Gob wrote:Australia’s new UNELECTED Prime Minister has revealed she does not believe in God.
Fixed that for you.

Gob wrote:Australia’s new UNELECTED Prime Minister has revealed she does not believe in God.
No, they're not. On the contrary, they pose (among other things) an essential question (or a question whose answer is essential): If something is impossible, what is it that makes that thing impossible?Crackpot wrote:Spare me impossibilities. They're grade school.
Another of the numerous questions that present serious issues, even though Judeo-Christo-Islamic thinkers have for centuries tried to brush them off. Such questions go to the very heart of the nature of God (assuming that there is a God). And they go, if we follow the reasoning underlying whatever the answers may be, to the very heart of the nature of the (incomprehensible) universe in which we find ourselves. And they go, if we follow that reasoning even further, to the very heart of the nature of what we are.Crackpot wrote:And they're wrestling with the "Can God make a Rock so big that even He can't lift it?" question too I'm sure.
Gob wrote:But why choose a god at all?
Surely any omnipotent being would not require faith?
loCAtek wrote:Not faith, but love. Hope, faith is but a step towards it.
Perhaps it is not a matter of anything's being required of anyone. Perhaps God realizes -- and it would presumably know better than any of us, having created all of us, etc. -- that having hope, faith, love is good for us.Gob wrote:Again, why would an omnipotent being require any of those human emotions to be offered towards it?
It is simple something can't be or do something that violates it own definition. The fact that you can't understand that doesn't change that you're making an absurd point. Regardless of your claims that it is a "serious" question.Andrew D wrote:In full,Another of the numerous questions that present serious issues, even though Judeo-Christo-Islamic thinkers have for centuries tried to brush them off. Such questions go to the very heart of the nature of God (assuming that there is a God). And they go, if we follow the reasoning underlying whatever the answers may be, to the very heart of the nature of the (incomprehensible) universe in which we find ourselves. And they go, if we follow that reasoning even further, to the very heart of the nature of what we are.Crackpot wrote:And they're wrestling with the "Can God make a Rock so big that even He can't lift it?" question too I'm sure.
And we see before us yet another of the innumerable Judeo-Christo-Islamic retreats in the face of reason: If you can't answer questions, just roll your eyes at them and hope that no one notices the total absence of answers.
Thanks AndrewD, that's how I would have answered.Andrew D wrote: Perhaps it is not a matter of anything's being required of anyone. Perhaps God realizes -- and it would presumably know better than any of us, having created all of us, etc. -- that having hope, faith, love is good for us.
Humans choose and change their conditions; there are all the elements on this earth for it to be a paradise. All we need to do is heed God's message that we should love each other.Gob wrote:It may, but then why did it not make it integral to the human condition?
Or did it want us to suffer?
I believe it is the mental/spiritual exercise that is the point, and not actually finding an answer. It appears to me that they are Judaic/Christian/Islamic versions of Buddhist Koans-Andrew D wrote:
These are serious -- not "grade school" -- questions. They go to the very heart of the nature of God (assuming that there is a God). And they go, if we follow the reasoning underlying whatever the answers may be, to the very heart of the nature of the (incomprehensible) universe in which we find ourselves. And they go, if we follow that reasoning even further, to the very heart of the nature of what we are.
Jewish and Christian and Islamic theological scholars have wrestled with these questions for centuries. The predominant result of that wrestling has been to dismiss them. Why? Because they cannot answer them.
The purpose of kōans for a Zen practitioner is to become aware of the difference between himself, his mind, and his beliefs, which influence how he sees the world; and, ultimately, to help him realize his true nature. Once a Zen practitioner becomes aware of his mind as an independent form, the kōan makes sense and the teaching point is realized.
...teachers have long alerted students to the danger of confusing the interpretation of a kōan with the realization of a kōan. When teachers say "do not confuse the pointing finger with the moon", they indicate that awakening is the realization of one's true nature — not the ability to interpret a kōan with one's mind.
...
Other traditional kōans
Killing the Buddha
If you meet the Buddha, kill him.
—Linji
Thinking about Buddha is delusion, not awakening. One must destroy preconceptions of the Buddha. Zen master Shunryu Suzuki wrote in Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind during an introduction to Zazen, "Kill the Buddha if the Buddha exists somewhere else. Kill the Buddha, because you should resume your own Buddha nature."
Why? Why set up these quirks and requirements, why would an omnipotent being do that?loCAtek wrote: Humans choose and change their conditions; there are all the elements on this earth for it to be a paradise. All we need to do is heed God's message that we should love each other.
...to relate to. Why?loCAtek wrote:
You don't want a humane, loving God? Why?
Some people already 'know' there is no god, and don't seem to do a lot differently.... And specifically, my Very Serious Question is, if you knew there was no god, what would you do differently, and why?
it will only bring security to those who need that type of security.... Faith un-indoctrinated, also brings security.
Security from knowing you are part of God and his creation.
Some religions don't care what type of person you are - you can be the most giving and forgiving, caring and sharing person in existence, but if you don't follow their religion you're screwed.Depends on the one you settle on. Most say it depends on what kind of person you are.If I read them all and make the wrong choice, then I'm still fucked aren't I?
That sentence reads equally as correctly if you say " Therefore, the hypothetical conclusion that 'There is a God' has a large body of evidence that has yet to be gathered and/or tested for consistency",Therefore, the hypothetical conclusion that 'There is no God' has a large body of evidence that has yet to be gathered and/or tested for consistency.