"The Absurd is the confrontation of the irrational (the world) and the wild longing for clarity whose call echoes in the human heart"
Notice that the arguments cannot be valid under this definition of absurd. The fact that man's constitution (longings) cannot be satisfied by the world does not necessarily have anything to do with God. — Agustino
Good post. How do we know if a universe is rational? — darthbarracuda
Agreed. How could science even start to try to uncover the rationality, or lack thereof, of the universe?
Does this mean that any assertion that the universe is meaningless or irrational is based purely off of a gut feeling? — darthbarracuda
God is not a solution to absurdity because God risks absurdity par excellence. — Soylent
1.) God does not exist, and therefore life is absurd.
2.) Life is absurd without god, therefore god exists. — darthbarracuda
Wouldn't the existence of god dispel the absurdity of life? — TheMadFool
God would confer meaning, as in the absurdity is only superficial, for we would be part of a divine plan. — TheMadFool
Seems to me there are two arguments here:
1.) God does not exist, and therefore life is absurd.
2.) Life is absurd without god, therefore god exists.
The first argument is a reaction to the apparent non existence of a deity, while the second is a proof for a deity.
Absurdity here is meaning not only the metaphor of the actor without a stage, but also the complete uncanniness, or peculiarity, of existence as a whole if god does not exist.
Or is this just an appeal to emotions and ignorance? — darthbarracuda
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.