I’ve never much understood why permanent solutions to temporary problems ought to be shunned. It’s only temporary problems that have solutions, not the permanent ones. And does one not want one’s solutions to problems to last and thereby be permanent? How then is this supposed to assuage those who are suicidal and have no doubts regarding there not being an afterlife?
The outcome “4” exists from “2+2” by logical necessity
So I decide to build my own set of rules and values, this is my first attempt and I will need your help, so where should I begin?
What do you think about kids using social media. Personally I would ban smart phone use (outside of the home) for anyone under the age of 18. Cities do need to adapt to the needs of children though - green spaces to explore with freedom is so important I feel (beyond the watch of adult supervision).
If you insist going back to the times when there is no written records on the theistic studies, then it is not philosophical topic we would be discussing. It would be then shamanism, totems and superstitions you would be talking about. They are subjects for parapsychology, occultism, esotericism, anthropology or historical discussions at best.
↪Talkopu, this reasoning is the same, as I said before, as eugenics for disabled people. Would you likewise bar disabled people from procreating?
After all, wasn't the reason for trying to work out what was good, precisely to enable us to decide what we ought do?
If you decided to take up a religion, then you would be expected to read up on the principles and traditions of the religion. and study the objective definition of God, and be knowledgeable about the God.
Once you take up a religion, then that would be your religion for the rest of your life accepting all the code of conducts, principles and definition of the God
I am not sure what God you are talking about, but if we talk about the Christianity, then omnipotence of God is evidently implied in the Bible describing the creation of the world and humans by the God. God can also allow people to resurrect after their deaths ... etc. It sounds too naive to say that omnipotence of God is recently invented by humans, therefore not omnipotence. It screams a loud contradiction here.
Unless you are talking about a woman you met recently as your God, it is quite reasonable to assume religious Gods are omnipotent
It was a possible scenario post when you chose the definition of God with omnipotence. It was not my own definition of God.
God doesn't have any of those properties. God only exists in word.
I don't disagree, but what distinguishes the Post Truth era is which entities qualify as "what should be trusted".One should only trust what should be trusted.
Majority acceptance does not signify that a moral stance is right. That's what matters.
And if the majority decided we need to have a human sacrifice to help the crops that would settle it for you?
This is similar to an argument made for supporting slavery in America. It's not about humanity, it's about whose autonomy ought to prevail. Bad precedent to set
Does it imply that our perceptions are not direct? Could there be other factors involved in perception apart from the the object of perception, sensory organs, memories and experiences?
"The boundaries which divide Life from Death are at best shadowy and vague. Who shall say where the one ends, and where the other begins?" --Edgar Allan Poe