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| Belief and Spirituality General thinking beyond the boundaries of religion and organised belief |
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#1 (permalink) |
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General Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Oklahoma
Posts: 239
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Greatest Proof of a Lack of a Deity?
pain & suffering is a universal at least once in any sentient's life, and a deity responsible for the gazillions of past, present, and future experiencers should be ashamed of itself...especially if it were a judgmental deity on top of that. it remains the single greatest argument against a conscious creator.
what are other obvious arguments against the existence of a deity that you ascribe to? dcv- |
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#2 (permalink) |
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New Member
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Waltham, MA
Posts: 8
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The problem of evil and suffering is one of the oldest, and most formidable arguments against the existence of a deity. Or at least an all-good, omnipotent deity. If you don't believe that your deity is necessarily completely good, this wouldn't present a challenge to your belief system. Also it doesn't preclude the existence of an all-good, but not omnipotent deity/being who is simply helpless to stop the suffering.
But it is an effective criticism of many of the monotheistic religions which believe in an all-powerful, all-good god. My response to this argument would be twofold: 1) some suffering is necessary for moral development/goodness (charity, compassion, mercy, etc. would be meaningless if suffering was not possible) 2) some of the greatest causes of suffering are human-caused. I believe that God has given us free will, because people acting goodly/accepting God of their own free will is inherently better than them being compelled to do so, and that if it were not possible for people's actions to have negative consequences (such as suffering) free will would be meaningless. but those are just my arguments. Each religion deals with the problem of why suffering exists in their own ways, many of which seem quite plausible. |
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#3 (permalink) |
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spare alias
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 106
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One of the problems with the notion that "God wouldn't allow suffering" is that it entirely demands that God has a culturally agreeable and very human perception of morality.
The universe is a dynamic place - life requires cycles of birth/rebirth in order to exist. Without death life here would be nothing more than a stagnant soup of cells that has continued unchanged for 4 billion years on earth. With death comes the allowance for change - for growth. The dynamics that life is built upon can be judged in different ways - Kalahari bushmen would think nothing of spearing and skinning a lizard to eat. To them it is necessary sustanence in a harsh environment. However, some Brits would be horrified and call it "cruel". Which is the morally superior view of nature? What I'm trying to say is that you simply cannot make moral judgements about life, because they are simply inapplicable - not least because morality itself is a cultural phenomenon and has no objective basis of reality. And death itself - ah, the great king of fear! Death is nothing more than change - if there's any truth in spiritual principles then death is simply a return to the Source - to the bosom of all love itself, manifest on a magnificent scale beyond comprehension - or else simply a return to reality. In short, death is not to be feared. As for suffering - which is worse: a universe where suffering has real and potential expression; or a world where a minority of human beings demand that others experience suffering for the minority benefit? Often humanity both seeks to defeat suffering, yet elsewhere seeks to promote it because it is financially rewarding. Are we to blame God for these actions, or blame our fellow human beings for not attending to injustices when they are so easily remedied? Alas - I am not able to make a succinct and coherent argument here. Perhaps I should quote some writing of my own - in small portions - where I have tried to explain the matter better? To finish this post - that there is suffering in the world I do not accept as an argument against the existence of God, so much as an illustration of the limits of reasoning of the questor. (Not intended as an insult - to care is a sign of compassion - but perhaps misguided in this instance?) |
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#4 (permalink) | |
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Mod ~ Eastern Thought
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Dharmadhatu
Posts: 2,650
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here i am thinking that if one believes in a deity, there are no obvious arguments (to them) of the non-existence of said deity. perhaps i'm missing the question here? |
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#5 (permalink) | |
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General Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Oklahoma
Posts: 239
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it is a considerable amount of contemplation and reasoning which returns me to the original post. i notice everyone tends to answer human-centrically, as if we were here since the first single celled organism decided to dine on its neighbor. pain and suffering, existing perhaps for billions of years, in countless experiences, exposes a not so nice deity...which of course might be the case. but to say that any conscious being would allow such a billions of year stretch so that humans could come along and learn from it seems arrogant in the least. it isn't death that the question was reflecting...death after all is the remedy to pain & suffering. the question was raised to see if it were possible to go beyond the usual human-centric viewpoint of material forms to see the direction evolution may be headed. i don't personally believe in a deity behind form, but i do think evolution of consciousness (passive & active principles forming an occilation of relationship from natural phenomena) has likely created pain & suffering, as an effect of the awakening process. when dealing in conjecture (which we all are after all) , judging someone's reasoning ability is folly since the 10 year old girl down the street may be the one holding the closest view of ultimate reality. dcv- |
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#6 (permalink) | |
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General Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Oklahoma
Posts: 239
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Vajradhara
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topics topics topics dcv- |
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#7 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Wisconsin
Posts: 51
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There is no God 'cause you're suffering?!?? The suffering is what WE are supposed to eliviate, NOT God. WE have caused it, not Him!
That we are concerned about the human suffering that WE have caused, is PROOF there is a God. Not the contrary. If we were unconcerned, THAT might be your argument that there is no God. But we are! On another note: Why do atheists attempt to debunk the believers? Do we pose some sort of threat? Either you believe, or you don't. And there is nothing wrong with either. Is there an atheist mandate to get our heads out of the clouds? Do you receive points if you get someone to say "Oh my gosh, you're right, there is no God. How could I have been so misled?" |
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#8 (permalink) | |
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Mod ~ Eastern Thought
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Dharmadhatu
Posts: 2,650
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hmm... ok... perhaps i'm just terribly confused. you said this, in the OP: "what are other obvious arguments against the existence of a deity that you ascribe to?" which is a non-sensical question. if one ascribed to a deity belief, they would not have other, obvious arguments that their deity belief was not correct. they would not have any argument, let alone "other" arguments against the existence of their deity. in a very general way, i can be considered agnostic, however, that should be clearly understood through the paradigm of my spiritual tradition. after re-reading the thread, i seem to get from it that an argument is being made along the lines of "since suffering and pain exists, there is no God." is that correct? if so, that would not be a correct assessment of the situation, at least from my point of view. i'll leave aside, as much as possible, my own religious views on this issue and just deal with the logic. it does not follow that suffering/pain = no God. it may, perhaps, establish some criteria for God.. such as non-interference or the like, though i do not believe that it can be extended much futher and still be supportable. pain and suffering are the flip side of bliss and contentment, however, you cannot have one without the other as the essential definition, the information of the event, is lost without a frame of reference. |
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#9 (permalink) | ||||
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General Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Oklahoma
Posts: 239
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i would hope in this forum that i have found so engaging that folks here haven't lost their sense of exploration in exchange, for the defence of intellectual & emotional turf. that is not my idea of evolution, or finding value in other's experiences. i don't think folks realize just how much i do respect their beliefs. if i have come across in a disrespectful manner, you have my naked and shameful apology. dcv- |
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#10 (permalink) | ||||
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General Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Oklahoma
Posts: 239
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Vajradhara,
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from this, a being would come to know that physical reality is becoming obsolete, as it is a vehicle for consciousness. this would mean it would eventually not be limited by a preset form that it was incarnated into (death & birth), but that it could create consciously whatever form best suited its needs, and thus be able to embrace its immortal true state of being. this is of course all speculation on my part, but is also as likely as all other speculation, and based upon several years in the least of exploration into phenomena and original contemplative thought...and for me anyways, a fascinating area for contemplation of the potential direction that evolution may be taking. dcv- |
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#11 (permalink) | |
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Soul Rebel
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: The Highlands of Scotland
Posts: 4,604
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On the one hand, it is nothing more than a reverse of the exact same postulation you made - you cannot understand why people hold a certain view, essentially because it seems illogical. On the other hand, it is a very real issue - that people who make moral judgements of how the mechanics of the universe are run I feel have completely misunderstood a very real and essential part of the mechanics. A big problem with the question, as posed by Agnostics and Atheists (and I remember vehemently posing it myself) is that it almost inevitably presumes a very mainstream Christian view of reality - that there is a loving God who cares for every little thing and wishes no harm on anything. And, of course, mainstream Christianity answers the question with reference to Hashatan - the opposer of God that we call the Devil. But what Agnostics and Atheists do is strip Satan from the equation, which renders the necessary mainstream Christian answer to that questions nonsensical. That renders the question nonsensical as well. My recommendation is to step away from the Christian-centric view if you are going to seriously try and answer that question in a non-Christian manner. That is not intended to sound insulting - but living in a Christian-centric Western culture often trying to view reality in a non-Christian-centric manner can be a suprisingly difficult thing to do. IMO, that is why you cannot understand what you ask - because you are still asking with the Christian view of reality and God in mind. |
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#12 (permalink) | ||||||
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General Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Oklahoma
Posts: 239
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Brian,
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...(that was funny). i am not your run of the mill atheist...i am even beginning to loathe the label itself, but am not sure what to call myself. what does a person who does not believe in a deity, but likewise does not subscribe to the atheist's present day infatuation with christianity do?Quote:
dcv- |
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#13 (permalink) | |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Wisconsin
Posts: 51
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Quote:
I see now ....I can also entertain the notion of an unconscious creator......so let's get this whole "atheist" label off you. You do not fit the term comfortably...as you said. My hackles rise at the mention of the word....so PLEASE, call yourself something else....or better yet, don't label yourself at all! Since you are taking an evolutionary approach to an unconscious creator, I'm not sure "suffering" can be applied until man arrived....since it's man that defines what suffering is. |
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#14 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Kansas
Posts: 448
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First a minuscule point. Pain is not evidence against God. Without pain I would burn my foot off in the campfire.
Suffering, being interpreted as prolonged, unquenchable pain without purpose, then is the argument. One counter-argument might be that it is perhaps impossible to design a universe with free will in which such situations can be avoided. The question then would be, "Is the price of existence really worth it?" As a Christian, I say, "Yes, and those innocents who suffer share their suffering with Jesus Christ." There are those who bear more of a burden than the rest of us. That is reality whatever the truth about the existence of God. Without God, the suffering remains without the balm in Gilead. |
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#15 (permalink) | ||||
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Mod ~ Eastern Thought
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Dharmadhatu
Posts: 2,650
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namaste,
thank you for the post Quote:
it's clear now though ![]() Quote:
i'm not sure if this would qualify as an "unconcious" deity... though it would qualify as one that didn't interfere in the universe. Quote:
modern physics is also coming to this conclusion... H.P. Stapp says it like this: an elementary particle is not an indepedently existing, unanalyzble entity. It is, in essence, a set of relationships that reach outward to other things. Robert Oppenheimer says it like this: If we ask, for instance, whether the position of the electron remains the same, we must say "no"; if we ask whether the electrons position changes with time, we must say "no"; if we ask whether the electron is at rest, we must say "no"; if we ask whether it is in motion, we must say "no". one of the Madyamika founders (Nagarjuna) would say it like this: Things derive their being and nature by mutal dependence and are nothing in themselves. Quote:
it is not limited to this lifespan nor is it limited to this physical form in any real sense. our habits and conditioned nature impute the self and project it as a ontological truth into reality. this is not the case, from our perspective. there is nothing that can be identified as an independently existing, permenant self.in our tradition Bodhisattvas are perfections of aspects of Enlightenment and as such, they can choose a rebirth for themselves in which ever form is most appropriate to their mission. it may be a human or a bird or an insect... in our tradition this is commonly known as "skillful means" and it is what allows them to address a teaching to a people in a manner in which the audience can grasp what is being communicated. remember... in Buddhism we draw little to no distinction between humans and other sentient beings. all are equal in wanting happiness and not wanting to suffer. |
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