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NOTE: This is not an anti religion post, simply a philosophical and age old debate.
Ok, so very very basically, here is an issue with the typical Christian view of God, a view shared by other religions, aside, however.
God is all good
God is all powerful (omnipotent)
God is all knowing
If God is all good, then why does he make evil things happen? Why does he create murderers and tsunamis?
Some say God creates us with the choice to do good and bad that we may have free will.
So, in this case God creates us without knowing if we'll choose to be good or bad people, or even if we will believe in him/her.
So God doesn't know if we're going to be good or bad, so God is not all knowing.
BUT - Imagine we still want to hold that he his all knowing, i.e he knows everything about everything. This means God creates us knowing that we're going to be good or bad people, this means that he condemns those he creates bad to a life of sin and ultimately hell, so he can't be all Good.
BUT - if we want to still hold that he is all good, then there must be another reason murderers and tsunamis exist, but what? Maybe God created the world, and is not powerful enough to intervene. Then God is no longer all-powerful. Either that or he is powerful enough to intervene, and simply doesn't want to, in which case he is not all good.
What do you think about all this?
Urghhh...has no one read my comment on the first page about Good and Bad being just perceptions? Furthermore, even if such a God exists, who are we mortals to judge for Him what IS good or bad?
If we were perfect, we would not lose that limb in the first place. ^^
Then we rule out the sort of God we are suppose to be debating about in the first place.
The choice would still be available even if not taken. If someone couldn't personally find it in them to say kill another person and was faced with the option to kill or not and doesn't, does this mean they have no free choice in this matter or does it mean they made the choice not to kill?
Evolution works through naturalistic processes. Just as we rule out God creating storms we can just as easily do this with evolution.
Which means that everything that occurs has done so according to His designs. Hence they had NO free will at all because He knows what is going to happen. Does that clear Kasic's point up?
He put the tree there so they HAD the option to go off the good path. And if he stopped them, he would be taking away their free will.
How does knowing something will happen take away free will. It will happen that way, but he doesn't nessicarily make it that way. I could know that my friend was walking home, but it doesn't mean I was making him do so.
Well yes, that is another fallacy with the All P/K/L. If God knows what's going to happen, it has to be that way otherwise God is not Omniscient. Which would mean we wouldn't really have free will, just the illusion of it. But this isn't what I was trying to get at, see my last post.
Why do you rule out that god made storms? He has to constantly balence this ecosystem and what if making storms is one way to do it, so people losing homes is minescule to having a national famine.
I could know that my friend was walking home, but it doesn't mean I was making him do so.
How does knowing something will happen take away free will. It will happen that way, but he doesn't nessicarily make it that way. I could know that my friend was walking home, but it doesn't mean I was making him do so.
Why does God have to balance ecosystems? If He wanted to prevent a famine why then is he not creating storms in Somalia, Kenya, Ethiopia, countries suffering from drought now?
Wait.... I just relized why is free will a part of this? Why does people having free will matter if god is good or not? It is our persoanl preference to have free will, but would god be considered bad if he never gave us free will in the first place?
So it could be that in order for god to be all the things he would give us no free choice, which would then mean that us debating is all part of his master plan somehow.
How does knowing something will happen take away free will. It will happen that way, but he doesn't nessicarily make it that way. I could know that my friend was walking home, but it doesn't mean I was making him do so.
Yes, you may know that, but do you know exactly where each foot is going to be placed for each step? Whether or not he will trip? Who he will meet walking and if they will talk or not? Because that's what Omniscience means, knowing EVERYTHING.
Because Christianity espouses the idea of a Divine Plan. He does not just know, He planned what will happen. Clarified?
Basically if we have free will, we can commit all sorts of sin or choose to be good. We have a choice. Which brings up the question, why does He give us free will if He knows we will stray to the Dark Side? It then brings up the question of Him being all knowing and wanting all of us to go to Heaven. If He knows what will happen to us, he has already sorted out people into Heaven and Hell before they were born.
This is the way I see it in my head.
100*0=0
Infinity*0=0
I don't see what difference that amounts to. If you know something, and that gives you no control, then knowing everything should still amount to no control.
This conversation is pointless. Has anyone else worked out that every idea we have has a counter? There is a way to disprove everything that has been said and then something else to counter that disproof. Like Somewhat said, there is no way to win this argument.
Ok... how bout this? There is no bad side, only a good side because god has just been basicly using us like puppets, every murder and stuff, is his weird interpretation of good.
I think there is no way to win this...
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