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The Argument from Evil is Absurd

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Jerry and I are having a constructive exchange on the problem of evil.  My argument starts when Jerry asks me to define “good.”

Jerry, the issue is not how one would define “good” in any particular situation.  The issue is whether it is possible to define good in a way that is not grounded in subjective preferences.  The only way to do that is if there is some objective standard of good.  Such an objective standard would necessarily stand over and above all men’s subjective preferences.  The character of God is advanced as the source of that objective standard. 

The argument goes like this:

The good is that which is consistent with the objective transcendent standard grounded in the character of God.

Evil is the privation of the good.

Evil exists. 

Therefore, the good, of which evil is the privation, also exists.

Therefore, an objective transcendent standard grounded in the character of God exists.

Therefore, God exists. 

Thus, as Vivid has noted, the existence of evil – if the word “evil” means anything other than “that which I do not subjectively prefer” — is powerful evidence for the existence of God.

This all boils down this: Objective evil exists only if objective good exists. Objective good exits only if God exists. Objective evil exists. Therefore, God exists.

Now this does not necessarily mean that evil in the objective sense (i.e., the privation of the transcendent standard grounded in God’s character) exists.  It may be that “evil” means nothing except “that which I do not subjectively prefer.”  And if evil in the objective sense does not exist, the argument for the existence of God from the existence of evil (which implies the existence of objective good) never gets off the ground.

BUT, the atheist argument from evil never gets off the ground either. This should be plain from the my other post to which you have already alluded. 

If you use your definition and not use the word evil but the phrase,. “privation of the good” then you will end up with nonsensical arguments.

False.  One may agree or disagree with the argument I set forth above.  It is not nonsensical. 

But they [i.e., atheists] think their version of evil does exists and will point to examples.

It is certainly correct that all sane people, including atheists, understand that evil exists.  That is why I am constantly saying that no sane person lives their life as if materialism is true. 

So the standoff is to use logic to show that their definition is meaningless in the context of what the Christian God promise. That is what I am doing.

The challenge is to show that the atheist’s definition of evil is incoherent in any context.  And I have done that in the prior post.

I doubt your definition, which come from Augustine, will win many converts because it does not sync with the typical atheist’s use of the term. 

I advance arguments.  The arguments stand or fall based on whether they are grounded in logic and evidence.  A sound argument is sound regardless of whether it results in “converts.” 

Yes, my definition of evil does not sync with the typical atheist’s use of the term.  My project is to point out that when the typical atheist uses the term, they invariably do so in a way that is incoherent.  By this I mean that they invariably argue that God, if he exists, has “done evil thing X” or “allowed evil thing X to happen,” and since God would not do that, God does not exist.  The problem is that for the argument to work, “evil thing X” must actually be objectively evil.  And for the atheist “evil thing X” means “that which the atheist does not subjectively prefer.”  And it is incoherent to argue “God does not exist because he does not arrange affairs in a way I subjectively prefer.” 

The theodicy argument breaks down because [atheist’s] version of evil is meaningless.

If by the “theodicy argument” you mean “the argument from evil,” we agree.

 But I doubt atheists would accept your definition of evil.

Of course, their premises preclude them from accepting my definition.

So how can you claim that their argument is incoherent based on it.

Perhaps “incoherent” is the wrong word.  Absurd is probably better.  To argue that God does not exist on the ground that he does not arrange affairs in a way I subjectively prefer is not incoherent.  All one has to do is advance the following syllogism:

Major Premise:  If God exists, he would prevent evil (defined as “that which I do not subjectively prefer) from happening.

Minor Premise: Things that I do not subjectively prefer happen all the time.

Conclusion:  Therefore, God does not exist.

The argument is not incoherent.  Rather, it is based on an absurd major premise. 

Do you have evidence that atheists use your definition?

You raise an interesting point.  When they argue from the problem of evil, atheists implicitly use my (i.e., Augustine’s) definition of evil.  Otherwise, as anyone who thinks about it for two seconds can see, the argument is absurd (see the absurd syllogism above).  What does this mean?  It means that atheists cannot adhere consistently to their own premises.  And that is not surprising (no sane person . . .).  Instead, as is often the case, they reject the existence of objective evil while smuggling that very thing in through the back door when they argue from the “problem of evil.”

Comments
Socialists like to pick their evils. Hitler was evil, but silent about Stalin being evil as well. The Imperial Japanese Army was evil for how they carried out actions, but the Soviets did many of the same thing. The rape of Nanking led to prosecutions for war crimes, but no one was prosecuted for the rape of Berlin. If free will does not exist, then how can anyone truly be guilty of anything? Without free will, there is no choice in violation of any laws. Man is simply acting on nature and the idea of any government existing at all should be abhorrent to socialists. Government stands in the way of man's nature, since governments create laws that stand in the way of being able to act as we must, but our nature alone.BobRyan
April 9, 2020
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Sev, Worldview is pretty much as described in the word itself:
world·view (wûrldvy) n. In both senses also called Weltanschauung. 1. The overall perspective from which one sees and interprets the world. 2. A collection of beliefs about life and the universe held by an individual or a group. [Translation of German Weltanschauung.] The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition copyright ©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
This describes a complex but vital fact of life which is central to living, working and thinking together. It should be unsurprising that how we think about ourselves and our world or wider reality is not a simple thing. Even Geometry or Arithmetic and Algebra should prepare us for that. Or even, learning to play Chess. A key insight involved, pivots on the structure of warrant and what we face as finite, fallible, morally struggling and too often ill-willed creatures who obviously come with a wide range of takes on what reality is and what entities are real vs perceived or assumed etc. To accept A as so, we ask, why. B. But, why B? C, then onward. We face three unpalatably humbling options identified long since: impossible infinite regress of warrant, circularity that begs big questions, finitely remote start-point that rests on first plausibles not subject to further proof and sustained on comparative difficulties [global factual adequacy, logical & dynamical coherence, balanced explanatory power . . . neither simplistic nor an ad hoc patchwork]. Of the three, the only defensible one is the third, responsible, reasonable faith resting on a well thought through faith point. In a world that has committed the gross fallacy of imagining hyperskepticism an intellectual virtue (being put in the place of prudence) being forced to admit to having unprovable or unproved first plausibles or presuppositions that vary from person to person and which include inescapable first principles and duties of reason is often a shock. One, that will be resisted in the imagination that big-S Science has the answers. However, it turns out that evolutionary materialistic scientism is both question-begging and irretrievably, utterly incoherent. This then taints fellow traveller views. What is self-referentially incoherent is necessarily false by way of refuting itself and undermining ability to have confidence in chains of implication -- the principle of explosion. In this case, there are multiple ways in which such a view undermines the credibility of mind. Often, this is projected to others, classically through Marxists' dismissal of class conditioning, or Freud's pointing to potty training or Crick's imagined bag of nerves and electrochemistry etc. In every case, a subtle personal exception of expertise is imagined, revealing the incoherence in the face of self-referentiality. So, no, the worldview concept is complex because it has to address reality rather than ideology. Where the most central branch of Philosophy is Metaphysics, in effect critically aware analysis of worldviews, including study of the logic of what is, being. That is, Ontology. KFkairosfocus
April 9, 2020
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The current benevolent versions of the faith can only be sustained by discarding or, at least, ignoring a lot of the Old Testament.
You are entitled to your opinion, no matter how convoluted it is. Your ignorance, while amusing, is not an argument.ET
April 8, 2020
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Sev “So, when the charge of inconsistency is leveled by someone at the worldview of another with the intention of trying to undermine it, I would answer, let him who is without that particular “sin” cast the first stone.” Yikes, this coming from someone that constantly tries to undermine theism and Christianity. Since we are appealing to scripture I would suggest “ first get the mote out of your own eye” Vividvividbleau
April 8, 2020
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Sev Thanks for sharing some of your worldviews. Vividvividbleau
April 8, 2020
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It seems to me that the concept of "worldview" is too vaguely defined to be of much use. If it refers to the sum total of the knowledge we acquire as we grow and age and the inferences we derive from that knowledge then they are almost bound to be inconsistent since there is so much we still don't know about ourselves and the Universe in which we find ourselves. If it refers to some sort of notional framework theory or more general explanation then the same caveat applies. As Karl Popper wrote, while we may each differ in the amount we know in different areas, we are all alike in our infinite ignorance. In physics, integrating relativity and quantum mechanics has so far proven to be an insuperable obstacle and there doesn't seem to be any radical new approach on the horizon which will subsume them both. Christianity is riddled with inconsistencies to put it mildly. The current benevolent versions of the faith can only be sustained by discarding or, at least, ignoring a lot of the Old Testament. So, when the charge of inconsistency is leveled by someone at the worldview of another with the intention of trying to undermine it, I would answer, let him who is without that particular "sin" cast the first stone.Seversky
April 8, 2020
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JVL, >What is your favourite band? Why do you like them? Those are just subjective opinions, and they don't really matter. I don't even mind when someone makes fun of my favorite band. :-) >How many of your opinions can you defend logically? If you can’t does that make them worthless? Opinions I don't need to defend. But my stances on issues I can almost always defend logically. If I can't, then I don't engage in discussion of them until I've thought them through. Or I am very tentative in what I express. If I cannot defend them, then yes, they are pretty much worthless. In things that matter, I try to hold defensible positions. I try to hold positions that are more likely to be correct than the positions I reject. I prefer to hold positions that I think others ought to join me in agreeing with for sound reasons that they should be compelled to accept. These matters (philosophical, political, religious) are extremely important to life, and therefore important that positions be defensible. >Why is consistency more important than your feelings? Feelings can change by time of day, because of the weather, because of who I last spoke to or how bad traffic was today. In other words, they are my most ephemeral aspect. If I followed my feelings more than my intellect, I would get myself into more trouble than I can imagine. I would do things I would hate myself for moments after I did them. My feelings are therefore subordinate to my intellect as much as I can make that the case. >In my experience most Christians have had a significant life experience which led them to Christ. Experiences which cannot be logically explained or scrutinised. Yep, those are extremely ephemeral also. I would be concerned that later life experiences could just as quickly make them non-Christians. In fact, most of those I know who have left the church did it for emotional reasons, not intellectual ones. I do examine my feelings and experiences, but always in light of what I can best determine is/was true. My feelings do not guide my search for truth, as far as I can prevent them. >Can we just trust in our heart of hearts that some things are true even if we cannot logically defend them? Is consistency the most important criteria? Having a consistent worldview is very important to me. I know how my feelings can fluctuate, and do not trust them as a guide to any sort of truth. I see feelings lead people into all sorts of pain and dysfunction. Feelings are also incredibly easy to manipulate, and I see demagogues and lotharios manipulating people's feelings often, to the victim's ultimate harm. Please place less emphasis on feelings. I think it will improve the outcomes in your life. Make those feelings subordinate to facts.EDTA
April 8, 2020
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JVL “Can we just trust in our heart of hearts that some things are true even if we cannot logically defend them? Is consistency the most important criteria?” I don’t think so. The consistency has to do with , for lack of a better term, intellectual worldview consistency. If your intellectual worldview is inconsistent with your experience then something is wrong with your worldview. Secondly experience is a bad test for whether something is true, jump up does the floor move under your feet ? The world is spinning around at thousands of miles per hour but you don’t experience that you experience the opposite. Finally logic cannot tell us what is true but it does tell us what cannot be true regardless of experience. One of the greatest divides on this sight is the primacy of evidence, logic or experience, I say the former. Also I am hard pressed to think of any experience that is illogical., but keep in mind logic does not tell us what is true but rather what cannot be true, big difference. Vividvividbleau
April 8, 2020
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BA77, the belief that we can infer conclusions on evidence and logic rather than following unconscious but fundamentally non rational dynamics implies a belief in fundamental, significant freedom. Freedom in turn implies moral government and a root that grounds the good. KFkairosfocus
April 8, 2020
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Bornagain77: As a Christian I can live perfectly consistently with the fact that I am not morally perfect but that I am a sinner saved by grace. I fail to be morally perfect, or even to be morally acceptable to others, very often. It is part and parcel with being a Christian! On the other hand, it is impossible for the atheistic materialist to live his life consistently as if his worldview were actually true, i.e. as if he had no free will, no moral agency, whatsoever. Why is consistency more important than your feelings? In my experience most Christians have had a significant life experience which led them to Christ. Experiences which cannot be logically explained or scrutinised. Do you examine those with the same critical eye for consistency? Did you do so during or after your experience? I am not calling the experiences into question; I'd just like to know how they fit into your logical, justified worldview? Can we just trust in our heart of hearts that some things are true even if we cannot logically defend them? Is consistency the most important criteria?JVL
April 8, 2020
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Truthfreedom: Again, opinions are of no value unless you address why you hold them (meaning you are addressing the underlying reasons ). Those underlying reasons can be easily destroyed if they do not stand logical scrutiny (that is why logic is so beautiful, because it is objective. Logic is a UNIVERSAL tool). Do you love your spouse? Why? Do you love your children? Why? Do you love your pets? Why? What is your favourite band? Why do you like them? What's your favourite meal? Why? Do you think John Grisham is a great author? Why? How many of your opinions can you defend logically? If you can't does that make them worthless? I didn't strongly try and defend my opinions; I honestly reported them as such and I gave some reasons why I was led to them but I admitted they might be incorrect. For that I get vilified.JVL
April 8, 2020
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BA “As a Christian I can live perfectly consistently with the fact that I am not morally perfect but that I am a sinner saved by grace. I fail to be morally perfect, or even to be morally acceptable to others, very often. It is part and parcel with being a Christian! On the other hand, it is impossible for the atheistic materialist to live his life consistently as if his worldview were actually true, i.e. as if he had no free will, no moral agency, whatsoever.” Could not agree with you more, the inconsistency I was referring to was to the acting out towards others in Christian charity, attack ideas not the person. I should not have said that we all are inconsistent in our worldview beliefs because the Christian is not,. For instance in the past I have been a hypocrite, I am sure I will be a hypocrite in the future, this is not inconsistent within the Christian worldview. Vividvividbleau
April 8, 2020
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vivid:
but are any of us perfectly consistent in living out our worldview beliefs?
As a Christian I can live perfectly consistently with the fact that I am not morally perfect but that I am a sinner saved by grace. I fail to be morally perfect, or even to be morally acceptable to others, very often. It is part and parcel with being a Christian! On the other hand, it is impossible for the atheistic materialist to live his life consistently as if his worldview were actually true, i.e. as if he had no free will, no moral agency, whatsoever. Here are quotes from leading atheists admitting that it is impossible for them to live consistently as if their worldview were actually true. As Nancy Pearcey comments, they have "abandoned all hope for a unified, logically consistent worldview."
Darwin's Robots: When Evolutionary Materialists Admit that Their Own Worldview Fails - Nancy Pearcey - April 23, 2015 Excerpt: Even materialists often admit that, in practice, it is impossible for humans to live any other way. One philosopher jokes that if people deny free will, then when ordering at a restaurant they should say, "Just bring me whatever the laws of nature have determined I will get." An especially clear example is Galen Strawson, a philosopher who states with great bravado, "The impossibility of free will ... can be proved with complete certainty." Yet in an interview, Strawson admits that, in practice, no one accepts his deterministic view. "To be honest, I can't really accept it myself," he says. "I can't really live with this fact from day to day. Can you, really?",,, In What Science Offers the Humanities, Edward Slingerland, identifies himself as an unabashed materialist and reductionist. Slingerland argues that Darwinian materialism leads logically to the conclusion that humans are robots -- that our sense of having a will or self or consciousness is an illusion. Yet, he admits, it is an illusion we find impossible to shake. No one "can help acting like and at some level really feeling that he or she is free." We are "constitutionally incapable of experiencing ourselves and other conspecifics [humans] as robots." One section in his book is even titled "We Are Robots Designed Not to Believe That We Are Robots.",,, When I teach these concepts in the classroom, an example my students find especially poignant is Flesh and Machines by Rodney Brooks, professor emeritus at MIT. Brooks writes that a human being is nothing but a machine -- a "big bag of skin full of biomolecules" interacting by the laws of physics and chemistry. In ordinary life, of course, it is difficult to actually see people that way. But, he says, "When I look at my children, I can, when I force myself, ... see that they are machines." Is that how he treats them, though? Of course not: "That is not how I treat them.... I interact with them on an entirely different level. They have my unconditional love, the furthest one might be able to get from rational analysis." Certainly if what counts as "rational" is a materialist worldview in which humans are machines, then loving your children is irrational. It has no basis within Brooks's worldview. It sticks out of his box. How does he reconcile such a heart-wrenching cognitive dissonance? He doesn't. Brooks ends by saying, "I maintain two sets of inconsistent beliefs." He has given up on any attempt to reconcile his theory with his experience. He has abandoned all hope for a unified, logically consistent worldview. http://www.evolutionnews.org/2015/04/when_evolutiona095451.html
Richard Dawkins himself admitted that it would be 'intolerable' for him to live his life as if his atheistic materialism were actually true
Who wrote Richard Dawkins’s new book? – October 28, 2006 Excerpt: Dawkins: What I do know is that what it feels like to me, and I think to all of us, we don't feel determined. We feel like blaming people for what they do or giving people the credit for what they do. We feel like admiring people for what they do.,,, Manzari: But do you personally see that as an inconsistency in your views? Dawkins: I sort of do. Yes. But it is an inconsistency that we sort of have to live with otherwise life would be intolerable. http://www.evolutionnews.org/2006/10/who_wrote_richard_dawkinss_new002783.html
In what should be needless to say, if it is impossible for you to live as if your worldview were actually true then your worldview cannot possibly reflect reality as it really is but your worldview must instead be based on a delusion.
Existential Argument against Atheism - November 1, 2013 by Jason Petersen 1. If a worldview is true then you should be able to live consistently with that worldview. 2. Atheists are unable to live consistently with their worldview. 3. If you can’t live consistently with an atheist worldview then the worldview does not reflect reality. 4. If a worldview does not reflect reality then that worldview is a delusion. 5. If atheism is a delusion then atheism cannot be true. Conclusion: Atheism is false. http://answersforhope.com/existential-argument-atheism/
bornagain77
April 8, 2020
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@48 JVL
And I thought the atheist would be the one telling others their opinions and views don’t mean anything!!
Again, opinions are of no value unless you address why you hold them (meaning you are addressing the underlying reasons ). Those underlying reasons can be easily destroyed if they do not stand logical scrutiny (that is why logic is so beautiful, because it is objective. Logic is a UNIVERSAL tool). Opinions: in the tavern. Facts: at UD. :)Truthfreedom
April 8, 2020
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“The belief that “we can be better than this” presupposes free will, i.e. moral agency.” I certainly agree but are any of us perfectly consistent in living out our worldview beliefs? Vividvividbleau
April 8, 2020
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vivid,
Sigh, we can be better than this.
The belief that "we can be better than this" presupposes free will, i.e. moral agency. I rest my case.bornagain77
April 8, 2020
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Vividbleau: Sigh, we can be better than this. And I thought the atheist would be the one telling others their opinions and views don't mean anything!! Anyway, I'm not taking it personally. Bornagain77 I know has very strong opinions and views and I respect that; he(?)'s been very, very consistent over a long period of time. Truthfreedom seems to enjoy sniping at views he(?) doesn't agree with just for the pleasure of it which means I probably won't respond to his(?) posts much in the future. I don't mind being disagreed with! That's fine. But, if in the back of your mind you think "This person is just another one of those materialist nutters who can't think" then don't waste my time and yours responding. As I've said before, I like getting to know people and finding out why they think the way they do. I don't expect to come to an agreement. I hope to build some respect and consideration so that we can move forward on some important issues that will require compromises from every one. I don't know how many of you remember the TV series The Ascent of Man presented by Jacob Bronowski (it came out a long time ago). At the end of one of the episodes he travels to the Auschwitz camp and appeals to all of us to stop treating each other as lesser beings then ourselves. He mentions that the pond there contains the ashes of some of his own family and he implores us all to get to know each other. I still find that moment extremely powerful. And I'm trying to take it to heart: I don't want to write anyone off as insane or so wrong they're not even worth talking to. I don't want to live in a society where we're just shouting at each other. I want everyone to be able to speak and be heard. It's the least we can do for each other.JVL
April 8, 2020
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Truthfreedom: Until adversaries of some caliber arrive. Sparrings have their purpose too. Thanks for your support. You do not participate because it is one of the most difficult ones. Most people do not even understand the implications of this. That’s why you (and others) hide behind the ‘I’m not interested’ quote. And you are fooling no one. I choose not to participate because I can't parse the arguments for there being no free will; it feels like I do have free will so I have nothing to contribute. I'm not hiding at all. I'm being honest. I guess I'm not of a high enough caliber then.JVL
April 8, 2020
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“Perhaps they have time to waste on you.” Sigh, we can be better than this. Vividvividbleau
April 8, 2020
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@41 JVL
That’s why I don’t participate in the free will discussion.
You do not participate because it is one of the most difficult ones. Most people do not even understand the implications of this. That's why you (and others) hide behind the 'I'm not interested' quote. And you are fooling no one.Truthfreedom
April 8, 2020
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@43 Bornagain77:
Perhaps they have time to waste on you.
Until adversaries of some caliber arrive. Sparrings have their purpose too.Truthfreedom
April 8, 2020
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Bornagain77: Moreover, you did not start nor were you part of this discussion to begin with. I was addressing TF, vivid and Jerry. Perhaps they have time to waste on you. Okay!! Stay safe, stay healthy.JVL
April 8, 2020
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JVL
That’s why I don’t participate in the free will discussion.
Later on
Why did you participate in the discussion?
LOL, well for you, the denial of free will is insane and refutes your atheism. so it is obvious why you would refuse to participate. For me, I have much better things to do than argue with someone who refuses to address the evidence honestly. Moreover, you did not start nor were you part of this discussion to begin with. I was addressing TF, vivid, BobRyan, and Jerry. Perhaps they have time to waste on you.bornagain77
April 8, 2020
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Bornagain77: But alas, since, under Darwinian premises, Dawkins himself is purely a material being with no free will, i.e. with no moral agency, then it directly follows that Dawkins cannot possibly care. That's why I don't participate in the free will discussion. I believe Dr Dawkins does love and care and wants to protect other people from plagues and pestilence and such. If that means he's wrong about free will then he's wrong. Tell me, exactly where is the ‘meat robot’ of Dawkins, since he has no free will, going to step in to impose justice on a unjust world? The denial of free will, moral agency, by atheists is insane! You'll have to argue with him about that. The rest of your argumentation in your post is similarity superficial and insane so I will not even bother. Fine. Why did you participate in the discussion? One of three things was going to happen: I was going to stand my ground which you find 'insane', I was going to run away with my tail between my legs or, just maybe, I was going to admit I was completely mistaken. Since the third option was pretty unlikely I suspect you were anticipating one of the others to come about. If that was the case then what did you hope to get out of the conversation? I like to find out what and how other people see the world. I like to get to know people. What about you? Why did you bother?JVL
April 8, 2020
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JVL "But he’s not saying he doesn’t care!!" But alas, since, under Darwinian premises, Dawkins himself is purely a material being with no free will, i.e. with no moral agency, then it directly follows that Dawkins cannot possibly care. Tell me, exactly where is the 'meat robot' of Dawkins, since he has no free will, going to step in to impose justice on a unjust world? The denial of free will, moral agency, by atheists is insane!
“In a universe of electrons and selfish genes, blind physical forces and genetic replication, some people are going to get hurt, other people are going to get lucky, and you won’t find any rhyme or reason in it, nor any justice."
The rest of your argumentation in your post is similarity superficial and insane so I will not even bother.bornagain77
April 8, 2020
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Bornagain77: for Darwinists, what’s a few more 10 million dead here or there? As Dawkins said, “In a universe of electrons and selfish genes, blind physical forces and genetic replication, some people are going to get hurt, other people are going to get lucky, and you won’t find any rhyme or reason in it, nor any justice. ” But he's not saying he doesn't care!! He's not saying it's a good thing! He's just saying that's the way it is. "[N]or any justice." He doesn't like it anymore than you do. He's saying that unguided processes cannot care or take pity, we have to make up the difference. The unimaginably horrible consequences of Darwinian ideology imposed at the government level is simply lost for each individual person with such large numbers. I don't know any biologist or atheist that thinks Darwinian ideology should have anything to do with government policy except when dealing with mutating pathogens and nearly extinct life forms. Here’s what happens when Atheists/evolutionists/non-Christians take control of Government: Most Germans in the 1930s were not atheists, they elected the fascists and then afterwards found out what a colossal mistake they had made. Most of the Russians who supported the revolution during the 1910s were not atheists, they supported what they thought was strong leadership and then afterwards discovered that they should have done things a bit differently. Unscrupulous and pathological individuals are always quick to exploit a situation where things are in flux and they have some support. Being atheists isn't what made them evil (if I am allowed to use the term this once!), they were sick and broken and not enough people stood up to them when they got the reigns of power. And sometimes ideas born out of fear get people to behave very badly. I just heard recently that during the Black Plague people all over Europe, not knowing what was causing the wholesale deaths, decided to blame a group of people they had decided were the cause: the Jews. Whole Jewish enclaves were wiped out because people were scared and were desperate to stop the slaughter. The Jews themselves seem to suffer fewer deaths which may be down to better hygienic practices but it made them look even more responsible. A sad, sad chapter in European history. Nothing to do with evolution or atheism. It's not atheism or Dawinists you should fear. Fear fear and those who choose to exploit it.JVL
April 8, 2020
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BobRyan at 37, for Darwinists, what's a few more 10 million dead here or there? As Dawkins said, "In a universe of electrons and selfish genes, blind physical forces and genetic replication, some people are going to get hurt, other people are going to get lucky, and you won't find any rhyme or reason in it, nor any justice. "
"In a universe of electrons and selfish genes, blind physical forces and genetic replication, some people are going to get hurt, other people are going to get lucky, and you won't find any rhyme or reason in it, nor any justice. The universe that we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil, no good, nothing but pitiless indifference.” ? Richard Dawkins, River Out of Eden: A Darwinian View of Life
Oh well Mr. Dawkins, Que sera, sera! The unimaginably horrible consequences of Darwinian ideology imposed at the government level is simply lost for each individual person with such large numbers.
Hitler, Marx, Lenin, Stalin, Mao – quotes - Foundational Darwinian influence in their ideology (Nov. 2018) https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/historian-human-evolution-theorists-were-attempting-to-be-moral-teachers/#comment-668170
Here's what happens when Atheists/evolutionists/non-Christians take control of Government:
“169,202,000 Murdered: Summary and Conclusions [20th Century Democide] I BACKGROUND 2. The New Concept of Democide [Definition of Democide] 3. Over 133,147,000 Murdered: Pre-Twentieth Century Democide II 128,168,000 VICTIMS: THE DEKA-MEGAMURDERERS 4. 61,911,000 Murdered: The Soviet Gulag State 5. 35,236,000 Murdered: The Communist Chinese Ant Hill 6. 20,946,000 Murdered: The Nazi Genocide State 7. 10,214,000 Murdered: The Depraved Nationalist Regime III 19,178,000 VICTIMS: THE LESSER MEGA-MURDERERS 8. 5,964,000 Murdered: Japan’s Savage Military 9. 2,035,000 Murdered: The Khmer Rouge Hell State 10. 1,883,000 Murdered: Turkey’s Genocidal Purges 11. 1,670,000 Murdered: The Vietnamese War State 12. 1,585,000 Murdered: Poland’s Ethnic Cleansing 13. 1,503,000 Murdered: The Pakistani Cutthroat State 14. 1,072,000 Murdered: Tito’s Slaughterhouse IV 4,145,000 VICTIMS: SUSPECTED MEGAMURDERERS 15. 1,663,000 Murdered? Orwellian North Korea 16. 1,417,000 Murdered? Barbarous Mexico 17. 1,066,000 Murdered? Feudal Russia” This is, in reality, probably just a drop in the bucket. Who knows how many undocumented murders there were. It also doesn’t count all the millions of abortions from around the world. http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/NOTE1.HTM From 1900-1987 over 250 million dead through Atheism’s grasp for domination: http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/COM.TAB1.GIF http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/COM.ART.HTM Who Killed More: Hitler, Stalin, or Mao? - Ian Johnson https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2018/02/05/who-killed-more-hitler-stalin-or-mao/ Atheism’s Body Count * https://www.scholarscorner.com/atheisms-body-count-ideology-and-human-suffering/ Atheist Murderers http://www.thomism.org/atheism/atheist_murderers.html etc... etc... etc...
My opinion is that nobody will ever know the real numbers for deaths. But it is interesting to note that every time a revision is made to the numbers of dead (with some certainty) that the revision is almost always in the upwards direction. Never a revision downwards.bornagain77
April 8, 2020
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bornagain77 @ 27 There were millions sent to the gulags, which was a death sentence without actually being called a death sentence. Those who died pushed Stalin up to around 100,000,000 dead, which beats out Mao by about 20,000,000. Had Mao been given more time, he would have passed Stalin.BobRyan
April 7, 2020
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I suggest you not be so condescending
I apologize. I didn't mean to come across as condescending.jerry
April 7, 2020
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Jerry I said that did you miss it ? Now I know what you meant. I suggest you not be so condescending Vividvividbleau
April 7, 2020
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