muhammad_isa
Veteran Member
That means, in turn, that the future must be fixed
Why have you bolded this statement?
This does not negate free-will.
You won't get out of it that easy
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That means, in turn, that the future must be fixed
This evidence is never actually presented, it's alluded to, claimed to exist, implied and inferred, but never ever presented?Nobody can confirm that as a fact, they can only look at the evidence and confirm it in their own mind.
Why have you bolded this statement?
This does not negate free-will.
You won't get out of it that easy
So why wouldn't it be evidence for God if Baha'u'llah described knowledge that the people of His time could not possibly have had?
There was no IF because that post was in response to something else you said earlier.
Tiberius said: How can you claim that God objectively exists if you have no objective evidence that God exists?
It is not an IF to me because it is a simple to me that Messengers of God exist. However, the hypothetical IF/THEN statement was necessary to make my point in the post you are now responding to.
I brought it up because I thought you were saying that a man claiming to be a Messenger of God could not be objective evidence of God because of what you said below, so I was trying to demonstrate how a man claiming to be a Messenger of God could actually be a Messenger of God.
Tiberius said: No they aren't objective evidence that there is a God and they are not objective evidence that God sends messengers, since people can claim that they are messengers from God even if there is no God, and even if there is a God, people can still claim they are messengers sent by him even if God never sends messengers at all.
I fully agree. That is an extraordinary claim so it requires extraordinary evidence. Now all we need to do is decide what would constitute that evidence.
I agree, making guesses as to a person's motivations and intentions would be speculation, but that is only one thing I suggested you do. What I said before that was "All you can do is look at the facts in their entirety and try to figure out what they mean."
It says nothing about the accuracy of Person A's result, because:
Person A could be right and Persons B, C, D and E could all be wrong..... or
Person A could be wrong and Persons B, C, D and E could all be right..... or
Person A and B could be right and Persons C, D and E could all be wrong..... or
Person A and B could be wrong and Persons C, D and E could all be right.....
etc., etc., etc.
That was in response to a different post so that is why I answered it differently.
Tiberius said: So, if religion isn't here to provide any objective truths, how can you possibly claim that your God objectively exists?
In my answer I was declaring "God objectively exists..."
It certainly would..
Get out of what, it was your claim that "the future must be fixed."
I don't believe free will exists anyway, we have some autonomy governed by multiple factors of influence.
I presented the evidence numerous times.This evidence is never actually presented.
I know that and that is not what I have presented.Claims are not evidence.
@muhammad_isa just a reminder that I answered your question to me in post 2359. I'd appreciate it if you could return the favour. Choose any of the arguments you liosted and I'll explain why it's not a valid argument for God.
In most cases there is only one way to interpret what He said because it was straightforward.Well, now, the issue is this...
Is he really communicating information that the people of that time couldn't have had, or are you taking something he said that was vague and could be interpreted in many different ways and concluding that the one particular interpretation that could not be known MUST be the right interpretation?
The only reason I am now able to go back is because I just got a new used laptop that is very fast. My other laptop was on its last leg so I was barely limping along, but God heard my cries and He answered them so I found a really good laptop.Well, I'm glad to see that you were able to go back and follow the conversation to that point. It proves that you are capable of doing so, so I don't want to see you using the "I can't remember what we were talking about" thing anymore, okay?
I already admitted to that many posts back in case you forgot.And we still have that very large IF in there.
Well, obviously that is true as otherwise we would be believing the claims if every Tom, Dick, and Harry.No, my point was that a person simply claiming something is not sufficient reason to accept their claim.
If a person claims to be a messenger from God, then that claim by itself is not sufficient to conclude that they actually are a messenger from God.
You already know what I consider to be evidence but it was not sufficient for you so you will have to stipulate what would be sufficient, and not something that is impossible to procure, something realistic.I agree. What would you suggest counts as such evidence?
No, it is just asking you to think about it because that thought process could lead you to think about possibilities you had not thought of before.And me asking myself why a particular person would do a particular thing is NOT looking at facts. It is asking me to make a speculation.
It is obvious why people agree on material things like the length of a rope, because we an see and measure them. They are verifiable, so how could people disagree?And what if each person got a completely different result?
When we do this with things that we know are objective - the length of a piece of rope, for example - we see agreement among all the people.
That is completely illogical. Just because there are different interpretations of a religion that does not mean that the religion is made up and that it contains no objective truth.When we look at things that are just subjectivity opinion, we see exactly this kind of disparity.
Thus, the fact that there are so many different interpretations of religion is evidence that religion is just made up. It is not objective truth.
So what? There was a reason I said it ans I did not deny it.Doesn't matter, you still said it.
Ah, the old "Just because we must do what god knows we will do, doesn't mean we can't do something different" argument.Why have you bolded this statement?
This does not negate free-will.
You won't get out of it that easy
Err .. no. Think about it....The future IS fixed .. but not by God.
That means, in turn, that the future must be fixed .. is that correct?
Yes, it must be, as it means God knows what we all choose to do.
That is a falsifiable claim, so it is testable as a deity that intervenes in the universe would leave data to be examined. Can you demsonrate any for your claim? Beyond pointing at stuff and making the unevidenced assertion that god did it, of course.I understand that you are arguing that God cannot interact with the universe, but that is not correct.
That would negate free will, and its you who needs to "think about it" as it's pretty hard to miss what you keep saying.
free will
noun
- the power of acting without the constraint of necessity or fate;
But we are subject to time, and we are on the receiving end of god's interference.No .. Almighty God created the universe.
The universe is a space-time continuum.
It follows that He is not subject to time.
Erm, the exact opposite. God does interact with this universe, by necessity.Now, I understand that you are arguing that God cannot interact with the universe, but that is not correct.
I would like to know how you can understand with such confidence about an infinite God, with your finite mind
Oh dear. You clearly (and ironically) don't understand the basic concepts at play here.Ha ha!
You are so sure of yourself.
..and there was me thinking that you believed in the power of science and logic..
I think we'll have to take "baby-steps"..
It depends on the context of those choices.Is it correct that most people accept that we are free to choose say, A or B?
Most people will say that we are.
It is true that, to an extent, we merely have the illusion of free will. At least some of our "choices" are actually determined to a degree by a chain of preceding events.Some people claim that we aren't, and we only think that we are choosing it,..
The only silly thing here is your silly analogy.This is pretty silly in my opinion, as that means that people who drive down the highway are not really driving their vehicles, as they are not making any decisions to steer or brake etc.
..which leads to the question "who is driving the vehicles?"
False dichotomy...so which of the above positions do you take?
Depends.Are we free to choose or not? [ assume God does not exist ]
Does god see just one future, or does he see every possible future that results from every possible choice made by every person?The fact that God is aware of the future IN NO WAY takes our free-will from us.
Regardless of who fixes the future, or why it is fixed, if it is fixed then we do not have the ability to control or change our own destiny. God has created a universe where we are basically automatons following a predetermined programme to an inevitable conclusion.The future IS fixed .. but not by God. It is about perception.
We perceive that the past "has already happened", and accept that to be fixed. The future is EXACTLY the same .. fixed.
The past was fixed by our actions .. and so is the future !
We can't do something different than what God knows we will do but that is only because what we will do is identical to what God knows we will do, but that does not mean that God determines what we will do by His foreknowledge. God's foreknowledge does not cause anything to happen. We cause our own actions by choosing to act and acting upon what we choose. God does not make us do anything by knowing what we will do, that is completely illogical.Ah, the old "Just because we must do what god knows we will do, doesn't mean we can't do something different" argument.
It depends on the context of those choices.
The only silly thing here is your silly analogy.