The problem of evil implies the immorality of procreation. See op for details. — Bartricks
You are just saying things. — Bartricks
Imagine there is an omnipotent, omniscient person. — Bartricks
And imagine that this omnipotent omniscient person really likes the sensible world, — Bartricks
Impossible, illogical, no such entity exists. — universeness
If you are unable to change the world, then you ought to frustrate your desire to introduce new sentient life into it. Yes? — Bartricks
No, you can change the world, many historical people have and your desire to pass on your legacy to your children to continue your work is valid. — universeness
That's a blurt. That's not an argument. It's just you saying something. — Bartricks
So, identify this omnipotent/omniscient, get it to reveal itself and demonstrate its ability. Can you do that or is it you that's just typing BS. — universeness
You lack the ability to change how the sensible world operates. For instance, you lack the ability to prevent the horrendous evils that are occurring daily. You're not God. — Bartricks
Make an argument. — Bartricks
No one is, god doesn't exist. I can change how the world operates through scientific breakthrough that can indeed prevent many horrendous evils. Are you still afraid of smallpox for example? — universeness
My argument is that your omnipotent/omniscient does not exist, prove it does, put up or shut up! — universeness
Try and stick to the topic. Do you have the ability to prevent all of the horrendous evils that are occurring in the world? Yes or no? — Bartricks
That is what decency demands — Bartricks
What is a disjunctive syllogism? You have 30 seconds. — Bartricks
Ever the quote if managers giving more work to their subordinates. You can quit a job but not life itself though, lest death. Cold comfort. Paternalistic thinking. Another person’s suffering started for them and here’s why I’m so justified. But I’m not. — schopenhauer1
Are you someone who can't understand that a proponent of the problem of evil thinks God 'can' exist — Bartricks
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.