jillery <
69jp...@gmail.com> wrote in
news:r38vt7dcun8d5tcs7...@4ax.com:
> On Mon, 18 Jun 2012 09:06:00 -0700 (PDT), Perseus
> <
leopoldo...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>On Jun 18, 6:17 am, jillery <
69jpi...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> On Sun, 17 Jun 2012 05:00:59 -0700 (PDT), Perseus
>>> <
leopoldo.perd...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> >On Jun 16, 2:46 pm, "AlwaysAskingQuestions"
>>> ><
alwaysaskingquesti...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> >> *Hemidactylus* wrote:
>>> >> > On 06/16/2012 08:30 AM, AlwaysAskingQuestions wrote:
>>> >> >> *Hemidactylus* wrote:
>>> >> >>> On 06/16/2012 04:55 AM, AlwaysAskingQuestions wrote:
>>> >> >>>> *Hemidactylus* wrote:
>>> >> >>>>> On 06/15/2012 01:33 AM, AlwaysAskingQuestions wrote:
>>> >> >>>>>> Dale wrote:
>>>
snip confusion
> IIUC you're saying in paraphrase there are events that happen which
> cause human suffering, And that a god which does nothing to stop
> these events isn't worth thinking about. Therefore such a god does
> not exist.
Maybe not. If you are effering to a generic god, one that is simply
there, then you might be in error. OTOH, if you are reffering to a
specfic claim for a god, such as the revealed godss of tgeh desert, then
that is a logical conclusion.
This is based on claims made by the believers™, as wewll as some of the
claims made my the writers of those scriptures.
> Your argument makes an implicit assumption that a god, regardless of
> motivation, is obliged to stop events that we feel cause us suffering.
I suspect you may be right.
> But if such a god exists, it would be obliged to consider the entire
> universe and all eternity, not just us in the here and now. What if
The magic world of what if.
If humanity was a creation of a particular god, then ethically that god
has obligations towards humanity.
OTOH, if like the revealed gods of the desrt, a god shows up After events
are already in progress, then no, it is not ethically obliged.
OTOH, if that god claims it is the creator of humanity, then it has
accepted the ethical obligations that Dale seems copnfused about.
Its obligations towards the universe are not a concern to me at this
point, for the universe has yet to inform me as to what it thinks. I
suspect it never will.
> the events which cause us suffering benefits some other part of the
> Universe? What if the events which cause us suffering now benefits us
> in the future? Or vice versa? We don't know any of that, but such a
> god would.
Only if it was omni-sentient. Which removes any free will or change in
the future. Again, this is only true beyond reasonable doubt if the god
involved is one of those like the revealed gods of the desert.
> But let's assume for argument's sake that your implicit assumption is
> correct, that a god is obliged to eliminate human suffering. How do
> you expect such a god to accomplish this? Do you expect it to arrange
> the Universe strictly and entirely for our convenience, so that no
If you are familiar with the US & its fascination with entertainment, you
may recall a tv series called bewitched. All the god in question has to
do is wiggle its nose. Hey, it was good enough for the US. :::)))
Like with the gods, I saw no lasting effect from that procedure either.
> suffering *can* happen, even in principle? Or do you expect it to
> actively violate natural laws on a case-by-case basis? I hope that
> both sound as silly to you as they do to me. ISTM the only way for a
> god to eliminate all human suffering is to scrap our rational universe
> and replace it with a magical one.
Isn't that what gods do, magic?
> And what of the cases where this clan feels that other clan is making
> them suffer? How would such a god take sides in the politics of men?
> On what basis would it choose?
Easy, arrange it so the clans never think like that. BTW, I agree, good
luck with that when humans are involved. We are a greedy lot & easily
led in some cases.
> Please note that I haven't raised the concept of suffering being good
> for us in principle. Nor have I raised the possibility that a god is
> intervening right now, keeping the Universe from causing even more
> human suffering that it does. Please note that I haven't raisded them
> because I don't need to, and they're just as nonsensical as your
> implicit assumption.
When it comes to discussing the gods of humanity, all one can do is
discuss the claims for those gods.
As to suffering, never known it to be good for the individual, even if
they did learn from it. At the time, it hurts & hurts deep. Or it did
in my case. Of course, YMWV.
I prefer to recall a Mark Twain comment when suffering is involved.
Paraphrase:
If a cat jumps on a hot stove it will not stay there. The sad part is
the cat will never jump on a stove again.
I'm not so sure a cat not jumping on my stove is a thing to be missed or
mourned.
> My point being that your implicit assumption, that a god is obliged to
> eliminate human suffering, has no solution, even for a god. And so
> your argument, that a god's failure to eliminate human suffering
> somehow proves its nonexistence, is false. As I noted before, I don't
> say that gods exist. I say that your argument doesn't prove they
> don't exist.
It really depends on the god involved, or so I think. If a god pretends
that it is benevolent, then suffering is out. Short of claiming one can
not know mind of a god, but one can know what its adherents claim, there
is no way to even evaluate the question. & of course, they are so ill
defined. I've only found one requirement, & thjat can be waived for
certain classes of gods. Here is my list of what gods are. Should you
see a carerogory, other than imaginary, feel free to add to it.
What is a god, a short & incomplete list.
Requirements or attributes of the gods, goddesses & other
divinities of the human species. [Incomplete]
Anthropomorphic
A: Must be supernatural [applies to every divinity declared] B: May
or may not be able to have a visible body [Zeus & the Greek
pantheon as an example]
C: May or may not interfere in human activity or destiny. D: May or
may not be good, evil, or apathetic where humans are concerned.
E: May or may not be a divine through their own will, may be a
victim of apotheosis [the Chinese pantheon is a good example of
these types ofgods.]
Demons: Now there is a thought, Demons as gods. Indeed, they are,
lessor gods to be sure, but more powerful than some gods, less powerful
than others.
Dwarves &/or Elves: Though two distinct races, dwarves are
found in worldwide mythology as well as European. Elves, tend to be
Nordic & Germanic in origin. Fates: They are common to the classical
myths as well as the European ones.
Fairies, or the wee folk: A class of gods that include everything from
Brownies to Knockers & beyond. Some are good, & some like Red Hat, are
not.
Giants: though supernatural as understood in the myths of the world, they
are not necessary known to have god like powers as most understand the
term.
Gods & goddesses: I hope this class does not need more explanation.
Spirits: are all supernatural, even those that are the spirits of humans
or animals that have not went on to where good spirits are entitled to
go.
Animistic, all living creatures, including plant life
Astral/solar All heavenly bodies
walksalone who is not to keen on philisophical questions, the words but,
if, & maybe are to frequently visitors. Mythology is not that much
better, yet it holds my interest. What strange critters we humans are.
Why be born again, when you can just grow up?