... why we shouldn't act in an attempt to make any kind of divine force happy ... — David
If divine forces don't exist, then trying to make them happy is obviously just stupid. — David
I've reluctantly come to the conclusion that God doesn't exist. — Bitter Crank
All that is to the good. — Bitter Crank
So, I've reluctantly come to the conclusion that God does exist. — Hanover
What anchors the good to reality if not God? — Hanover
Is it just man's declaration of what is good? Or, is the good good regardless of what demented person might call it bad? Unless you're willing to admit that the good is just some manmade invention subject to redefinition at will (and rejecting the view that our understanding of the good evolves over time, getting ever closer to the truth with the passage of time), it strikes me that you are a theist. — Hanover
Your god is what is good, just, and pure, and that god is what the Christian and the pious atheist both worship, just calling themselves different names. — Hanover
1. You have to explain what you mean by "divine deity".
3. In my personal opinion it is more likely that a benevolent God (it is just as likely for the God to be evil, but in that case nothing anyone does will "save him" after death) will want people to act in a good way (good is not, as many people thing, something subjective), so in consequence, the only reasonable way to act, asuming that there is a God from whom we know nothing, is to be ethically good.
Regarding whether God has tricked everyone and told them the opposite of what is true, I don't know what to make of that. If you don't have faith that God is honest, then I guess anything could follow as to what he meant when he said things. He'd be just like any other person you couldn't trust.
As it happens, there are some advantages.
God the all powerful, all knowing, all present... becomes a being that exceeds our capacity
My reading of the Bible, including the Gospels, tells me that I should be good to others for their sake
And whatever our beliefs or non-beliefs, we can behave well or badly as it suits us, and accept the consequences.
What anchors the good to reality if not God? Is it just man's declaration of what is good?
Or, is the good good regardless of what demented person might call it bad?
Unless you're willing to admit that the good is just some manmade invention subject to redefinition at will (and rejecting the view that our understanding of the good evolves over time, getting ever closer to the truth with the passage of time)
Your god is what is good, just, and pure, and that god is what the Christian and the pious atheist both worship, just calling themselves different names.
we are still obliged to examine and defend any definition of good.
People examine and defend what they view as right.
Also, how do You quote people? I get the feeling I'm doing it wrong... — David
What obliges us (which I'm assuming implies "us humans")? Or do You mean "us philosophically-inclined people"? In any case, isn't that obligation merely part of Your own sense of morality, which likely doesn't apply to many people? Or do You mean, we literally have to because there is no way to not, as it is the way humans process and deal with morality? — David
What do You think would would happen if people, rather than defend their beliefs attempted to reconcile them with others', holding neither above the other before evaluation of which is more reasonable or correct? Is that even fundamentally possible, or is the root of our very decisions about which beliefs are better than others, the determinant, the judge in our heads, so fundamentally decided by the beliefs that are already held that there is no reconciliation? Perhaps, this is more of a psychological question than a philosophical one, but I'd still like to hear peoples' stances. — David
I think I'm making God and good synonymous as opposed to reducing one or the other. It's consistent with my very expansive reading of the commandment against idolatry, which I take as a prohibition against objectifying him in any way. That would include considering him a thing of any sort. But I suppose that's an aside. Yes, God is goodness, and the goodness exists, but I think it's meaningless to ask where goodness physically exists, and I disagree that goodness waited around for some guy to be smart enough to create it.Wow. Beautiful. Considering it on a logical level, though, I feel like You are reducing G-d to morality rather than vice-versa. In other words, from what You said, it should follow that G-d is merely an easier name for whatever You call the system of morality the governs Your life. Thus, G-d's reaction becomes irrelevant; we are just computers and the program we follow is G-d or morality or whatever You want to call it. An interesting idea. — David
You are, but as a practical matter, do whatever you want. That's what I do.am I doing this forum right? — David
Your capitalization of "You" is odd by the way. I agree, worship makes no sense. I don't even fully understand it under a traditional religious view. It would seem that God needn't be asked, but that strikes me as another question.On Your end, how can You know that worshipping (as You understand it) G-d is actually causing G-d to feel worshipped? What I mean to say is that the G-d You happen to pray to is one whom You could never know how to pray to? Doesn't that make prayer feel useless? — David
why we shouldn't act in an attempt to make any kind of divine force happy — David
Your capitalization of "You" is odd by the way. I agree, worship makes no sense. I don't even fully understand it under a traditional religious view. It would seem that God needn't be asked, but that strikes me as another question. — Hanover
Perhaps David is confusing You with G-d, which is really odd. — Bitter Crank
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