Stone and Beau: I have read the first essay, and found all of the arguments weak and answerable. It's interesting how I've actually refuted a lot of Russel's arguments in this thread and it doesn't really matter, does it? I guess people have pretty well defined belief systems, and honestly I think there are people on this site who claim to be open to discovering any truth they can on their own but the reality is, that is not the case. I think Beau and Stone should be more honest with themselves and anyone; they are interested in exploring any ideas that don't have to do with Christianity or have similar explanations. My point is, isn't that excluding a huge possibility? I understand; here come the responses - fear, oppression, history, evil. My final response? Don't pretend to be as open minded as you think you are, because at the end of the day you won't accept anything that might trigger emotional hangups concerning your hatred of organized religion. If fluffy bunnies exist outside of this realm, and beam down thoughts through aliens, and it doesn't involve a church group, than its plausible. At the end of the day, everyone is free to make up their own minds, no matter what the limits are that are placed on their thinking. Lastly, I want to briefly mention something I get into Hawkeye about down below a little more clearly: I am not arguing on behalf of organized religion. I think the knee jerk reactions I'm getting are kind of tiresome. I know organized religion sucks many times, and most of the people on this board hate it. I get it. I'm not arguing for organized religion. Actually I believe myself to be pretty open minded as well. I have read the Koran. And the Bhaghavad Gita. And translated the Lotus Sutra for a graduate class. And earned degrees in both science and religion. But because I also think Jesus is cool, I'm not thinking freely enough, or discovering enough on my own. I get it. Charge ahead bravely on your own path I guess, because I'm such a cookie cutter Christian who is just mindlessly following along as a sheep with no thought put into anything.
Hawkeye: You miss the point that I made earlier about sociobiology reducing into moral relativism, and illustrate it beautifully with the statement
Quote: My disagreement is putting one God or belief in a God above anothers. Above "all" others.
There is the moral relativism. If you take that and run with it to extremes, the concept breaks down. Because there is absolutely no way to arbitrate between groups of conflicting beliefs, and because the majority can oppress the minority. For instance: the German people as led by the Nazi's believed that Jews were inferior forms of humanity and needed to be wiped out. In their society, it was acceptable to torture and kill Jews. Most of humanity would agree from their standpoint that this is wrong. But if there is no God, then there is no way to justify this. In other words, if there is no God, society simply determines right and wrong, and society can be very, very twisted and evil. In other words, there is absolutely nothing wrong, if we accept your worldview, with putting 12 million people through torture and genocide. However, I would say the moral conscience that most people have would argue against this. You may disagree, and consider that you do then live in a universe where might makes right, the minority can always be exploited, and there is nothing that is absolutely wrong and right. Anything that you consider to be good could be made evil by some society, and vice versa. The paradigm becomes madness.
Quote: No, you don't have to be Christian to be good. I believe your mistaken. Even a non believer in Christ or the Christian God can be good.
A couple things here. First I'm not sure where you are getting this idea because I don't argue nor believe that assertion. The most moral friend I have is not a Christian. Secondly, how are you judging someone to be good? By what standards? I would argue that in your belief system there is no absolute standard of good or evil, and honestly there is no way for you to judge someone as being 'good' or 'evil'. One society's version of good could be one other society's version of evil.
Quote: There is nothing wrong in informing anyone of impending disaster. But if your saying I am to follow blindly with what the Catholics say, or the JWs, or , or Mormans, or, or, then your wrong.
Again, you are fighting a straw man here. I never argue for following some belief system blindly. I think skepticism is good. However I don't think skepticism alone will work. At some point we must make a choice based on the preponderance of evidence.
Quote: When it comes to child molestation and freedom of determination. Are you saying that God has decided that these children are ripe for the molesting for the sake of a lesson about freedom of choices? to pick good or evil? God wants these perverts to make that choice? To me it sound like justification of it. God told them to rape that child. He gave them that choice. Thats sick.That belief is wrong. My God says its evil, and not to do it. Those priests and those bishops , and the Popes who have allowed this to go on are evil. Evil.
I am about to give up on this discussion because its so ridiculous. Please address my points, or read what I say, or quit arguing against things I wouldn't say. Of course these actions are evil. Sigh. My point, if you can read what I've written, is that we have some free will currently. And there is evil. And God could put a stop to the evil, such as abuse of children, but that would put a stop to the free will on Earth. God has chosen to allow it for the time being, and so that shows that God values our ability to make choices, so much so that he is willing to allow evil for the time being. That doesn't make abuse right, or mean that God wants people to abuse others, or that I'm arguing that raping babies is what we should all do. So for the time being, we are all on this ship of Earth together mixed in - good, bad and in between, which is what makes this mode of existence special, and we have some degree of free will.
You, others on this thread, are not arguing with my points, you are arguing with my imaginary points. I am not here to defend religion. Is that clear? I am making belief statements based on science, history, and philosophy that can be reasoned for or against using logic. I haven't argued anywhere that someone should go to church or pay money to some group, or raping kids in the name of God is good. If you continue to use the straw man fallacy there is no point in me answering any more, seriously.