sojourner
Annoyingly Progressive Since 2006
Well thanks for being honest. At least now I know what brand of snake I'm dealing with. There seems to be something decidedly sociopathic about an individual who enjoys shattering the hopes and dreams of others, simply to watch them squirm. Congratulations on your altruistic and humanitarian endeavors.I'm going to be honest and say that I'm here as an experiment on whether or not there are any theists who believe there are proofs for God, and whether or not (after their arguments are shown to be broken, just as Pascal's Wager is) they admit to seeing their mistake. I basically came here with the assumption that faith exists in those people and then arguments arise from the faith; I was interested to see if a (less advanced, clearly, than you) theist would put up their arguments for God, and was almost hoping that, once these arguments were disproved, they would cease to believe in God. This experiment counts as evidence for whether or not theists in general are willing to have their faiths challenged if it becomes clear that there is no evidence for God. This will help me with whether or not I should bother breaking the arguments down in real life as well, because if they won't understand their mistake anyway, there's no reason to do so.
Unpleasant as this may seem, it's why I'm here. You asked for a (presumably honest) response, and you got one.
I never claimed that theology is a proof for God. You did.Do you have a PhD? I know two people with PhDs in theology, and both would agree that theology fails to make an arguments for God's existence that have any credence.
That depends upon the field of endeavor. I wouldn't want to use science as much as theology in helping a person develop spiritually, for example. When designing an airplane, science is on my mind much more than theology. When going about the endeavor of healing, it's a much more even split.but they would both admit that it's less useful to the modern world than science.
It's interesting that you're assessing me when you know nothing about me.In any case, it's interesting that you have a degree in theology, and yet don't seem to understand the difference between proof and evidence.
And my daddy can beat up your daddy. This is a religious forum; the thread is ostensibly a theological debate. You do the math.Let me rephrase what I meant. Your idea that you can argue with even a fraction of my understanding is flawed if you're basing that idea on your knowledge of theology. I'm not saying anything, nor did I say anything; I said "if", and I'm saying "if" here as well. If you think the reason you can argue with my level of understanding in this field is because you have a degree in theology, then you're wrong; theology does not help with understand. Theologians do not have a deeper understanding of reality than everyone else, nor is their logical ability on par with scientists.
Translation: I'm going to use a sewing-needle to drive a nail into concrete, and then conclude that a nail cannot be driven into concrete.Yes, but the basis of theology - the verification of the arguments for or against God - seems to better served by a logical understanding of science than any specific study of another subject. Maybe at more abstract levels, the direct study is necessary of God, but not at the level of this thread (evidence for God).
I'm placing you on ignore. You are only the second person I've so treated, and I'm doing so because your motivation for being here sickens me.