THIS IS A READ-ONLY ARCHIVE FROM THE SORABJI.COM MESSAGE BOARDS (1995-2016). |
---|
god.htm I took three hits and bite one bullet, and earned an medal of service for being generally rational. I'm extremely interested to see how you guys do. (regardless of the strength of your religious convictions) |
|
********** Congratulations! You have been awarded the TPM medal of distinction! This is our second highest award for outstanding service on the intellectual battleground. The fact that you progressed through this activity without being hit and biting only one bullet suggests that your beliefs about God are internally consistent and well thought out. A direct hit would have occurred had you answered in a way that implied a logical contradiction. The bitten bullet occurred because you responded in a way that required that you held a view that most people would have found strange, incredible or unpalatable. However, because you bit only one bullet and avoided direct hits completely you still qualify for our second highest award. A good achievement! ************* |
|
since when does religion have anything at all to do with rational thought or logic? |
Faith, though, like love, is non-rational. You don't love because.... You just love. |
OK I have flapped my gums and said my peace. |
any emotion, by definition, is not rational. |
And love and faith aren't emotions. |
|
my belief that god/morality can be derived from an inner conviction, yet the rapist was not justified by the voices of god he heard to rape and kill. my problem though with that dilemma or "hit" is that what your inner conviction compells you to do may, or may not be justified, depending on the actions. An inner conviction to god does not exclude or exempt you from the rest of society. As far as Im concerned, thats a flaw in the logic of the game. As far as Im concerned, you as well spider, we scored a perfect score. |
two hits. |
|
eri, you can just cut and paste the whole link, for some reason it gets transferred weird as link when you paste it into text like above. I agree with spider that religion should be rational. And I am not surprised that she scored very high. And science is not a religion any more than creationism is a science. |
"You have been awarded the TPM medal of honour! This is our highest award for outstanding service on the intellectual battleground. The fact that you progressed through this activity neither being hit nor biting a bullet suggests that your beliefs about God are internally consistent and very well thought out." Frankly, I don't agree, but whatever. |
that hooka knocked me out |
i still think the rapist matter is flawed. but then again i was thinking about what was right, and it seems what is right isnt always bulletproof logic. |
I felt, too, that they were making some kind of logical error in setting up the rapist story as an example to support one of their earlier questions that they had framed in the abstract. Reductio ad absurdam? Or something? I should give this test to my roommate. She is an ardent Catholic and a PhD candidate in Philosophy with strong training in logic. |
"And love and faith aren't emotions." that's true. nonetheless, love nor religous beliefs (faith) are still not rational. |
|
if it was logical, engineers would be priests and all poets would go to hell maybe that's how it is, but it's not my belief |
and the rapist question bit my bullet. |
"Earlier you agreed that it is rational to believe that the Loch Ness monster does not exist if there is an absence of strong evidence or argument that it does. No strong evidence or argument was required to show that the monster does not exist - absence of evidence or argument was enough. But now you claim that the atheist needs to be able to provide strong arguments or evidence if their belief in the non-existence of God is to be rational rather than a matter of faith." But, assertions about the Loch Ness monster involve a limited, testable domain, i.e. Loch Ness. You could, concievably, observe the whole of Loch Ness, analyze the results, and detect the existence of some monster. Assertions about the existence/nonexistence of god involve the whole universe, hardly a testable domain, and speculations about a beast of a completely different nature than Nessie. Thus I judge such assertions to be in the realm of faith. So there, you Battleground of God fuckwits! |
What I'm saying is reason is involved in faith, just as is emotion, and just as emotion and reason are involved and love. But love/faith can't be reduced to emotion/reason. Look, even Dante had Virgil as a guide only up to the gates of Heaven, because Virgil was a symbol for Reason, and this was to show that Reason can only take you so far. Then Beatrice, or Faith, has to carry you the rest of the way. Yep. 's all I'm saying. |
reason tells me that the 'christian' belief of having the only truth in spiritual matters [as was taught to me as a child] is not logical, but it is very arrogant. |
But, since each creates his/her own existance I must therefore be my own god. Therefore, you may all worship me any way you wish. Since it really won't matter since you are all creations of my mind. And, when I cease to exist you too will all cease to exist. At least until I decide to recreate my self. Then I might decide to bring some of you back. Or, maybe not. |
|
Congratulations! You have been awarded the TPM service medal! This is our third highest award for outstanding service on the intellectual battleground. The fact that you have progressed through this activity without suffering many hits suggests that whilst there are inconsistencies in your beliefs about God, on the whole they are well thought-out. The direct hits you suffered occurred where your answers implied logical contradictions. You did bite a number of bullets. These occurred because you responded in ways that required that you held views that most people would have found strange, incredible or unpalatable. At the bottom of this page, we have reproduced the analyses of your direct hits and bitten bullets. The fact that you did not suffer many hits means that you qualify for our third highest award. Well done! |
because i said it is basically irrational to believe in god as an all-powerful being, irrational to use god as justification for violation of cultural law. i feel smug. |
i have a feeling that no matter how you answer all the previous questions, there is no "right" answer for the rape question. it's a trick question; everyone gets it one wrong, so to speak, which is why the average amount of hits or bullet bites or whatever is 1.6xx. |
|
|
this is kinda fun. |
|
but then I read what it means-- You have to bite a bullet if your choices have an implication that most would find strange, incredible or unpalatable. There is more room for disagreement here, since what strikes many people as extraordinary or bizarre can strike others as normal. So, again, please do not get too upset if we judge you have bitten a bullet. Maybe it is our world-view which is warped! there are no right or wrong answers, only answers that contradict yourself or contracdict what 'most would find strange..'etc. Spider's claim that Faith is not rational is my #1 arguement against the catholic church. it is the fly in the ointment of so called 'free choice'. if god doesn't give everyone faith, yet faith is a prerequisite to heaven, is this a good god? |
|
i didn't like being tricked into knowing i had to answer "false" to the "cruelly torturing innocent people is morally wrong" question in order not to take a hit. because i really do think it is morally wrong, and i don't think that is incongruent with any of my previous answers. |
God is all powerful? yes? no? if god is all powerful, then God can make a rock that he cannot lift? yes? no? if God cannot lift the rock then he is not all powerful. if God cannot make a rock that is impossible for him to lift then he is not all powerful. can someone find away out of this catch-22? i was raised Catholic. the church taught that God is: all knowing. (he knows the past and the future) all perfect. and that he gives us a free will. my point. so God knows what i'll do today. i must do what he knows. i cannot change because that would make him wrong, and he is all knowing and all perfect. i cannot have a free will. |
|
|
|
easier if you think of time as a human measurement |
argument as to why free will is not compatible with an all knowing god. The argument in fact states that god sacrificed his all knowing when he gave us free will, because of his love for us. or something like that, i don't have the book in front of me. |
|
|
To go along with the "God" concept, would be like saying we were merely chess pieces,on God's little chess board. I don't like manipulation,unless I'm the manipulator. |
Philip K. Dick before going to sleep last night. Some really interesting ideas about the nature of god, good and evil. Of all the stuff I've read on religion it's the science fiction authors that have had some of the more interesting ideas on god. |
That's all I really remember about it. It wasn't that well-written, if I recall correctly. |
|
|
|
|
just finished listening to this. pretty interesting. elvis costello does a commercial. |
i attend the church once or twice a week. some refer to it as yoga class. i believe very strongly in the idea of god. |
it felt kind of good to be called rational... it just doesn't happen that often. |
|
|
|
traffic....you bastards! Whenever i'm watching christian television(which is almost always) the thing i like to ask the tv screen is this: If everything that happens, and everything we do, is all part of "gods plan", then how can anything possibly be *wrong*? |
|