A good god wouldn't desire that. He'd desire that people would be happy wether they liked him or not.
I said that the evidence suggests that God does not want to prove himself for the sake of gathering a bunch of robots, but that he wants people to search for him as a sign of their sincerity. Why is that not good, according to you?
That should be irrevelant for a powerful being.
Observations about what should and what should not be, according to your opinion, is not scientific method. You've done this several times now (i.e. saying what your understanding of God should be as opposed to looking at what the recorded evidence suggests).
This kind of side stepping is not genuine discussion and will only ever lead in circles. Anytime someone makes a valid point about what is actually recorded regarding the nature of God, you dismiss it with what you feel the nature of God should be.
You did not answer the question. If God was proved irrefutably to your satisfaction, would you obey him?
Is this explained in the Bible?
Yes, my explanation is consistent with the biblical explanation. The fact that you are so ready to dismiss written evidence on the basis of what "could be" shows a bias on your part. I don't mind evidence being challenged, but what you are doing is side stepping the evidence and you are doing it consistently
Being moral to get into heaven or to please an authority isn't being moral at all.
Is this you making rules again about something you profess not to believe in anyway? Why should I trust your opinion about the morality of Jesus as explained in the Bible?
You see, over and over again you say you don't believe, that it is unreasonable to believe, but you have no problem being the authority when it comes to telling other people about their own beliefs. You can't have it both ways.
Of course. And this isn't a bad belief at all. It's called the scientific method and it clearly shows how to prove stuff. It has been used to prove things like gravity; radiation; the atomic world; etc, and until now, flawless. If you find a problem with it or have a better model, go collect your Nobel Prize.
Irrational. I expressed no problem with the method. I questioned your understanding of the method. It is a problem if you view them as one and the same...
I got a bit lost. Can you tell me how do you explain a thing whose existance has never ocurred to you?
Explaining things that have never occurred to us before is what ALL learning is about. Is it part of the scientific method to exclude the existence of a life much greater than you on the basis that you have no awareness of that life form according to your understanding of what it means to be aware of this life form?
besides, how do you know that (assuming this world was, indeed created), it was created for humans? It can have been created for ants as well.
Sure, but for whatever purpose it was created, the point is, there is still a purpose. Are you aware that you've changed the topic here?
This is a logical failure, because you say nothing can come from nowhere but then you open an exception and say "Well, nothing can come from nowhere except this amazing being I call God".
No, I'm fine with simply saying "I don't know". It appears that it is the atheist who cannot say "I don't know". I asked you to tell us where the singularity comes from if not from a creator.
The thing is, you don't know. You can't test it. You can't even deduce the conclusion from your 3 previously listed rules about science. All you have is a theory that all the matter in the universe came from a single point at some time as a result of chance.
So there you are, in a situation where you've got this belief in a singularity, but no explanation for it that fits into any of your laws.
We go back to the scientific method above that didn't exist towards most history. When it started (around 1500) most of those problems stopped.
You may not be aware, but you really do harm your credibility with comments like this. It's like you are so busy trying to defend your point of view that you can't see how irrational your comments are.
Are you suggesting that abuses of the scientific method stopped after the year 1500?
You are restricting yourself to Christianity.
Again, you are being irrational. It's like me suggesting that you are restricting yourself to this forum when it comes to talking to other people. It would make no sense for me to say that just because my only experience of you is here on this forum.
I used Christianity as an example. I believe that all of these irrational comments are not a result of your language barrier, or your age, or you using an phone vs your tablet or because of your inexperience in these issues, etc.
I believe it is because you really do hit a wall when it comes to arguing the non-existence of something which you cannot prove one way or the other. I think it would be far more rational for you to take the position that you cannot prove it one way or the other, but that you strongly believe there is no God based on x,y,z.
General Relativity and Mechanic Quantics. But nowhere do you find someone who rejects belief in one of them, or only believe about what he wants about them. Nobody has another interpretation of them, and String Theory is about to solve this problem.
It has nothing to do with religion.
But it does have something to do with reason. I reject your assertion that religion and reason are separate ideals.
The point is that even in science there are contradicting theories and teachings, but because it is science you see no problem with that. But when it comes to religion, you suddenly see the contradictions as proof that there is no merit to anything about religion at all.
You are using two different standards. Is that what happens with scientific method? Either that, or you need a new theory about using contradictions as a reliable way to measure the reason of a particular issue.
Its not that all religions could be wrong. It's that all religions are most likely wrong and only one can be right.
There are many similarities between various religions. Real truth is sometimes like that. To make a blanket statement that only one religion can be right misses the point and shows that you've not thought your conclusions through.
No theologist has ever been able to do so.
Yeah yeah and no atheist has ever been able to solve all the contradictions in science, either. So what?
What if those persons don't believe you in the first place, instead of your actions? What if they think you are a girl; other thinks you are a guy; other thinks you are several people; all at once. What about if you can't be seen or spoken with?
Whether they think I'm one gender or the other, or that I am more than one person, or that I can't be seen or spoken too, or whatever, the point is, I still asked for lunch. Those contradicting points of view ABOUT me do not change the fact.
I believe this push for an argument against the existence of God based on contradictions which come about as a result of people who do not listen to what God wants is a cheap shot and very much irrational.
For example, am I to base my understanding of atheism is general on your example here? Based on the kind of reasoning you've used, I think a lot of more experienced atheists would cringe at that thought.
I've discussed these kind of issues with atheists before who take a different approach than what you've shared here. Does that mean it is a contradiction which disproves the existence of atheism? Because all atheists are not completely united should I feel justified in saying that atheism does not exist?
Yes, that really is the logic you are using for Christianity and it's relationship to God.