure to omit it from future posts![]()
I didn´t intend to misrepresent you. I was under the impression that you admitted the logical problems coming with the concept "freewill". Sorry if that was a misunderstanding.At no point have I agreed, even half-heartedly, that free will is "not a reasonable third option". Perhaps I didn't make that clear enough in my last post.
I personally think that pragmatism is the only reasonable way to approach philosophy. If belief in god helps you towards happiness, go for it. If belief in "freewill" (whatever that might mean) floats your boat be my guest.Yes, I'm not a fan of total pragmatism but I think that if you believe something you need to be making a constant effort to live by it.
Well, if that is the way you are determined to behave if believing in determinism, and if this behaviour of yours wouldn´t make you happy I see why you personally don´t like the idea of determinism. However, if this behaviour wouldn´t make you happy, I would see a chance that you´d go to the funeral despite the implications you personally feel determinism has.Now excuse me if I start to rant a little, but you asked for an example (which you may come to regret). If I were to start believing in determinism, for a start I would skip the funeral I plan on attending tomorrow. A friend of mine recently lost her brother and I didn't know him but I was planning on going to the service to show some support for her. But if I wasn't accountable for my actions, I wouldn't feel obliged to go, and she would probably be sad not to see me after I said I'd be there, but that wouldn't matter to me, because all that sadness was always going to happen anyway, and after all it's all just neurotransmitters and electrons bouncing around in her brain, and who ever felt sorry for an electron? Not I!
Do you experience that a change in factors cause a change in the degree of your "misery"?So I'd continue to do as I pleased with no thought for anyone but myself, and eventually I'd have no friends and I'd be rather miserable, but then I'd tell myself that I was always going to be miserable anyway, and that misery was just chemicals and electrons.
Ah, you´d force yourself. Why would you force yourself to do something the effect of which you find undesirable? Do you believe that "pleasure and pain are illusions" or don´t you? If you do, how would determinism be the problem? If you don´t, why would you believe it once you were to acknowledge determinism?Occasionally I might derive some pleasure from the limited and temporary spoils of my selfishness, but then I'd force myself to remember that pleasure is just as much an illusion as pain.
I´m sorry, but I have problems following this line of reasoning.Eventually I don't think there would be any pleasure or pain or anything, at which point I suppose I might just accept my role as a completely passive observer and cease to see the point in doing anything.
The point is the same as it would be if everything would not be predetermined: You do that which you expect to gain the best results - in regards to whatever ideal you hold.I think maybe that's what I'm getting at when I talk about something being "meaningless": If everything is predetermined, what's the point in doing anything?
Neither. There is no such thing as a decision. There are actions, and actions are caused and have effects.Are we making our decisions or just watching them happen?
Well, the idea that a predetermined action is not an action but merely watching doesn´t seem to make sense to me. Thus, I fail to see how this question addresses determinism. Determinism doesn´t reduce acting to "watching".The opinions and actions of a spectator have no bearing on a game, so why not live as if you're a player, just in case you are?
Am I the only one who can make neither heads nor tails of this kind of self-referential sophistry? How it reads to me: God allows me to be me, but gives me stuff that I can choose to make a better me. How many "me"s do I have? It looks like there's a "me" which is free to choose how I behave and/or believe. Is that the "meta-me"?The whole fact that God doesn't force us all to follow in His path gives us a good indication that there's an agent of decision making involved at the lower levels. I see no justification for why a God would force some people to heaven but not others. A more reasonable approach which follows in with His attributes is that He allows people to be themselves, and provides everyone the tools to be their best selves. Some accept it, and some reject it.