Quote:
Originally Posted by cottage http://www.religiousforums.com/foru...od-enough-basis-belief-non-8.html#post1584647
Quote:
Originally Posted by cottage
Then those gods you mention will by defintion be inferior to the concept of a single, omnipotent, Necessarily existing Creator. And I have no 'personal religious belief', but am simply demonstrating a logical position.
By your definition. Your definition is not based on logic, but aesthetics.
Aesthetic preferences are not logical positions (by definition .) You like that god concept best, so to you all other god concepts are inferior. I like arbutus best, so to me all other trees are inferior. "But trees are all variations on the same thing - none are better or worse than any other" you say. "None of the others are so red and bendy" I reply, "therefore it is logical that the arbutus is the supreme tree among trees".
Im guessing that in using that analogy to address what Ive written above youre not being entirely serious?
Anyway, its not my definition, and it most certainly is not based on aesthetics. Its simple logic: if Jayne is taller than Sue, and Sue is taller than Chloe, then Jayne is the tallest of the three. My views on the attractiveness, or not, of tall women does not in the least alter the conclusion that Sue and Chloe are shorter than Jayne. So it is with the concept of an omnipotent, necessarily existent Supreme Being. If such a God exists, then other gods, which by definition cannot have that same identity, will necessarily be inferior. And my (or your) preferences have no bearing on that self-defining, necessary truth.
That's not what you're saying. You're saying Jayne is taller than Sue, and Sue is taller than Chloe, so only Jayne necessarily exists, and she is a superior emblem of womanliness to Sue and Chloe.
Im saying no such thing in that example! Read it again! Im saying Jayne being the tallest, Sue and Chloe are therefore the shorter, irrespective of any personal preferences or subjective view of womanhood.
Plus it's all a moot point when all three ladies are figments of your imagination anyway. You could just as easily imagine Sue to be taller than Jayne.
<groan!> The three ladies are a figment of my imagination!! It was a metaphor to show the truth of the premise is not decided by subjectivism. 'Jayne is the tallest' is true or false, notwithstanding my preferences.
You've decided the attribute of creating the universe is better, more important and more necessary than the attribute of (for example) flying the sun across the sky in a chariot.
No I have not! Tell me, what on earth made you come to that view.
The Greeks would emphatically disagree with you (because if the sun doesn't rise, the crops will die). Their disagreement would be based on culture and aesthetics, not logic. But if your god doesn't exist, and their gods don't exist, none of them are necessary and all their imagined attributes are moot. There's nothing there, so there's nothing to compare.
Im amused at the way you say your god, as if Im a theist arguing for the existence of a deity. Also youre attributing views to me that I do not recognise and may even disagree with. I think perhaps you might have got the wrong handle on this argument?
Originally Posted by cottage http://www.religiousforums.com/foru...od-enough-basis-belief-non-8.html#post1584647
Quote:
Originally Posted by cottage
Then those gods you mention will by defintion be inferior to the concept of a single, omnipotent, Necessarily existing Creator. And I have no 'personal religious belief', but am simply demonstrating a logical position.
By your definition. Your definition is not based on logic, but aesthetics.
Aesthetic preferences are not logical positions (by definition .) You like that god concept best, so to you all other god concepts are inferior. I like arbutus best, so to me all other trees are inferior. "But trees are all variations on the same thing - none are better or worse than any other" you say. "None of the others are so red and bendy" I reply, "therefore it is logical that the arbutus is the supreme tree among trees".
Im guessing that in using that analogy to address what Ive written above youre not being entirely serious?
Anyway, its not my definition, and it most certainly is not based on aesthetics. Its simple logic: if Jayne is taller than Sue, and Sue is taller than Chloe, then Jayne is the tallest of the three. My views on the attractiveness, or not, of tall women does not in the least alter the conclusion that Sue and Chloe are shorter than Jayne. So it is with the concept of an omnipotent, necessarily existent Supreme Being. If such a God exists, then other gods, which by definition cannot have that same identity, will necessarily be inferior. And my (or your) preferences have no bearing on that self-defining, necessary truth.
That's not what you're saying. You're saying Jayne is taller than Sue, and Sue is taller than Chloe, so only Jayne necessarily exists, and she is a superior emblem of womanliness to Sue and Chloe.
Im saying no such thing in that example! Read it again! Im saying Jayne being the tallest, Sue and Chloe are therefore the shorter, irrespective of any personal preferences or subjective view of womanhood.
Plus it's all a moot point when all three ladies are figments of your imagination anyway. You could just as easily imagine Sue to be taller than Jayne.
<groan!> The three ladies are a figment of my imagination!! It was a metaphor to show the truth of the premise is not decided by subjectivism. 'Jayne is the tallest' is true or false, notwithstanding my preferences.
You've decided the attribute of creating the universe is better, more important and more necessary than the attribute of (for example) flying the sun across the sky in a chariot.
No I have not! Tell me, what on earth made you come to that view.
The Greeks would emphatically disagree with you (because if the sun doesn't rise, the crops will die). Their disagreement would be based on culture and aesthetics, not logic. But if your god doesn't exist, and their gods don't exist, none of them are necessary and all their imagined attributes are moot. There's nothing there, so there's nothing to compare.
Im amused at the way you say your god, as if Im a theist arguing for the existence of a deity. Also youre attributing views to me that I do not recognise and may even disagree with. I think perhaps you might have got the wrong handle on this argument?