Exiledoomsayer
Only toke me 1 year to work out how to change this
No, I notice this alot and you really should try to understand there is a immense difference between me disrespecting your idea, and disrespecting you. I really do not care to gently and respectfully allow a (seemingly)wrong idea to persist, I'd rather confront such an idea and see where it go's.When you insult my ideas, you insult me, the one who holds such opinions. When you talk the way you talk, regarding my ideas are ridiculous claims, you are in essence insulting my ability to reason, inferring through your behavior that I am so stupid for believing such a thing.
To disagree is one thing, but one's ideas should be treating like any other possession which belongs to another: that is with respect and gentleness.
To borrow a example from another thread.
You might think pedophilia is okay, and I will respect your right to hold that idea. But I sure as heck wont respect that idea itself and I wont restrain myself from dismantling it.
You and your idea are two seperate things, it is not my fault that you choose to take it personally while there certainly are other ways to take it.
I am not nessisarily saying "If you hold that idea you must be a retard and a sicko"
I might just be saying "You hold that Idea but I disagree, I wonder if you have looked at it from different angles, here is one example.."
The first, sure I am insulting you as a person and your thinking capability. The second, I am respecting your ability to reason and assume that perhaps you made an oversight and in pointing that out will either convince you or give you the chance to respond to that and show that you did consider that objection and share your results. Perhaps I made an oversight myself in my original assumption that you can bring to light for me.
Personally I would have prefered if you had given me the benefit of the doubt and ascribed the second motivation to me and answered my concerns. rather then assume I held the first and consider yourself under personal attack.
That was a tad rambly but did that make sense?
Well that is good then. I did feel I summarized it quite reasonably.The way you summarize my ideas are almost right, except for the negative connotations you attribute to them.
As for weither the negative connotations are deserved or not I suppose is debatable.
Well there can never be a perfect analogy, they will always break down when carried deep enough.1. We have a choice and a will, but they are not free to act on their own. It is not possible for anything other than God to act on their own free will, because we were created, and our entire history was known before our creation. To say that we are like puppets, however, is not exactly accurate. Puppets are empty shells, with no drive or internal purpose. God gives us our drives, and our purpose. So we feel, and we act out, according to the way God purposed us.
But it would perhaps be more accurate to describe us all as robots, preprogrammed with how to act, thinks, feel, learn. Our paths set in stone the moment we are made without further need of direct control, rather then constantly controllled by strings.
I am not sure if I would call it a choice if we could not have chosen differently, our choices where made for us the moment we were 'programmed' However, Only the illusion of choice exists for the robot that is unaware of its programming.2. The fact that God is in control doesn't mean that we didn't choose. Rather, we choose act according to the conditions God created for us. We are creatures created and moves by outside influences. But an evil man is just as evil no matter the why of how he got to be that way. Either it was chance which made him that way, or he was designed that way. Either way, it wasn't him who created himself, but he's still just as evil.
Though I cant hold that against you since I hold the same view with regards to natural lack of freewill.
If you program a robot to build a bomb, drive itself into a building and detonate, are you innocent?3. All the horrors of the world are under God's jurisdiction, but He is not making them happen with His own hands. He creates evil beings to commit evil acts so He Himself can remain pure. Yes, He can stop them, but as I said in my reply to Resha Caner above, God is the only one who can morally choose not to prevent evil from happening. This is because only He knows the end result, and His intentions are good.
I most certainly do not think so. Ultimately it is the building programmer that is responsible for any action its creation under takes while following the programming it was given.
With regards to gods intentions being good, they are only good because you defined him as good. It does not matter what he does he will always be good too you.
Everything god does is good.
Something is good because god does it.
Its quite circular would you not agree?
Since this came up during #1 already I will just respond to the final part.4. God does not pull our strings, per say, but he does create our very nature, which results in our actions. We act because of who we are. Who we are was designed by God. It's not that God makes a habit out of creating good people just to override that and make them do random evil acts whenever He feels like it.
How do you know you where meant to be good? Perhaps you where made to be evil by snapping suddenly and going for that school. Its not random evil acts its all part of his plan after all?
I think you are putting the cart before the horse here. God does not base his plan around how we where created. We are created to fit his plan are we not?5. We and our actions are not separate. When we were created, all of our history was already known. Based on this knowledge, God designed us with a plan in mind. The fact that GOD had a plan in mind does not justify our actions. Evil is still evil.
And again, If the robot commits evil by following his programming, who is responsible the robot or the creator? I would say the creator. The robot is mearly a tool to commit evil with. It is not itself evil, it could have been programmed for good just as easily. Thus the programmer is at fault.
If you disagree I would like to have that explained.
Clearly, God could have programmed us with the ability to appreciate perfection to the fullest in the first place.6. Clearly, God has a more perfect plan in mind than one where all of creation begins in paradise and stays in paradise. We can only learn to appreciate perfection more if we've seen what imperfection is like. And life is never as sweet as when it has been saved from death.
He choose not too, He is all powerful he surely would have had the ability to do so without contrasting it against suffering. If he was unable to do so he is not allpowerfull. If he choose not to do so we can only guess at his motivations but from a human stand point its either "Malice" or "I do not know, but I hope its for a good reason"
Indeed, as I said it does not matter if he wanted us just to torture us for his own amusement. That would be what he created us for and if do not like it. too bad. It does not matter that god might be a sadist he is in control for might makes right in this picture, and god is the mightiest. (or so we assume, maybe at 8pm his mother tells him to put his toys away and come to dinner? Interesting thought.)7. The "point" of creation is as God defines it, as He's the one who started it in the first place. If you don't like it, that's too bad, but creation is not your design anyway.
Yeah I was thinking that actually but wasnt sure what else to make of it.Well, technically, killing someone would mean curing the illness, but it defeats the purpose.
I have nothing to argue with here really.I kinda see a point on both sides here. On one hand, I don't think we were meant to know everything. A little mystery is good for our health. But at the same time, just accepting something as a "divine paradox" and not trying to understand it is a major cop-out.
I would point out that the "mystery for our health" bit I view as the things we do not know yet that we are working on, I would consider uncovering mystery as a healthy thing. As such you would need mystery to uncover. But i certainly do not consider the mystery itself as a healthy thing to be left alone.
Oh, kind of like how weights are good for your health if you lift them regulary and move on to heavier weights eventually. but they do nothing for you if you just leave them lying there.
Yeah i like that analogy.
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