• @Mike_Hawk God doesn't want slaves, he wants servants. Slaves are unwilling workers, and servants are those who work with the passion to serve. If God was egotistical he would have revealed himself long ago, and forced us to obey him, or perish. How can any being who has the limits of 120 years or less ever pretend to know enough in order to be a worthy witness of all things that exists in the universe? If we can't be humble to God what do you expect of him? Do you want him to force himself upon you? I doubt that. If we can't represent the ways of his only begotten son, and have the humility to confess the king himself who lead the way with complete confidence we don't deserve to be redeemed. There's always an agenda when it comes to us beings of the flesh.


  • @Raz0r said in Fact check with Pet: Why atheism is irrational:

    @petrapark3r Alright, so if u say that god was always there, then i can say that the popping of spaces were also always there....Think it through well.

    Indeed :grin:... I was hoping someone was going to make that point! You are absolutely right, God is also incomprehensible to our rational mind!

    So indeed, we must all accept, that whatever we believe about this world is in fact irrational! Atheism does not protect you from this :smirk:

    However there is one very important difference. Let's assume for one moment, that there is no multiverse for simplicity's sake. Let's assume that 14 billion years ago, "Let there be light" literally resulted in a giant burning explosion that we can watch today if we look far enough out into space (isn't that awsome?): the big bang.

    Yes, the reason for being itself, the reason for why there is anything will be irrational, but if you assume that this reason is God, you do win one thing:

    The universe suddenly makes complete sense to our rational mind. From the beginning, from the big bang on, the world has a reason, is logical, mathematical, is causal and makes sense to us. And I, as a rational thinker, very much prefer this idea over a world, that in itself is irrational.


  • @Mike_Hawk said in Fact check with Pet: Why atheism is irrational:

    If god does exist, He is certainly not worthy if praise. He is a mass-murdering, egomaniacal pedophile who sanctions slavery.

    Well, you can indeed conclude these things about the god of the philosophers, the one we can reason about like this. Because the god of the philosophers is not tight to a revelation, say the Bible for example. So you can basically blame everything on him.

    If we talk about the christian God, you would even be right about saying that natural catastrophies might be blamed on Him, even though the question of responsibility might still not be that easy to resolve here. But evil? Evil that people do, requires their free choice, or it would not be evil. The christian God does not sanction pedophily or slavery. Period. Don't spout generalizations like that... Or, if you really believe that, then get a better education.


  • @steelfirehawk said in Fact check with Pet: Why atheism is irrational:

    @Mike_Hawk God doesn't want slaves, he wants servants. Slaves are unwilling workers, and servants are those who work with the passion to serve. If God was egotistical he would have revealed himself long ago, and forced us to obey him, or perish. How can any being who has the limits of 120 years or less ever pretend to know enough in order to be a worthy witness of all things that exists in the universe? If we can't be humble to God what do you expect of him? Do you want him to force himself upon you? I doubt that. If we can't represent the ways of his only begotten son, and have the humility to confess the king himself who lead the way with complete confidence we don't deserve to be redeemed. There's always an agenda when it comes to us beings of the flesh.

    That is a good way of argumentation!

    May I offer a piece of advice: This language you are always speaking of the "ways of the flesh". People don't understand it. Heck, I don't understand it. Learn to speak in ways that people can understand, so that you can serve God better.


  • @petrapark3r in your attempts to summarize scientific theories regarding the creation of the universe there is one fundamental fact that seems to have eluded you. the scientific theories regarding the creation of the universe are not facts, they are theories based on available facts. Science does not explain how the universe came to be, it only proposes theories based on proven evidence.
    Science does not say "we know how the universe was created", science says "this is what we can prove based on evidence, theories that seem to fit that evidence, and we are trying to find out more".

    With religion, when one does not know the answer to a question they make the answer be "because of God". With science, when one does not know the answer to a question one will say "I do not know but these are the facts we have so far".

    And unlike relegions science depends on facts that can be proven, tested, and recreated.

    You can have faith in anything. That doesn't make it real.


  • @ScruffyMutt said in Fact check with Pet: Why atheism is irrational:

    @petrapark3r in your attempts to summarize scientific theories regarding the creation of the universe there is one fundamental fact that seems to have eluded you. the scientific theories regarding the creation of the universe are not facts, they are theories based on available facts. Science does not explain how the universe came to be, it only proposes theories based on proven evidence.
    Science does not say "we know how the universe was created", science says "this is what we can prove based on evidence, theories that seem to fit that evidence, and we are trying to find out more".

    This was not an attempt to summarize scientific theories. I mentioned a few where they helped my argumentation.

    What I did was thinking through the atheistic viewpoint, which clearly has little to do with science, since as you said correctly science only proposes theories based on evidence (measurable things). There is no such thing as proven evidence btw. Science by its very nature does not prove (however it does conclude things).

    Of course I know the limits of science, and I am glad you do to. Many scientests however seem to not know. It seems to me, that the fact, that science has to have a tunnel vision which only allows it to see things that are indeed measurable, always tempts people into thinking that there cannot be anything outside of science, anything outside of the measurable. Even assuming this must be called unscientific, because it transfers the limits of science onto a worldview which clearly includes things that science cannot see.

    With religion, when one does not know the answer to a question they make the answer be "because of God". With science, when one does not know the answer to a question one will say "I do not know but these are the facts we have so far".

    Which is why I'm very fond of the catholic church, which to my knowledge is the only religious community, that clearly states that science is indeed what should be used to understand the measurable world, and to put a end to using God as a stopgap for every inexplicable phenomenon.

    And unlike relegions science depends on facts that can be proven, tested, and recreated.

    Indeed science is a very convincing thing. Don't conflate it with atheism though. That's clearly overstepping its boundaries.

    You can have faith in anything. That doesn't make it real.

    Agreed.


  • @petrapark3r I've read the bible several times over. It's no generalization.

    When Moses slaughtered the Midians, he was told by god to "Keep the little women". (Numbers 31:9)

    That's pedophilia.

    The old testament clearly sanctions slavery, and the new testament only says "Slaves, obey your earthly masters in everything." (Colossians 3:22)

    Next time provide evidence rather than opinion before insulting a complete stranger's intellegence like an asshole.


  • @Mike_Hawk said in Fact check with Pet: Why atheism is irrational:

    @petrapark3r I've read the bible several times over. It's no generalization.

    When Moses slaughtered the Midians, he was told by god to "Keep the little women". (Numbers 31:9)

    That's pedophilia.

    I did not insult your intelligence, I said you were not educated correctly. And you have just proven me right, for in Numbers 31:9 God does not speak to moses. God only speaks in Numbers 31:2. In numbers 31:9 the bible recounts that the israelites captured the women and the children of the Midians (they spared their lives). Slavery was indeed a common thing in the times of the bible and we can assume that these became slaves. But there is absolutely nothing in this verse that says anything about pedophilia. That is your interpretation only. Here is the link to the New American Standard Bible and especially to the hebrew word for word translation, where you can see clearly that the word for "children" or "little ones" and the word for "women" do not even stand together (it doesn't say "little women" in the original text).

    The old testament clearly sanctions slavery, and the new testament only says "Slaves, obey your earthly masters in everything." (Colossians 3:22)

    Yes the old testament does allow slavery (not sex slavery though, in fact it is rather prude about sex outside of marriage). But the old testament is not equal to the christian faith. As you said correctly, the new testament does not sanction slavery. There is no evidence to assume Jesus would have agreed with slavery. In fact he did rectify a few things that were common in the days of the old testament, for example that men could just release women from marriage (which did put them in a situation where they were economically ruined).

    Next time provide evidence rather than opinion before insulting a complete stranger's intellegence like an asshole.

    The christian faith however is not just the contents of the bible!

    So here is the evidence you claim does not exist. The catechism of the catholic church says: "Every form of social or cultural discrimination in fundamental personal rights on the grounds of sex, race, color, social conditions, language, or religion must be curbed and eradicated as incompatible with God's design." (PART THREE • LIFE IN CHRIST • SECTION ONE MAN'S VOCATION LIFE IN THE SPIRIT • CHAPTER TWO THE HUMAN COMMUNION • Article 3 SOCIAL JUSTICE • II. Equality and Differences Among Men (link))

    Of course I do know that many of the 20.000 christian protestant denominations say that the christian faith is pretty much equal to the contents of the bible. (However 99% of them do not sanction slavery either!). So maybe I have to add, that the true christian teaching is only to be found in the one apostolic church, the oldest institution in human history (1.4 billion members and counting) as well as the orthodox church (300 million members).

    This is propably the greatest sin of christianity to have broken the unity that had existed for 1000 years. The confusion among us is what gives others the chance to claim such things as you did, no matter how untrue, because there was someone in history who interpreted the bible in the way you say (and thus apostasized against the true doctrine of the church!). But then again: 1 person in 100 people is (this is pure statistics) completely out of his mind. Of course you'll have those, and this is exactly why the church always did its best to fight heresy you know?


  • @petrapark3r said in Fact check with Pet: Why atheism is irrational:

    Don't spout generalizations like that... Or, if you really believe that, then get a better education.

    @Mike_Hawk said in Fact check with Pet: Why atheism is irrational:

    insulting a complete stranger's intellegence like an asshole.

    I did not insult your intelligence as explained above. However I do apologize for having worded it in this aggressive kind of way. This was very unchristian of me. I am sorry.


  • Nothing in the new testament supports slavery???

    "Slaves, be subject to your masters with all respect, not only to the good and gentle but also to the unjust. For this is a gracious thing, when, mindful of God, one endures sorrows while suffering unjustly.(1 Peter 2:18-19)"

    That's new testament bruh.


  • @Mike_Hawk said in Fact check with Pet: Why atheism is irrational:

    Nothing in the new testament supports slavery???

    "Slaves, be subject to your masters with all respect, not only to the good and gentle but also to the unjust. For this is a gracious thing, when, mindful of God, one endures sorrows while suffering unjustly.(1 Peter 2:18-19)"

    Nothing in this verse supports slavery, it only tells you how you should act if you are one: with love (respect) even to the unjust. This is completely in accordance with Jesus' statement to love your enemies.

    You might even say, that St. Peter called any kind of slavery "suffering unjustly" here, but this isn't entirely clear from the context.

    Here, have a laugh:

    Screenshot 2019-07-25 at 06.47.06.png


  • The bike ref made me think of the video for Supergrass Alright, and because Gaz Coombs looks like a monkey, that in turn made me think of the infinite monkeys eventually writing Hamlet. Isn't this a better allegory?

    Personally, I've never had a philosophical problem with the conventional scientific model of super-condensed energy in a big bang / big crunch scenario, and see no need to give the thing a religious overview. It's worth noting that nothingy non-existence per se is no more daring a proposition than arch-dialectical, conceptual wrangling. I once read all one gazzillion pages of Being and Nothingness by Sartre, and briefly understood it (in between destroying my brain cells with whiskey), and this was before today's reliance on quantum jiggery-pokery as a get-out-of-jail card.

    Which makes me sound like an atheist, which is not the case. I say: all things being equal, when ruminating God or religion, don't be afraid to totally dismiss science in favour of discussing personal experiences.


  • @Indrid-Cold as always a very clever reply my friend. I like the monkeys singing in that music video, they seem to be very happy :joy:

    You are very right, and I must admit, I never read Sartre. And indeed, my endeavor here is rather philosophical than religious, for the God of the philosophers has little to do with the God of religion.

    But it still seems like a good starting point for a conversation doesn't it?


  • @petrapark3r said in Fact check with Pet: Why atheism is irrational:

    But it still seems like a good starting point for a conversation doesn't it?

    I always love the way you bring these religious ideas to site that's 90% a rat-up-a-drainpipe hook-up zone.


  • @Indrid-Cold said in Fact check with Pet: Why atheism is irrational:

    @petrapark3r said in Fact check with Pet: Why atheism is irrational:

    But it still seems like a good starting point for a conversation doesn't it?

    I always love the way you bring these religious ideas to site that's 90% a rat-up-a-drainpipe hook-up zone.

    :grin: Gutter philosophy, I like it! Thank you :heart:


  • @petrapark3r said in Fact check with Pet: Why atheism is irrational:

    Atheism assumes that God is not real, and claims to be entirely rational. But that second part about, being entirely rational, can be proven to be wrong, simply by thinking it through just once:

    @petrapark3r As far as I know Atheists are more intelligent and smart than theists. I'm not saying this without any reliable source. I have included those sources for you. A new paper published in frontiers in psychology which describes belief in god is associated with lower scores on IQ test
    Source 1
    Source2
    If atheism was irrational, their followers should have lower IQ than that of theists

    So lets assume there is no God. Then the universe at some point just popped into existence right? Of course not. That wouldn't make any sense now would it?

    There are so many theories other than bigbang one. Nobody exactly knows how universe came into existence.

    Some scientest might throw in, that the universe itself might be a fluctuation of a quantum field, or simply one of many universes popping out of whatever they pop out.

    And of course they could be right, and of course my question to them remains the same: Then did this something that the universe popped out of just suddenly pop into existence? Of course not, that wouldn't make any sense either.

    Lets assume god created the universe according to bible's genesis, God needed 6 days to create the universe but he did rest on 7th day though. What kind of almighty creator needs rest ? One more thing, a day is the time needed for Earth to complete one rotation on its axis. So how days passed if Earth and Sun were not created yet? How did he measured this time?

    Then this must mean, that this nature (or space or quantum field or whatever unfathomable thing the universe popped out of) has always been there, has always existed, eternally. Existence itself must be eternal then, if it wasn't created by an eternal God. Think it through well. There is no third option, so much is for sure...

    Now lets construct an example, that is able to make us see the problem here properly: Imagine you borrowed a bike from your friend. And this friend had borrowed it from another friend. And this guy again borrowed it. And so on and so forth. The bike was given from one person to the next. Reaching back through history, through time.

    If everything must have a cause, then God
    must have a cause. If there can be anything without a cause, it may just as well be the world as God, so that there cannot be any validity in that argument. It is exactly of the
    same nature as the Hindu's view, that the world rested upon an elephant and the elephant rested upon a tortoise; and when they said, "How about the tortoise?" the Indian said,
    "Suppose we change the subject." The argument is really no better than that. There is no reason why the world could not have come into being without a cause; nor, on the other
    hand, is there any reason why it should not have always existed. There is no reason to suppose that the world had a beginning at all. The idea that things must have a beginning
    is really due to the poverty of our imagination.

    Let's not complicate things by assuming there was a big bang for the sake of the example though. Let's just assume that this universe itself is eternal and not the quantum field it popped out of.

    So since the universe is eternal (and the bike symbolizes existence itself), this chain stretches into the past, without end... It is equally eternal. Now, answer this question: Why is there a bike? How can it always be borrowed, if there is no original owner?

    This can be answered with cause-effect reasoning. A cause-effect relationship is a relationship in which one event (the cause) makes another event happen (the effect). One cause can have several effects. Assuming again god created this universe, universe is the product of him. Every product like a house, is the work of an agent therefore the world which is a product, must have an agent or creator who is called god. But we know this inference is inconclusive, because the one of the premise 'the world is a product' is doubtful. How is it proved that the world is a product? It can't be said that the world is a product because it has parts. Wherever we perceive anything being produced, the producer or the agent is found to work on the material with his limbs. God is said to be bodiless. How can he then work on matter to produce the world?


  • @Urfi said in Fact check with Pet: Why atheism is irrational:

    @petrapark3r As far as I know Atheists are more intelligent and smart than theists. I'm not saying this without any reliable source. I have included those sources for you. A new paper published in frontiers in psychology which describes belief in god is associated with lower scores on IQ test
    Source 1
    Source2
    If atheism was irrational, their followers should have lower IQ than that of theists

    I too always assumed that in this day and age there would be more intelligent people on the side of the atheists than of the theists. Thank you for giving me some data :smile: . However in all the millenia before us, this was not the case, and there is no reason to assume, that it must be in the future. Also, most people have not thought this one here through properly, most people haven't really understood it. Heck most people haven't even heard of it. (It is the cosmological way to God according to Thomas of Aquinus). I wonder if those numbers would still be the same if everyone had understood these things... But yeah, it is no proof.

    There are so many theories other than bigbang one. Nobody exactly knows how universe came into existence.

    And as you should have seen, I was not assuming that they know. But let me add, that there is a consensus about the big bang. There is almost no scientist who doesn't agree with this theory. The question they are not sure about is what was before (and what before even means, since time seems to have begun with the big bang).

    Lets assume god created the universe according to bible's genesis, God needed 6 days to create the universe but he did rest on 7th day though. What kind of almighty creator needs rest ? One more thing, a day is the time needed for Earth to complete one rotation on its axis. So how days passed if Earth and Sun were not created yet? How did he measured this time?

    Why would you even assume, that I'd take the bible literally? That indeed would be a lack of intelligence (sorry to everyone who does) for the following reason: Genesis actually contains two accounts of how the earth was created (see my post for further info).

    If everything must have a cause, then God
    must have a cause.

    Reason has to conclude that there must be one thing that has no cause...

    If there can be anything without a cause, it may just as well be the world as God

    ...which is either God or the world.

    , so that there cannot be any validity in that argument. It is exactly of the
    same nature as the Hindu's view, that the world rested upon an elephant and the elephant rested upon a tortoise; and when they said, "How about the tortoise?" the Indian said,
    "Suppose we change the subject." The argument is really no better than that.

    Yes it is. Because what can be its own cause? What in the world could be its own reason? Can the world really be its own reason? Wouldn't this make the world godly?

    Even if you would disagree with what those questions imply, this is still a bit more than just an elephant on a turtoise.

    There is no reason why the world could not have come into being without a cause;

    There is absolutely any reason to assume that there should be nothing and no reason at all to assume that the world could have come into being without a cause or without even the possibility of coming into being. Things don't just happen. That idea is more than just irrational...

    nor, on the other
    hand, is there any reason why it should not have always existed. There is no reason to suppose that the world had a beginning at all. The idea that things must have a beginning
    is really due to the poverty of our imagination.

    You are right, you can assume that the world is eternal. And yes, it is due to our inability to understand the nature of this one first reason. It will forever remain non-understandable to us, for this is how reason works. And this is the definition of the word irrational: it makes no sense to our reason (latin: ratio).

    Which is exactly the point of the argument I am making.

    And it is not a question of who is more intelligent. Every atheist will agree that this conundrum is indeed irrational, once she understands what I am talking about. It's just like with mathematics: you have to agree that 1+2 = 2. Before you understood it, you might not have agreed, but once you understand it, you have no choice.

    And I mean what should they do about it? They have two irrational choices, believe in God or an eternal irrational world. Of course they'd chose what their peers chose: atheism...

    This can be answered with cause-effect reasoning. A cause-effect relationship is a relationship in which one event (the cause) makes another event happen (the effect). One cause can have several effects. Assuming again god created this universe, universe is the product of him. Every product like a house, is the work of an agent therefore the world which is a product, must have an agent or creator who is called god. But we know this inference is inconclusive, because the one of the premise 'the world is a product' is doubtful. How is it proved that the world is a product? It can't be said that the world is a product because it has parts. Wherever we perceive anything being produced, the producer or the agent is found to work on the material with his limbs.

    We don't have to bring the idea of product into this. The world is a causal thing. Look out the window. Everything happens for a reason. Trees grow, because a seed once fell into the gorund and the sun gives its energy. The argument has nothing to do with wether the world is a product or not. Causality is enough, and causality is real.

    God is said to be bodiless. How can he then work on matter to produce the world?

    Yeah, God is also irrational. We cannot understand how he could work on matter. Just as we cannot understand a world that created itself or has no reason.


  • @petrapark3r hi, I only came here to point out that “Pet” in French means fart.

    G’dday (:


  • @WtfJudith said in Fact check with Pet: Why atheism is irrational:

    @petrapark3r hi, I only came here to point out that “Pet” in French means fart.

    G’dday (:

    This must be one long brain fart of mine then :joy:


  • @petrapark3r What you just tried to do is "prove" that atheism is irrational by using irrational claims yourself though.. Difference between science and religion is that science actually does something regarding to that question while religion stayed the same ever since, not moving at all in any direction.
    I would rather use and follow logical arguments and be called atheist instead of believing in words and book that human wrote back in the days when the level of knowledge and evidence was at its lowest and rational ignorance was at the highest.
    To me, it seems that you're questioning science as a whole and trying to prove that there is God. There are different types of scientists today, they have different hypothesis and they work hard to either conclude if they are true or false, on the other hand, what do religious people do? On every "who, what, when, where, why" they will say: "it was God and it shouldn't be questioned" and that's it. - complete ignorance and disrespect to science, the same science that made this world a better place with all the innovations and changes.
    Science works with things that look irrational at first and through different actions it finds explanations and evidence for it, while religion is built on irrationality and follows it fully while neglecting every counterevidence that can be tested in space and time. If God exists, who created him? I guess another God. I respect religious people and their opinions, as long as they don't try to neglect science and use theories that science works with just to claim that scientists don't know anything and that they are irrational.