if you take God to be omniscient then God has a better understanding of what is just than you do (as your knowledge is not perfect, God's is). And as such it make no sense for you to judge God's actions as unjust, this is merely your limited human mind not being able to comprehend true Godly justness. — PhilosophyRunner
to play devils advocate (in a post about God!), if you take God to be omniscient then God has a better understanding of what is just than you do (as your knowledge is not perfect, God's is). And as such it make no sense for you to judge God's actions as unjust, this is merely your limited human mind not being able to comprehend true Godly justness. — PhilosophyRunner
If I find God to be unjust by my understanding of justness - this means my understanding of what is just and God's understanding of what is just differ. As God cannot be wrong in his understanding of anything, it is my understanding of justness that is wrong. — PhilosophyRunner
choose — Benj96
Then we have to accept that God is an insane asshole that actually believes that serial rapists should not be punished except when caught? — ToothyMaw
Then everything ethical and just is absolutely arbitrary. Or we don't need God. Read this for clarification.
In that frame work, we would have to assume that your understanding of who is an asshole is wrong compared to God's superior understanding of who is an asshole. — PhilosophyRunner
Or that everything ethical or just is what god understands as ethical and just, regardless of whether humanity understands it as ethical or just. — PhilosophyRunner
But from my point of view, this is all moot as I see no reason to believe an omniscient God in the first place. — PhilosophyRunner
Then I'm not alone here. — ToothyMaw
1. If God is just then there should be no injustice
2. There is injustice
Ergo,
3. God is not just [1, 2, MT] — Agent Smith
Not really, unless God were threatening me with death, or an eternity of damnation for defying him. — ToothyMaw
Are we referring to God as a person here or god as the universe?
Because god as a person could be just. They have free will to make good or bad decisions. God as the universe cannot be just as the universe is everything: thus including both justices and injustices as a whole. — Benj96
It would be arbitrary if God said what is ethical is ethical merely because he says so. — ToothyMaw
Are we referring to God as a person here or god as the universe?
Because god as a person could be just. They have free will to make good or bad decisions. God as the universe cannot be just as the universe is everything: thus including both justices and injustices as a whole. — Benj96
Exactly. He or she would have to demonstrate it instead of just saying so/dictating. They would have to show everyone what it means to be ethical (good) or unethical (bad) by utilising themselves (the truth - if they are indeed omniscient). — Benj96
If God desires to even be ethical, that is. — ToothyMaw
What I am saying is that if you are starting off with an omniscient God (as you did mention in your OP), then by the very attribute you ascribed to God, God has a superior understanding of what is just than you. — PhilosophyRunner
Indeed. I just really doubt that a good God exists — ToothyMaw
So if there is such a good God and they are able to be a person for a limited time and speak the truth now would be a good time for them to reveal themselves — Benj96
That's a terrible shame. I do agree that probably most people at this stage in time would have to "see it to believe it" rather than blindly trust that such a good god exists. — Benj96
Maybe it's time to give up on notions of being guided by some benevolent, all-powerful, cosmic father-figure? I honestly think we are on our own. — ToothyMaw
However if I did believe in an omniscient God, perhaps the bitterness would be palatable and I would avoid the arguments I was making. Funny that. — PhilosophyRunner
It makes sense to explore scenarios, sure. What I have explored has not led to any reason to believe in a God, but who knows if I may one day find something — PhilosophyRunner
a. If God exists, they are at least unjust, and have the potential to effect just outcomes if such just outcomes exist.
b. Just outcomes exist.
c. God must always effect just outcomes to be perfectly just.
d. God does not always effect just outcomes.
e. Therefore, God is merely unjust. — ToothyMaw
a - If god exists we seem to have no demonstrable way of knowing what their nature is, or if god is even present in the physical world.
I guess I would ask, what exactly is the correlation between our world and the reality (or not) of a deity? — Tom Storm
I guess I would ask, what exactly is the correlation between our world and the reality (or not) of a deity? — Tom Storm
b) We have no good evidence about the nature of any god/s. — Tom Storm
a) It is unwise to reach conclusions in the absence of good evidence. — Tom Storm
c) Therefore we can make no claims about god/s as being just or unjust. — Tom Storm
The problem for me is that these kinds of formulations only really work if God is a person - some old guy in the sky, with a personality and an almost human approach and is subject to a literalist/fundamentalist interpretation. — Tom Storm
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