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natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
if god is omnipotent, there is absolutely no justification for kids dying of hunger.john9blue wrote:so, if suffering occurs in nature, and humans follow the laws of nature, then how is god evil for allowing human suffering? you are implying that human suffering is bad, yet humans are no different from animals, which means that animal suffering is bad... but why? you think the laws of nature are evil?
your post is logically inconsistent.
it's possible that our universe is the best possible universe despite human suffering (which can be good). perhaps all human suffering occurs because the alternative is worse. think about this big picture.
is there justification for an animal dying of hunger? do you think natural selection is "wrong"? not to say that it's the same thing as a child dying of hunger, but theoretically that can be justified.Haggis_McMutton wrote:if god is omnipotent, there is absolutely no justification for kids dying of hunger.john9blue wrote:so, if suffering occurs in nature, and humans follow the laws of nature, then how is god evil for allowing human suffering? you are implying that human suffering is bad, yet humans are no different from animals, which means that animal suffering is bad... but why? you think the laws of nature are evil?
your post is logically inconsistent.
it's possible that our universe is the best possible universe despite human suffering (which can be good). perhaps all human suffering occurs because the alternative is worse. think about this big picture.
Unless he's also kind of a dick of course.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
In all actuality I believe the universe and nature are neither good nor evil; however, if we want to look at the world through dualistic glasses, then suffering must be labeled as "evil" and non-suffering as "good". How is it that suffering can be good? That seems irrational to me. If you are talking about a "bigger picture" as you mention later in your post, I think that is total bs. "Bigger Picture", "God's Will", "God's Plan"...just a bunch of malarkey to somehow try to make regular people feel safe and secure in a very hostile world and universe. That is the reality of the situation. You do not sit safe in your home apart from the crocodile ripping apart the gazelle.john9blue wrote:so, if suffering occurs in nature, and humans follow the laws of nature, then how is god evil for allowing human suffering? you are implying that human suffering is bad, yet humans are no different from animals, which means that animal suffering is bad... but why? you think the laws of nature are evil?
perhaps. My logic often rambles inconsistently...however, I think you can understand where I am coming from.john9blue wrote:your post is logically inconsistent.
I would agree that this Universe is the best possible Universe...BECAUSE IT IS THE ONLY UNIVERSE WE ARE LIVING IN! I still do not grasp your idea of how human suffering is "good". If God is "good", why does he just not eliminate suffering in the world. Yes, humans have free will; but the asteroid that killed off the dinosaurs didn't. Really, the sense of "good" and "evil" is arbitrary; and is a matter of perspective at best.john9blue wrote:it's possible that our universe is the best possible universe despite human suffering (which can be good). perhaps all human suffering occurs because the alternative is worse. think about this big picture.
Army of GOD wrote:I joined this game because it's so similar to Call of Duty.
god is omnipotent => the world could be exactly the way it is now with or without any kids dying of hunger throughout the whole of history.john9blue wrote:is there justification for an animal dying of hunger? do you think natural selection is "wrong"? not to say that it's the same thing as a child dying of hunger, but theoretically that can be justified.Haggis_McMutton wrote:if god is omnipotent, there is absolutely no justification for kids dying of hunger.john9blue wrote:so, if suffering occurs in nature, and humans follow the laws of nature, then how is god evil for allowing human suffering? you are implying that human suffering is bad, yet humans are no different from animals, which means that animal suffering is bad... but why? you think the laws of nature are evil?
your post is logically inconsistent.
it's possible that our universe is the best possible universe despite human suffering (which can be good). perhaps all human suffering occurs because the alternative is worse. think about this big picture.
Unless he's also kind of a dick of course.
let me put it this way: do you think that each and every child hunger death in the history of the world had the end result of making the world worse?
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
See, you don't seem to be grasping the ramifications of *omnipotent*.john9blue wrote:the problem here is that you both are trying to determine what is good and evil from your extremely limited perspective as apes on a lonely planet orbiting a lonely star in the arm of a random galaxy.
as an example: a child dies of hunger in the streets of chicago. had he not died, he would have stolen from a small, struggling convenience store every day for the next month. this would be just enough to put the convenience store out of business. the owner of the store would turn to robbery himself in order to get by. he ends up mugging and killing a young man who would have become the leader of *insert something important here*... and so on... you get the idea.
would an omnipotent god let that child die?
you're ignoring the consequences again. for starters, the store owner winning the lotto means someone else doesn't win the lotto, or wins less money from the lotto, which also has consequences and suffering.Haggis_McMutton wrote:See, you don't seem to be grasping the ramifications of *omnipotent*.john9blue wrote:the problem here is that you both are trying to determine what is good and evil from your extremely limited perspective as apes on a lonely planet orbiting a lonely star in the arm of a random galaxy.
as an example: a child dies of hunger in the streets of chicago. had he not died, he would have stolen from a small, struggling convenience store every day for the next month. this would be just enough to put the convenience store out of business. the owner of the store would turn to robbery himself in order to get by. he ends up mugging and killing a young man who would have become the leader of *insert something important here*... and so on... you get the idea.
would an omnipotent god let that child die?
omnipotent = he could have saved the kid, make it so that he's adopted by a rich family so he doesn't need to steal, make the convenience store owner win the lotto and make me find a 20 dollar bill on the ground without braking a sweat
No matter what the goals, omnipotent = he can achieve those goals AND eliminate suffering
Therefore, if there is an omnipotent god, he actively wants, or at best is indifferent to our suffering. Therefore, he is kind of a dick.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
Seriously, OMNIPOTENT.john9blue wrote:you're ignoring the consequences again. for starters, the store owner winning the lotto means someone else doesn't win the lotto, or wins less money from the lotto, which also has consequences and suffering.Haggis_McMutton wrote:See, you don't seem to be grasping the ramifications of *omnipotent*.john9blue wrote:the problem here is that you both are trying to determine what is good and evil from your extremely limited perspective as apes on a lonely planet orbiting a lonely star in the arm of a random galaxy.
as an example: a child dies of hunger in the streets of chicago. had he not died, he would have stolen from a small, struggling convenience store every day for the next month. this would be just enough to put the convenience store out of business. the owner of the store would turn to robbery himself in order to get by. he ends up mugging and killing a young man who would have become the leader of *insert something important here*... and so on... you get the idea.
would an omnipotent god let that child die?
omnipotent = he could have saved the kid, make it so that he's adopted by a rich family so he doesn't need to steal, make the convenience store owner win the lotto and make me find a 20 dollar bill on the ground without braking a sweat
No matter what the goals, omnipotent = he can achieve those goals AND eliminate suffering
Therefore, if there is an omnipotent god, he actively wants, or at best is indifferent to our suffering. Therefore, he is kind of a dick.
what are the consequences of earth having a species like ours that has a great deal of suffering? are they worse than the consequences of earth having a species that has no suffering?
calling god a dick because of human suffering is like a child calling their parent a dick because the parent won't let their child eat ice cream for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. except, with that case, the child is much closer in knowledge to the parents than we are to an omniscient god (if he exists)
It might a bit of stretch to say this, but genocide and rape aren't morally correct actions.john9blue wrote:the problem here is that you both are trying to determine what is good and evil from your extremely limited perspective as apes on a lonely planet orbiting a lonely star in the arm of a random galaxy.
Maybe he's so omnipotent that you can't fathom the ways of his omnipotence because he's omnipotent and stuff.Haggis_McMutton wrote:
Seriously, OMNIPOTENT.
consequences are for us, with our limited foresight and abilities. an omnipotent being can by definition do anything while avoiding all negative consequences. If he couldn't, he wouldn't be omnipotent.
give me an example of one thing that an omnipotent being couldn't achieve without inflicting suffering. That question is pretty much self-contradictory. If such an example existed, the being wouldn't be omnipotent.
BigBallinStalin wrote:It might a bit of stretch to say this, but genocide and rape aren't morally correct actions.john9blue wrote:the problem here is that you both are trying to determine what is good and evil from your extremely limited perspective as apes on a lonely planet orbiting a lonely star in the arm of a random galaxy.

Haggis_McMutton wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:It might a bit of stretch to say this, but genocide and rape aren't morally correct actions.john9blue wrote:the problem here is that you both are trying to determine what is good and evil from your extremely limited perspective as apes on a lonely planet orbiting a lonely star in the arm of a random galaxy.
why are you so stuck in the mindset that suffering = wrong?Haggis_McMutton wrote:
Seriously, OMNIPOTENT.
consequences are for us, with our limited foresight and abilities. an omnipotent being can by definition do anything while avoiding all negative consequences. If he couldn't, he wouldn't be omnipotent.
give me an example of one thing that an omnipotent being couldn't achieve without inflicting suffering. That question is pretty much self-contradictory. If such an example existed, the being wouldn't be omnipotent.
oh no! turns out our species is going to wipe out another, cooler species in a nearby star system in the year 9001! or, we would have, if some dude hadn't committed genocide in the year 2500 and wiped out the distant ancestors of the dude who spearheaded the "kill the aliens" program. thank goodness for genocide, eh?BigBallinStalin wrote:It might a bit of stretch to say this, but genocide and rape aren't morally correct actions.john9blue wrote:the problem here is that you both are trying to determine what is good and evil from your extremely limited perspective as apes on a lonely planet orbiting a lonely star in the arm of a random galaxy.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
This is going to a definitional thing.john9blue wrote:why are you so stuck in the mindset that suffering = wrong?Haggis_McMutton wrote: Seriously, OMNIPOTENT.
consequences are for us, with our limited foresight and abilities. an omnipotent being can by definition do anything while avoiding all negative consequences. If he couldn't, he wouldn't be omnipotent.
give me an example of one thing that an omnipotent being couldn't achieve without inflicting suffering. That question is pretty much self-contradictory. If such an example existed, the being wouldn't be omnipotent.
suffering is a chemical reaction in the brain.
Reassuring to see not much has changed round these parts, isn't it?Strife wrote:What is this... I don't even?
if suffering isn't wrong, or wrong doesn't exist, then why is it mutually exclusive with a benevolent god?Haggis_McMutton wrote:
This is going to a definitional thing.
Wrong from whose PoV and so on( I don't believe objectively wrong exists ).
However, that's not really the point.
We are conscious beings. We don't generally like death, pain, suffering and such.
God is omnipotent. No matter what his purpose it is not necessary for him to inflict suffering.
So why do it?
I'm not saying it's necessarily "wrong", whatever that means.
I'm saying it's in the same category as a kid letting his fish starve to death cause he's too lazy to feed them. Kind of a dick move.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
if objective wrong/right doesn't exist an objectively benevolent god cannot exist either, cause there's nothing by which to judge his benevolence or malevolence (which is pretty much what I believe).john9blue wrote:if suffering isn't wrong, or wrong doesn't exist, then why is it mutually exclusive with a benevolent god?Haggis_McMutton wrote:
This is going to a definitional thing.
Wrong from whose PoV and so on( I don't believe objectively wrong exists ).
However, that's not really the point.
We are conscious beings. We don't generally like death, pain, suffering and such.
God is omnipotent. No matter what his purpose it is not necessary for him to inflict suffering.
So why do it?
I'm not saying it's necessarily "wrong", whatever that means.
I'm saying it's in the same category as a kid letting his fish starve to death cause he's too lazy to feed them. Kind of a dick move.
the kid has limited knowledge and only lets his fish starve due to selfishness. that's completely different.
After you've finished your journeys across intergalactic space, time, and I guess space-time, lemme know when you've returned to this actual world. =Pjohn9blue wrote:oh no! turns out our species is going to wipe out another, cooler species in a nearby star system in the year 9001! or, we would have, if some dude hadn't committed genocide in the year 2500 and wiped out the distant ancestors of the dude who spearheaded the "kill the aliens" program. thank goodness for genocide, eh?BigBallinStalin wrote:It might a bit of stretch to say this, but genocide and rape aren't morally correct actions.john9blue wrote:the problem here is that you both are trying to determine what is good and evil from your extremely limited perspective as apes on a lonely planet orbiting a lonely star in the arm of a random galaxy.
pretty much, yes.Haggis_McMutton wrote:
if objective wrong/right doesn't exist an objectively benevolent god cannot exist either, cause there's nothing by which to judge his benevolence or malevolence (which is pretty much what I believe).
That leaves a subjectively benevolent god as a possibility, i.e. benevolent from our PoV. This one , I've been arguing, clearly doesn't exist.
So I guess the only tenable position is if an objective right/wrong does exist, this morality is completely foreign to ours (i.e. suffering = cool) and god is benevolent according to this foreign objective morality. Is this what you're saying?
this actual world sucks tho...BigBallinStalin wrote:After you've finished your journeys across intergalactic space, time, and I guess space-time, lemme know when you've returned to this actual world. =Pjohn9blue wrote:oh no! turns out our species is going to wipe out another, cooler species in a nearby star system in the year 9001! or, we would have, if some dude hadn't committed genocide in the year 2500 and wiped out the distant ancestors of the dude who spearheaded the "kill the aliens" program. thank goodness for genocide, eh?BigBallinStalin wrote:It might a bit of stretch to say this, but genocide and rape aren't morally correct actions.john9blue wrote:the problem here is that you both are trying to determine what is good and evil from your extremely limited perspective as apes on a lonely planet orbiting a lonely star in the arm of a random galaxy.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
I'm glad you've made it back!john9blue wrote:this actual world sucks tho...BigBallinStalin wrote:After you've finished your journeys across intergalactic space, time, and I guess space-time, lemme know when you've returned to this actual world. =Pjohn9blue wrote:oh no! turns out our species is going to wipe out another, cooler species in a nearby star system in the year 9001! or, we would have, if some dude hadn't committed genocide in the year 2500 and wiped out the distant ancestors of the dude who spearheaded the "kill the aliens" program. thank goodness for genocide, eh?BigBallinStalin wrote:It might a bit of stretch to say this, but genocide and rape aren't morally correct actions.john9blue wrote:the problem here is that you both are trying to determine what is good and evil from your extremely limited perspective as apes on a lonely planet orbiting a lonely star in the arm of a random galaxy.
just because something can't be shown to be wrong doesn't mean that it is able to be justified. the burden of proof is on both parties to show why something is morally good or evil.BigBallinStalin wrote:
I'm glad you've made it back!
Anyway, about genocide and rape on this actual world. I think you were trying to make the case that these actions can't be shown to be morally incorrect? Would you care to morally justify those acts?
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
And now we descend into the realm of which beliefs are worth having.john9blue wrote:pretty much, yes.Haggis_McMutton wrote:
if objective wrong/right doesn't exist an objectively benevolent god cannot exist either, cause there's nothing by which to judge his benevolence or malevolence (which is pretty much what I believe).
That leaves a subjectively benevolent god as a possibility, i.e. benevolent from our PoV. This one , I've been arguing, clearly doesn't exist.
So I guess the only tenable position is if an objective right/wrong does exist, this morality is completely foreign to ours (i.e. suffering = cool) and god is benevolent according to this foreign objective morality. Is this what you're saying?