Where Was God?
October 7, 2001 2:49 PM Subscribe
thanks for the cop-out, bitch.
Love,
Margarette.
posted by jcterminal at 2:54 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by ewilder at 3:00 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by Optamystic at 3:08 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by rebeccablood at 3:13 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by todds at 3:32 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by quonsar at 3:39 PM on October 7, 2001
"Fetch daddy's hard plastic eyes... so he can see the T.V."
posted by dong_resin at 3:42 PM on October 7, 2001
ewilder:
How can I trust in a God whose actions seem to be based mostly on cruelty and perversity?
Man's actions are sometimes cruel and perverse. Sometimes not. That's the result of the free will God gave them. Don't forget about the glory of Creation, which is one of God's Acts.
Religion itself has only prevented me from achieving any sort of personal salvation or grace.
The key word there is personal, buddy. No one sneaks past God as part of a group. Not a viable excuse.
But maybe God doesn't really care about humanity anymore. After all, God created the universe billions of years ago.
Remember that Christ came only two thousand years ago, and that time is not the same to God as to you or I.
Seriously, maybe you should read a few theological essays, go visit a minister, really make a study of theology before you dismiss it. It doesn't sound like your friends have enough knowledge to guide you. They may have faith, but you need some definite answers. You wouyldn't try to learn about physics or music by asking your friends for their impressions.
On the other hand, my money's on worms.
posted by Catch at 3:46 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by malmec at 3:46 PM on October 7, 2001
ah, yes. any discussion concerning God always leads to Space Ghost.
posted by lotsofno at 3:47 PM on October 7, 2001
be kind. everyone needs to try to make sense of this in their own way. in a way that makes sense to *them*.
1. "Sense" is sense and applies equally to all. Though each may arrive at it from a different angle, they must still, in the end, arrive at "sense" in order to be judged sensible. It is patronizing to suggest that we should water down (i.e., nullify) "sense" for some individuals because they lack the wit or strength to handle it straight.
2. It is not "kind" to cater to delusion. If someone chooses to participate in a pretend reality, there's not a whole lot we can do about it, but we can certainly avoid nodding and smiling and acting as though they were sane. Truth is more important than feeling good (ideally, both can be achieved together).
posted by rushmc at 3:49 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by fouff at 3:56 PM on October 7, 2001
Just a thought.
posted by bunnyfire at 3:59 PM on October 7, 2001
"In an instant, they came into existence. As you did. In an instant, they left this world. As you will. But beyond that last instant, I kept my promise...A little girl dances, a business woman sings, and a pilot keeps his wings forever."
Upon rereading the whole piece I found that it was just because I find it hard to understand a viewpoint that is so far from my own and lacks the slightest smattering of irony or sarcasm, to boot. While my cynicism sometimes makes me feel guilty for being so doubting I do prefer the feeling of always having my eyes open - earnestness and blind faith seem to go hand in hand and I've got to say that neither of them appeals to me at all.
posted by MUD at 4:14 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by Katy Action at 4:19 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by Yelling At Nothing at 4:21 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by bunnyfire at 4:31 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by Katy Action at 4:36 PM on October 7, 2001
Because it is not logically consistent to attribute credit for good in the world to "answered prayers" (or other benevolent godly forces) and not also attribute credit for bad in the world to the same godly forces. You can't argue free will in one case and god's help in another.
What if stopping all the evil means He stopped human history right now and just tipped us all into Hell right now
Some would argue that parts of life on earth are hell right now. That's hell with a lower case "h", as I don't think "Hell" exists.
If you do believe in free will, what is the point of talking about or believing in gods? They seem to be inconsisent beliefs.
posted by hitsman at 4:36 PM on October 7, 2001 [1 favorite]
What does he or she do all day then? "Gently-shaping gods" are of obvious little use today.
posted by hitsman at 4:39 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by Spirit_VW at 4:42 PM on October 7, 2001 [1 favorite]
Perhaps "free will" itself is the cruelty of God that people rail against at times like this. There is always that sheep-ish streak of human nature where we would rather have the right decisions made for us.
And man's "free will" doesn't extend to the point where we chose to be created or placed on this earth as God's little cringing puppets. God made up the rules of the game, and you don't get to sit out.
posted by Catch at 4:46 PM on October 7, 2001 [1 favorite]
I understand the need for solace, but all this warm puppy happiness can't mask the fact that a shitload of people went straight to Hell on Sept. 11, if we're to believe Christianity. And I too am having a hard time wrapping my mind around the page's claim of "free will at work" and the earnest Christian belief in divine intervention through prayer. Why are so many people praying and asking for God's blessing when, if this page is to be trusted, everything that happens is just us dicking around with our free will?
Either God can intervene and, in this case, didn't, or we do it all to ourselves while he sits back and has an iced mocha. Either way, I don't feel very inclined to respect him.
posted by brookedel at 4:49 PM on October 7, 2001
What does he or she do all day then? "Gently-shaping gods" are of obvious little use today."
You missed the key word there: ALL.
I dunno what good/evil that he does do, but by blaming God for this, people are looking for a scapegoat, one that can't talk back and defend themselves.
posted by Katy Action at 4:55 PM on October 7, 2001
bunnyfire revealed her depth of, well, something via the page she posted. i suppose most people are reluctant to kick her when she's down?
posted by quonsar at 4:56 PM on October 7, 2001
2) God commanded Man not to sin.
3) God is supposedly omniscient, therefore God knew that man was going to sin.
4) God set the punishment for sin at eternal damnation
5) Man sinned, and brought eternal damnation upon himself and all subsequent generations.
Conclusion:
God is either:
a) Omniscient, but utterly indifferent to the suffering of man
b) Not omniscient, and not much of an inventor at that, since his invention bit him in the Holy Ass ten minutes after it rolled off the assembly line.
Neither scenario is particularly comforting.
If "A" is the case, He is not worthy of my worship, or for that matter my respect. If "B" is the case, he is not God. He's just an intergalactic Goofball.
posted by Optamystic at 5:02 PM on October 7, 2001
A loving and caring God chose not to. That's why I don't believe in him.
posted by Yelling At Nothing at 5:04 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by Yelling At Nothing at 5:06 PM on October 7, 2001
Was going to reply to this along the lines that if anyone is claiming to know it all, it is you, through your little magic book, whereas I only claim that what is knowable is knowable through the use of our brains (which is all we got). But skallas said it so well already, I won't bother.
posted by rushmc at 5:22 PM on October 7, 2001
Oh, and by the way, isn't it interesting that we can all sit around and discuss the Creator of the Universe as if WE could be HIS judge....laughable if it wasn't so scary. Who are we to judge even ONE of HIS actions........can you imagine a bunch of ants on the sidewalk in your front yard debating the morality of whether or not you should have planted tulips where the old ant hill used to be........or funnier yet, can you imagine a bacterial convention debating the existence of research scientists?
We humans think we are something, don't we.........
posted by bunnyfire at 5:29 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by Yelling At Nothing at 5:33 PM on October 7, 2001
the two greatest commandments are these. Love God with all your heart, soul, mind and strength, and love your neighbor as yourself. Now if you can figure out how to obey either one of those by the murder of an innocent I would have to say something was dreadfully wrong with you-and the only god you could conceivably be serving would be satan.
So everything depends on the character of the One whom you are obeying.
posted by bunnyfire at 5:47 PM on October 7, 2001
I find the fact that your opinion of yourself is sufficiently low that you relate to ants and bacteria to be very sad, not funny at all. But low self esteem has long been a factor that religions have counted on and which enables them to gather and fleece their flocks.
We humans think we are something, don't we.........
You bet! Far better to be something than to be nothing.
posted by rushmc at 5:49 PM on October 7, 2001
Hasn't this dead horse been beaten enough?
posted by gazingus at 5:56 PM on October 7, 2001
He set the game up. He created the rules. Any cost he bore, he inflicted upon himself. To disagree with the preceding statement is to imply that there is a higher authority than God who held him to this unpleasant bargain, and who inflicted the unpleasantness upon him. If that's the case, the entity who was able to asess a penalty of Almighty God is, in fact, Almightier than God, and therefore, you've been worshipping a pretender this whole time. One who demonstrated not one iota of concern for those people holding hands and jumping to their deaths.
I hope you didn't put the rent money in the offering plate.
posted by Optamystic at 5:57 PM on October 7, 2001
as for rushie, don't worry.....it always interests me to see how people like him think. I am not offended or bent out of shape ....i rather enjoy a little debate, and here at least it doesn't deteriorate into idiocy-one reason i avoid religious newsgroups like the plague.
And don't think for a moment I didn't know what I was in for when I posted that link.
posted by bunnyfire at 6:04 PM on October 7, 2001
4) God set the punishment for sin at eternal damnation
Set the punishment, or perhaps sin IS eternal damnation in the same manner that a lexicon is a vocabulary. I would say that Hell is being apart from God forever, so it follows from choosing to live apart from God in life. I'm surprised how worried non-Christians are about Hell... I mean if you really, truly, firmly believe that God does not exist, then why concern yourself with Hell?
And man's "free will" doesn't extend to the point where we chose to be created or placed on this earth as God's little cringing puppets. God made up the rules of the game, and you don't get to sit out.
Can you honestly say that you would rather never have existed? If so, why?
posted by LabTroglodyte at 6:04 PM on October 7, 2001
So you say. But others disagree. In fact everyone pretty much has a slightly different idea of what God wants. And most people have radically different ideas.
I think the creator of reality is indifferent to our suffering. We are such a tiny blip in the totality of all that exists that It doesn't give us the slightest notice.
And if I'm wrong, since we all disagree, we're all going to burn together except for the 4 or 5 people who guess right about God's will.
People who think they understand what God wants, don't understand the concept very well.
posted by y6y6y6 at 6:10 PM on October 7, 2001
2) God commanded Man not to sin.
3) God is supposedly omniscient, therefore God knew that man was going to sin.
4) God set the punishment for sin at eternal damnation
5) Man sinned, and brought eternal damnation upon himself and all subsequent generations.
You forget #6. God created a way whereby man's sins could be atoned for, thus enabling man, if he should so choose, to escape "eternal damnation."
He is omniscient. Deal with it.
posted by po at 6:17 PM on October 7, 2001
"We" are the ones his actions affect, theoretically speaking. My apologies for the laughable presumption.
There are some pretty good ideas about peace and harmony and goodwill towards men floating around out there - humankind just hasn't been so great at putting them into practice. So why would the Perfect One be just as inefficient as man? The significance of step 3 in Optamystic's scale is huge - an omniscient God would know of man's flaws. An omniscient God would recognize that your step 6 would result in eternal damnation for many of his children. And he went ahead anyway. Rather similar to our talk of war, actually. So many of us are decrying the idea of innocent deaths, "collateral damage" - why would the Perfect One, the Loving One, accept collateral damage in the form of some of his children going to Hell?
I have to agree with Optamystic's conclusions: either he is not a God of Love by any means, or else he is imperfect.
posted by brookedel at 6:19 PM on October 7, 2001
Can you honestly say that you would rather never have existed? If so, why?
What I would 'rather' isn't a consideration. My point.
My personal attachment (or not) to existence doesn't make the choice less limited. Exist by God's rules or not at all.
And Hell isn't an exclusively Christian concept, child.
posted by Catch at 6:22 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by obedo at 6:23 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by bunnyfire at 6:34 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by brookedel at 6:40 PM on October 7, 2001
Well, for Pete's sake, who else could I possibly be? lol
You see, whenever a discussion about religion arises, rushmc feels the obligation to point out how silly and stupid religious people are.
He has no intention of understanding your point of view.
"Understanding" implies a duplicable rational process. Religious people intentionally separate themselves from reason and put themselves in the realm of "belief" and the "supernatural." Therefore, the variable, intricate, often contradictory theologies and "mysteries" that they prescribe are, by their very nature, not capable of being "understood" in any meaningful sense of the word. Rather, they must be accepted--in whole or part--on "faith," as the result of some sort of "revelation"-type mental event. So it's not a question of my "intention" to understand or not understand; it's simply unfathomable.
You might say that it is a narrow-minded tenet of his anti-religion religion.
I would really think you would have more respect for your own religion than to misuse the word this way.
He would do well to understand the meaning of the word "bigot."
I like the following, from Dictionary.com:
From the 15th century on Old French bigot meant “an excessively devoted or hypocritical person.” Bigot is first recorded in English in 1598 with the sense “a superstitious hypocrite.”
Hasn't this dead horse been beaten enough?
bunnyfire seems quite lively to me, though she's clearly riding in the wrong direction....
posted by rushmc at 6:42 PM on October 7, 2001
You obviously find it inspirational, but I read this and think, "That's probably how the Gospel of John was written."
posted by boaz at 6:45 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by normy at 6:49 PM on October 7, 2001
faith n.
2.Belief that does not rest on logical proof or material evidence.
4.often Faith Christianity. The theological virtue defined as secure belief in God and a trusting acceptance of God's will.
What exactly are the faithful trusting that their god will do? And what is the criteria for accepting ideas without logic or material evidence?
My first step to becoming an atheist was realizing that believing in a god, but not Santa Claus, was inconsistent.
posted by hitsman at 6:50 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by holloway at 6:50 PM on October 7, 2001
What the author of that page doesn't tell you is that if you continue to calculate some more digits of pi and convert them using the same formula, it translates to: "I am cornholio. I need some t.p. for my bunghole."
Pick any random string of digits long enough, and you can get it to say whatever you want.
Please read this book.
posted by hitsman at 6:55 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by kindall at 6:58 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by normy at 7:01 PM on October 7, 2001
regarding ants & bacteria,
when was the last time you answered their prayers?
If God exists, I don't think he chooses to answer some prayers, curing that cancer, or making that headache go away, while letting things like WTC happen.
posted by prodigal at 7:18 PM on October 7, 2001
Believers seem to forget life is 100% fatal and, in the end, it doesn't matter if you pass away quietly in a hospital bed at the age of 80, or if you're 30 yrs old and perish when the office collapses due to a massive sudden explosion. God could have prevented the sudden violent death of the 6,500 victims but what would it have accomplished in the scale of eternity? If the soul is eternal and God is eternal, then buildings collapsing mean absolutely nothing.
When your religion embraces an eternal system and an omniscient, omnipresent, omni-everything else deity, then the side effect is essentially a strong strain of nihlism which most Xtians and Muslims seem to not realize is present. Everything which happens on earth is unimportant. Death of the physical form is a 100% certainty and if God gives or takes a few years from your life, in the face of eternity, what does it matter?
So I really don't understand the hand-wringing of Xtians. An outporing of grief by atheists would be perfectly understandable. But Xtians, Jews, or Muslims, who believe in an eternal God who is completely in control of everything, should just get over it. A brief expression of sadness and shock is completely understandable but, according to their own beliefs, this is nothing to worry about. Everything in the physical world is ultimately irrelevant, including pain, suffering, war, and death.
posted by pandaharma at 7:18 PM on October 7, 2001
And besides... I think God is far more clever than to limit the true revelation of His existence to a Cracker-Jack surprise-like encoded secret "Hello world" message, hidden within the meaningless depths of the number pi ---- but hey, whatever opens your eyes.
posted by blackholebrain at 7:19 PM on October 7, 2001
Good point.
posted by rushmc at 7:27 PM on October 7, 2001
Yeah, I thought he was serious too, there's enough of that stuff around. For laffs, have a look at what the Bible Code nutters are up to -- they've already "discovered" warnings of the 911 debacle, natch.
posted by nikzhowz at 7:47 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by UrbanFigaro at 7:48 PM on October 7, 2001
I think it's cute that people would actually believe that if God was going to leave a message for us mortals, it'd be in English, and such colloqial English, to boot.
posted by MonkeyMeat at 7:48 PM on October 7, 2001
Well, it only stands to reason. Who else would he bother talking to, other than Americans? I mean, the President prays and stuff. I'm sure he has nothing to say to those Muslim foreigner types!
posted by rushmc at 7:51 PM on October 7, 2001
This is of course correct per, e.g., the Bhagavad-Gita, but I'm not sure I understand why you assert atheistic grief is more justified.
Matter can never be destroyed, just transformed, after all.
Certainly, "people" perished, but their personalities are merely social constructs, i.e interpretations of reality, not an objective reality per se.
Indeed, 20 more years of neurochemistry findings and the "personality" will be as quaint and discarded as the "soul."
No surprise, as Hindus and Buddhists have been saying much the same for 1500 years.
I am not an atheist, so correct me if I am wrong, but an atheist's grief seems like the tears of a soap opera fan when the heroine dies in childbirth. Understandable, I suppose, but still bizarre.
Grieving over the death of a person is akin to grieving over the crushing of a rock-
so I honestly do not see how today's atheist could feel any differently. Pray tell.
posted by quercus at 7:52 PM on October 7, 2001
mmmmmmm. 'jackassery'. a delicious word, UrbanFigaro!
posted by quonsar at 7:52 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by obedo at 8:06 PM on October 7, 2001
By giving us the freedom to choose either good or evil, heaven or hell, love or hate, etc., God leaves it up to us as to whether we serve him or ourselves, or others... or whatever.
The whole point of the WTC and this "Where was God?" debate is NOT to find out why God didn't hold out his hand and yell "Stop!" to the terrorists (although he could have, and evidently many believe he should have), but it hopefully might open a path to understanding for some that God's gift of free will to humanity is universal......allowing terrorists to choose evil --even unspeakably horrible evil-- instead of forcing them to bow down against their will.
Whether you believe in God or not, America was founded upon the very principle that our Creator gave us free will:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
No matter what you personally believe, Americans owe our freedom --our liberty-- to one of the greatest documents ever penned by human hand, the Declaration of Independence. And whether we like it or not, the freedom that enables all of us to have beer, baseball and barbecue --and even conversations such as this thread here on metafilter-- is exactly the same freedom that enables people like Mohammed Atta to communicate by killing thousands in a suicidal terrorist act.
No. Not the Declaration of Independence, or our Constitution, or even the Bill of Rights. It's the freedom given to all of us by our creator: free will... the essence of all other freedoms.
Oh yeah, one more thing... to me, prayer isn't telling God a bunch of stuff he already knows, or reciting 'holy poems'.... prayer is listening to God.
posted by blackholebrain at 8:27 PM on October 7, 2001
And while we're on the subject...anyone else as pissed off as I am about the extreme proliferation of "God Bless America" signs popping up all over the place? In one sense, I understand the sentiment in that it reflects a desire for our nation to continue enjoying prosperity, freedom, etc. On the other hand, those who proclaim "GBA" seem to genuinely believe that America is god's "promised land" of some sort, and that god actually is "watching out for" America and taking care of our nation. Ahem. Folks, isn't that very much similar to bin-Laden & Co. claiming that Allah is looking out for them and their holy lands? Believing that your version of the supreme being favors your land, and that your land is being desecrated by infidels, sounds very much like Falwell & Co., which in turn is not too far off of what bin-Laden & Co. are preaching.
Atheists: Defenders of Reality.
posted by davidmsc at 8:33 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by quercus at 8:37 PM on October 7, 2001
An atheist can love and feel just as deeply for someone as the Xtian. However, when their beloved dies, they're gone forever. You may have your memories, their writings, their art, or other signifiers of their existence and love. But an atheist will never have them around again. Hence, the grief would be far greater than the grief of an Xtian, at least in theory.
In practice, everyone seems to grieve at almost the same levels and this is the problem I have with religious people. If they truly believed in God and safety to be found in eternity then, for example, WTC wouldn't matter. God's in control, right? Death is inevitable and doesn't really matter, right? Even if children were slain, they're ending up in a far better place than here, right? If this is true, then why grieve? Why worry about whether God was involved or not? Why question his motives? Why should an Xtian even care when they're in the hands of a loving and all-powerful father?
Besides, why care about pain and suffering now? After the next ten million years in Heaven, will you care that you lay under 5 tons of rubble without food and water for 3 days before you expired? Would you still hold a grudge then against the terrorists? Or would you invite them to a round of 9 holes on the immaculate green and chuckle about the memories of distant earth and all the wars which seem laughable and forgettable?
Xtianity carried to its logical conclusion negates anything which happens on Earth. The only thing which matters is what happens to yr eternal soul.
posted by pandaharma at 8:48 PM on October 7, 2001
I was going to tell you it was useless to debate with each other, but then I actually took the time to read what you were saying, and my long-held beliefs were totally shattered. Whoa, still reeling.
posted by Hildago at 8:50 PM on October 7, 2001
I think one of the major causes of problems in the world is that each group thinks that they are the chosen and everyone else should believe the same thing they do. Muslim vs Hindu vs Jewish vs Christian vs Buddist ad freaking nauseum... OBL is pissed partially because non-muslims exist, and have set foot in Saudi Arabia, home of the holy sites of Islam. It goes on and on. Atheists do the same thing back. They refer to people who believe as deluded and somehow mentally weak.
Do what you want, believe what you want.
posted by jbelshaw at 8:52 PM on October 7, 2001
Mr. davidmsc-no sarcasm intended-i love the scientific fundamentalist discourse on reality-amusing how "Reality" can also be the subject of disagreement.
Please give me three simple declarative sentences expressing three incontrovertible truths about Reality.
No sarcasm at all-I'm seriously interested to hear what you have to say-
if that's too much work-just define "light" for me, like the light that comes from the sun-what is it, REALLY?
posted by quercus at 9:03 PM on October 7, 2001
if God was going to leave a message ... it'd be in English, and such colloqial English, to boot
I had a thought: if there was a God, and he was going to leave a message for mortals- wouldn't pi be a great way to do it? It'd be like that plaque sent out on Voyager, with the da Vinci man/woman and basic mathematical notions and units of Earth measurement. It's one of the most basic and central numbers, representative of the perfect circle. And because such a key number is infinite and non-repeating, it's a number that could conceal a similar "Hello World" message in every language, every colloquialism. Although I suppose that means it could really be concealing the message "There is no God!" in every conceivable language- a paradox that makes my head hurt...
posted by hincandenza at 9:04 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by aaron at 9:15 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by pandaharma at 9:21 PM on October 7, 2001
Here's a good definition. Just so I can short-circuit the inevitable nihilistic rejoinder, here's a good introduction to epistemology. I can only hope the discussion on avoiding absolute relativism will do you some good.
posted by boaz at 9:27 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by blackholebrain at 9:43 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by UncleFes at 9:45 PM on October 7, 2001
Hmmm. Correct me if I'm wrong but something made up of a finite set of consituents cannot be both non-repeating and infinite.
One or the other yes, but not both...
posted by fooljay at 9:59 PM on October 7, 2001
"Okay, so how many of you found my secret message inside pi? [lots of mumbling] Oh really? [more mumbling] Nobody?!! You mean to tell me that not one of you thought maybe I might have left a clue somewhere for you, somewhere obvious, somewhere any idiot would have thought to look???!!! [silence] Hmm... well, that's too bad, you dumb sinning morons, because that was the one simple test I made for all of this universe, and you were too stupid to figure it out -- so to hell you go, for as long as it takes you to count all the digits of pi!!! Ha-ha-ha... [lots of wailing]posted by blackholebrain at 10:06 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by blackholebrain at 10:16 PM on October 7, 2001
If we're just discovering it. What the fuck are *they* doing?
One thing struck me as worth a mention. Do any of us atheists, realists realize that if we can't even get through to fundamentalist little ol' bunnyfire and have her admit, just admit, there's a personal possibility she may be wrong, humanity's fucked for some time?
I dunno, but most contemporary B.A.Christians aren't joining the LORD's cause because they felt it was the only way they could kamikazee large groups of spiritually misled Muslims. But the same vacuum was filled in these lives, both Christian and Muslim. Muslim men aboard planes plummeting into office buildings were just as comforted as homebody bunnyfires are when they post such crap. Doing the will of god. amen.
Furthermore.
This may become my new "sig":
"If you choose to believe in some kind of anthropomorphized benevolent god then be prepared to embrace dreck like this to avoid losing your faith or experiencing cognitive dissonance." (a skallas dicksuck)
Off to Metatalk to discuss what a troll bunnyfire is.
And don't think for a moment I didn't know what I was in for when I posted that link.
posted by crasspastor at 10:40 PM on October 7, 2001
Surprisingly enough, the two often go together ;)
If only Mefi had more Calvinists, then this could really get interesting.
Ah, I remember Tony Nuttall lecturing on Calvinism and the Problem of Evil, and the vertiginous temporality within the prologue to Doctor Faustus, that most impishly Calvinist-ish of plays...
The US, first settled by predestinarians; established as a state by Unitarians and Deists; the birthplace of the LDS and SDAs, the home of Southern Baptism. That's frankly a recipe for long-term national psychotherapy.
(And like Nick Cave, I don't believe in an interventionist God. Which makes my personal take on Catholicism somewhat less High Tory than Andrew Sullivan's.)
posted by holgate at 10:50 PM on October 7, 2001 [1 favorite]
All those who doubt God's message in Pi
Condemned to reside just above circle three
Confined in undersized desks with hard wooden seats
Calculating the blessed ratio on calculators with stickey keys
For all Eternity Baww Haaa Haaa (Evil Laugh)
posted by obedo at 11:14 PM on October 7, 2001
Huh? Any irrational number (expressed to any rational base) has its digits in such a series. Or am I misunderstanding your assertion?
posted by nicwolff at 11:35 PM on October 7, 2001
posted by delmoi at 1:14 AM on October 8, 2001
I was brought up Christian. When I went off to college, I learned to be cynical and trust my own intelligence. The more educated I got, the more I understood how little we know. It was the failure of science and logic to answer the big questions that led me back, eventually, to God. Follow the path of deductive reasoning, scientific method, and empirical observation, and if you’re honest, eventually you have to confront one of the big questions: “design or accident?” Fortunately, I think, the more we learn, the more confounding is the depth and the intricacy of our world, and the harder it becomes to chalk the whole thing up to random chance.
Properly understood, religion is not the antithesis of logic and deductive reasoning, it is instead its *logical* conclusion (or perhaps I should say, it “can be its logical conclusion”, as in fact it rarely is, and is instead routinely abused and misused).
A big part of the problem is that there are many, many bad examples of so-called Christians, Muslims, and Spaceghostians for us to focus on. We see them and say, “not for me”. If you get to the point where you want answers to the big questions, be careful. Talk to many people, visit many pastors, ministers and Space Ghost museum curators. Find out who has a handle on things. I had to search far and wide to find a church whose leadership did not abandon logic and reasoning and insist on “blind” faith. Turns out, I learned later, that the pastor was valedictorian in his class at Harvard, and has a PhD in Divinity and Religious Studies. I learn more from him every week. Find somebody like that.
Even so, that web site was pretty sappy. And the design sucked, too.
posted by JParker at 1:15 AM on October 8, 2001
What nicwolff said, fooljay- for example, 9 divided by 11 (uh, to pick two numbers out of a hat) is .8181818181.... infinite, yet repeating. Whereas pi will have countless segments that repeat- obviously- but is not a repeating or in any way regular number.
BTW, I'm so proud my "VGER"/ pi thing got such clever responses like the "God Final Exam" and the long- lost Dante canto- although I don't know how you translate from the original Italian into "Bwaa Haaa Haaa"... :) That said, I'm waxing more metaphysical about this now that I keep thinking about it: why the hell IS pi so fawkin' irrational- you could never have a base-pi system, after all... If there is a God, would even He be forced to follow mathematical truths that supercede Him (one of the many, many reasons I reject anthropomorphic theism) or could he craft mathematics itself as He saw fit (i.e., create a rock so heavy he could not lift it)? Or is even the purest abstract mathematics itself just a human quirk, representative not of some deep understanding of "celestial harmonies" but just our own ability to invent imperfect yet compelling structures from the void?
posted by hincandenza at 1:28 AM on October 8, 2001
Still I prefer the classic hymns:
"Yes, there are two paths you can go by
But in the long run
There's still time to change the road you're on..."
Think about it!
posted by JParker at 2:04 AM on October 8, 2001
posted by JParker at 2:13 AM on October 8, 2001
posted by owillis at 2:13 AM on October 8, 2001
posted by dong_resin at 2:22 AM on October 8, 2001
Again, it's unfortunate that so many bad examples of Christians create this perception that we're all a bunch of right-wing raving fundamentalists. Folks are free to offer up their own personal beliefs, and the reasons for those beliefs, until someone mentions they are Christian, then it's "Moving Testimony!" and a hymnbook upside the head.
I'm kind of surprised at the knee-jerk reaction from MeFi'ers, though. Intellect, logic and reason are not exclusively doled out along the lines of religious belief systems.
posted by JParker at 2:32 AM on October 8, 2001
You can always email me and ask me. But I bet you won't.
posted by bunnyfire at 3:23 AM on October 8, 2001
posted by ewilder at 3:48 AM on October 8, 2001
...maybe I simply know a few things y'all don't....
what a blatant troll
posted by asok at 6:08 AM on October 8, 2001
Also, the following statement by Sister Bunnyfire during yesterday's services didn't get nearly enough attention:
I dunno what good/evil that he does do, but by blaming God for this, people are looking for a scapegoat, one that can't talk back and defend themselves.
Don't attack Him, because He can't defend Himself.
posted by rcade at 6:34 AM on October 8, 2001
If that's true, then why are there no mathematically acceptable proofs of God? The overriding principle of deductive reasoning is taking logical steps to a logical conclusion, not jumping to the end and saying, "This seems logical."
God always seemed to me more of a practical application of Godel's Incompleteness Theorem.
posted by boaz at 6:49 AM on October 8, 2001
So spill the beans already; you're not keeping secrets from your MeFi buddies, are you?
posted by boaz at 6:53 AM on October 8, 2001
posted by holgate at 7:03 AM on October 8, 2001
posted by johnnyboy at 8:20 AM on October 8, 2001
And you fell for it?
Even if God did exist, he hasn't proved himself worthy of worship. He's willing to sentence people to hell on the whim of a single religious decision; he supposedly is willing to destroy the world because people don't like him enough.
Ehh... to each their own, I suppose. If you can happily worship a raving loony then more power to you. I prefer being a spaceghostian myself.
posted by pandaharma at 9:12 AM on October 8, 2001
posted by quercus at 9:41 AM on October 8, 2001
posted by JParker at 10:03 AM on October 8, 2001
posted by quercus at 10:21 AM on October 8, 2001
That is generally where one finds definitions.
As I assume you are not an absolute relativist, please provide me with an absolute non- relative declarative sentence, a tiny piece of Truth if you will.
Ah yes, you get called on one so you escalate the level of your request. Why don't you start by telling me what is unreasonable about the definition of light?
posted by boaz at 10:47 AM on October 8, 2001
Further good reading on this topic at The 2001 Principal, which is basically a fan site for the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, but which takes off in a different direction by examining viewer reactions to the movie and why we believe some of the things we believe. Entertaining and thought-provoking site.
posted by JParker at 10:53 AM on October 8, 2001
"But..," I replied, adjusting the ill-fitting robes, "He made the earth too. So.."
"Well, He still didn't light it, buster. You wanna burn in hell for heretical thinking? He gave you free will, you guys lit the fire..."
"Well, I don't leave matches laying around for morons, why should he?"
posted by Perigee at 12:11 PM on October 8, 2001
So some define light as electromagnetic radiation composed of photons, then define photons as the smallest constituents of light. Round and round she goes...
The fact is we know a lot about what light DOES and how to use it, but even the most advanced researchers are at a loss as to what light is.
Furthermore, the dictionary.com definition is even weaker than most as it does not even mention photons, but defines light exclusively in terms of its wavelengths, completely ignoring its particle behavior.
umm..what were we talking about anyway?
posted by quercus at 1:31 PM on October 8, 2001
You really should go back and read that introduction; as you stand now, you're in danger of completely killing any discussion you wander into.
posted by boaz at 1:54 PM on October 8, 2001
posted by quercus at 1:56 PM on October 8, 2001
posted by bunnyfire at 2:03 PM on October 8, 2001
science is the antithesis to faith
big difference: scientists are self correcting, will say "this is a theory," "we might be wrong," "if the evidence holds . . ."
Can you imagine the pope holding a press conference and saying, "oh, we've discovered we were wrong. Mary was not a virgin, there was no resurrection, wine is wine and not blood, and there is no god."
In science, that kind of complete self-correction is more than just possible, it is evidence that the science is being done properly.
posted by yesster at 2:06 PM on October 8, 2001
But let me just ask you a yes or no question? Do you thinks its true that photons have zero mass?
posted by quercus at 2:07 PM on October 8, 2001
I saw Richard Dawkins linked here recently. At least there's a scientist with a backbone-ready to proclaim the vapid irrelevance of any alternate path of knowledge. Of course, he appears no more sympathetic to me than any other fundamentalist, even if he is a scientific fundamentalist.
Anyway, no one ever discusses the possible birth of God-just his death-could God be in the process of being born?
we see the following chain of events from the Big Bang-
birth of matter... birth of life...birth of mind...birth of ?
posted by quercus at 2:18 PM on October 8, 2001
But of course, most scientists don't suggest that science should be taken on faith. But a correction to your argument is nowhere does dictonary.com claim that a photon is matter.
Following the path of deductive reasoning brings us to jumping-off point, which is why it is called "faith." Everybody has it, either faith that God exists, faith that he doesn't, or faith that we cannot know. None of these are provable. You get to choose where your faith is placed.
Of course, deductive reasoning is only one of three possible logical processes. But a big difference is that most religions not only require that I believe that God exists (as an abstract something possibly lurking in the gaps unexplained by scientific knowledge) but believe quite a few things in addition such as God created the universe 6,000 years ago in 7 days. God flooded the entire planet because everyone was sinning so much. God knocked up a virgin in Palestine, the son was executed for heresy, and rose from the dead after three days. Certainly I can't prove or disprove a "god of the gaps" or "pantheism" or even "Deism" (although all three of these basically lead you directly to Humanism). However doubting the God described by Christianity doesn't require much faith at all.
posted by KirkJobSluder at 3:29 PM on October 8, 2001
posted by Optamystic at 4:48 PM on October 8, 2001
Well actually dictionary.com (hardly the last word in these things-but representative nevertheless) FWIW defines "subatomic particle" as "Any of various units of matter " and that same tome defines a photon as a discrete particle, hence matter, but it's hardly news that quantum physics is freaky. I dont blame them for imprecision. If you assert their calling a photon a particle does not reference a subatomic particle but an amorphous "particle" that never enters the matter zone, well so be it. Nobody knows what the hell a photon is anyway.
posted by quercus at 5:11 PM on October 8, 2001
posted by Yelling At Nothing at 5:24 PM on October 8, 2001
Is the horse still dead?
Does this thread exist, or did I make it up ?
posted by bunnyfire at 6:17 PM on October 8, 2001
Yes. You get the blame for it.
posted by norm at 8:11 PM on October 8, 2001
(The above is my absolute favorite line of biblical rubbish).
posted by Optamystic at 8:30 PM on October 8, 2001
True, but there are a lot of really foolish dictionary games that we could play by exploiting various loopholes and shades of meaning. One of the problems is that dictionaries are interested in common use rather than technical precision and are limited by a need to pack the maximum ammount of definitions into a reasonable book.
Nobody knows what the hell a photon is anyway.
That all depends on what you mean by know and your model of knowledge. We certainly know enough about light to explain almost all of the phenomena that we can observe (and are capable of observing) which is good enough for me.
posted by KirkJobSluder at 12:09 AM on October 9, 2001
in the rough-and - tumble that is metafilter, please remeber that when you are quoting and mockingscripture I believe you have gone past the boundaries. Whatever you may think of me, my beliefs or my God, -that verse and the book it comes from is very sacred and precious to me....that verse you mock has been tested and found firm in my life, whatever you may think.
Please, especially considering the events of the past few weeks........I do not mind most of this debate, I know I am a minority on this group-but this steps over a line, and I am asking you to please step back.
posted by bunnyfire at 2:55 AM on October 9, 2001
posted by Optamystic at 4:02 AM on October 9, 2001
In this thread, I have asserted that:
1) There is no God
2) If there is a God, he's a knucklehead.
I then point out a logical paradox that appears in scripture, and that's when you get all offended? Geez, I'm glad I didn't make my point about why God loves abortionists.*
You have suggested that you are privy to inside knowledge that allows you to know with certainty that your God is the one true, for sure, big guy in the sky. By extension, you have implied that those who disagree with you are eternally damned to torment in hell.
In questioning your suggestion, I have used the means at my disposal. (My brain, my five senses, and the book he supposedly wrote). I take no pleasure in offending you, but it causes me no pain, either.
*God loves abortionists because, according to Church doctrine, the soul exists from the point of conception. If the fetus is aborted between the time of conception and the time of birth, then the baby is not "born into sin". Therefore, the soul goes straight to heaven, bypassing the earth (the dominion of Lucifer). More abortions=more company for God. (This also squares with the widely held doctrine of "Age of Accountability", which states that young children who die go to heaven, automatically, having never consciously sinned).
posted by Optamystic at 4:34 AM on October 9, 2001
Exactly Sluder, I agree. Science is practical knowledge, i never understood why you had to buy the whole worldview that goes with it. Build me an optical computer-it doesn't matter if we understand the photon-furthermore, if one day we do know the photon, why are all other interpretations of lights thereby rendered incorrect?
where is it written the universe has ONE TRUE rational explanation? What is the origin of this idea? It's an outgrowth, of course, of the ONE TRUE God idea.
God has commandments; Science has "laws".
Priest, if your God works for you great, but don't prosyletize me, thanks-the same for Mr. Scientist-you have developed a theory which explains certain observations of subatomic phenomena-great, go USE the knowledge and build a better mousetrap, but please don't try to make me a slave to that truth either.
Some say I am denying "Reality", apparently blind to their pale echo of the converted who say I am denying God.
Either way, somebody wants me to submit to some belief system.
posted by quercus at 5:47 AM on October 9, 2001
If mocking your glorious little fantasy book causes you consternation, then perhaps your faith needs some reexamination.
posted by yesster at 6:09 AM on October 9, 2001
posted by quercus at 10:08 AM on October 9, 2001
It seems both selfish and preposterous to me to attempt to censor other people in this manner. You are justified in protesting when someone insults or degrades YOU in some unjustified manner, but not when someone comments on a book (which you did NOT write, and so has no external connection to you whatsoever), no matter how fond of it you might be.
posted by rushmc at 6:12 PM on October 9, 2001
posted by clevernickname at 9:31 PM on October 9, 2001
I'll think you'll find that that's a Gnostic idea - the notion that the World is not the dominion of God (indeed not created by Him), but rather of (and by) a debased and evil Demiurge who believes himself to be God. C.f. the Albigensians, the Kabbalists et al.
And there's an equivalent in Hinduism as well, if I remember correctly (at least, according to a version of We Will Rock You that Queen recorded in a BBC session in the late 70s)
It has to be said, if God had wanted people to believe all this Gnostic stuff, He wouldn't have gone to all that trouble having His Church try to exterminate them all those years ago.
Even though the post-Lutherans didn't go in for setting fire to people who had the presumption to disagree with them (unless you want to count the use of Agent Orange and I'm not sure that I do), even they don't hold with this A-perfect-God-couldn't-create-an-imperfect-universe stuff.
(But then again, many of the people posting here seem to have a Gnostic world view anyway.)
posted by Grangousier at 1:14 AM on October 10, 2001
It's all gauze pads and ball bearings these days.
posted by crasspastor at 2:29 AM on October 10, 2001
posted by ewilder at 4:51 AM on January 19, 2002
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posted by Postroad at 2:50 PM on October 7, 2001