Author Topic: Searching for GOD...  (Read 3862601 times)

The Accountant, OBE, KC

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22300 on: September 20, 2017, 11:23:43 AM »
BHS
Gabriella,

That’s a misrepresentation of Vladistic proportions. Of course I wasn’t. I was merely explaining that, in general, private members' clubs can do as they please, whereas organisations that are effectively part tax-funded should not in my view have exemptions from equality legislation that affects us all.
Yes I was pretty sure you weren't arguing that but was not sure what the relevance of your comment about flying planes into buildings had to do with your current point about equality legislation. Exempting tax-payer funded organisations from equality legislation is a very different issue to mass murder. Exemptions occur in the public and private sector where it is judged that the exemption is justified - that's for Parliament and the courts to decide, and yes you are free to disagree with the decision, but again you have not demonstrated any special problem caused by exemption for religious organisations. 

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Nor do I need to. What you’re doing here is known as “whataboutism”, and it just distracts from the issue on the table.
No it doesn't. What I am doing is saying you are creating an issue where none exists because it is just normal human behaviour to hold beliefs and you are trying to discriminate against one category of beliefs based on your personal bias.   

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But the point rather was that, “but that’s my faith” can be used to argue for anything. Literally. The only rational response to it then is, “so what?”
Absolutely. As is the rational response to any moral or political or any other non-religious belief that can be used to argue for anything. Literally.

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I suggest no such thing. Regardless of my opinion, such people would only be locked up if they committed crimes. The point rather is that, if they do commit crimes and use “but that’s my faith” as their defence, then that defence must fail
I agree, just as much as if they tried to rely on the defence "but that's my moral or political belief", then the defence must fail as it did in the case of Nelson Mandela....except where they have a justified exemption or where the court shares their belief e.g. killing in self-defence or defence of others is permissible     

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Easily. I’d “argue” that they’d committed a crime, and that whatever faith they happened to have is evidentially irrelevant. 

See above. Either an act is lawful or it’s unlawful. The point though is that, while you can argue for anything at all if you call that your “faith”, faith is evidentially (as well as epistemically) worthless.
I don't see what the problem is then - this applies to all beliefs. There is an adequate legal process and you have to justify to the courts why your religious or non-religious faith or belief that led you to commit an act exempts you from being convicted of a crime.

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Why would I suggest any such thing? “Privilege” is fine, but not as a defence against breaking the law.

Not for me, no – unless that is such people use their faith to validate, say, driving vehicles into pedestrians.
I thought your issue was that this should not succeed as a defence against breaking the law? As far as I know, there is no suggestion that religious people are trying to use their faith as a defence against being convicted for driving vehicles into pedestrians  is there? So I don't see the problem here. If anything such criminals often cite the country's domestic or foreign policy as justification for their acts based on their belief that the government is acting immorally  - including terrorists such as Timothy McVeigh and Anders Brevik. Ted Kaczynski, for example, cited the threat of industrialisation on Nature. None of them succeeded in their defence in court.

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Yes I know, but you can’t “accept” that and at the same time accept that they “knew only good”. Doesn’t bother me – it’s just a daft myth from our earliest and crudest attempts to explain the world – but it seem inherently contradictory to me.
Ok - well it's part of the story that they understood that going near the tree was wrong - the story to me seems to be about self-control. If it means something else to Vlad that's between you and him.   

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I’m not sure whether you’d describe policemen who entrap people who otherwise wouldn’t commit a crime into committing a crime as having “a character flaw” exactly, but they’d still be doing wrong.
I disagree that this is a case of entrapment. 

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It would seem like entrapment to a court of law too. See my reply to Vlad for details.
I disagree that a court would consider it entrapment.

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Just out of interest do you tell your daughters just to follow orders on trust, or to be curious, skeptical, enquiring?
I don't think being curious, skeptical or enquiring is a problem but as to whether they nevertheless follow my order despite feeling curious, skeptical or enquiring or whether they decide for themselves depends on the situation. Lots of decisions I leave to them to make, but sometimes I tell them to follow an order. If they disobey the order I will punish them on the basis that only one of us is the parent and if a decision has to be made, while I am responsible for them it means I get to make that particular decision and when they are responsible for themselves they can make that particular decision for themselves. For example, I have ordered them to do homework and threatened to punish them if they don't, no matter how skeptical they are about the benefits of Mandarin homework. 

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But would you do any of these things if you understood – really understood – that the consequence would be risking horrible outcomes for your descendants for all time?

That’s the analogy here.

And presumably that’s a risk you could weigh up. How would you do that though if you had no concept of what a bad outcome would even be?
Probably I would do those things even if I understood the horrible consequences - other people certainly have - inventing nuclear weapons and climate change issues spring to mind. Your analogy depends on A&E having no concept of a bad outcome - my understanding of the story is they had a concept of right and wrong.
I identify as a Sword because I have abstract social constructs e.g. honour and patriotism. My preferred pronouns are "kill/ maim/ dismember"

Quite handy with weapons - available for hire to defeat money laundering crooks around the world.

“Forget safety. Live where you fear to live.” Rumi

The Accountant, OBE, KC

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22301 on: September 20, 2017, 11:30:12 AM »
Gabriella,

First, it’s not what "I’m arguing" – it’s what the law says.

Second, the defence of entrapment requires the crime to be induced – ie, the opportunity to be created and the accused to be not predisposed to committing the crime. The A&E myth ticks both boxes pretty solidly I’d have thought.   

That’s not how it works – see above. If you don’t like the legal defence nonetheless, you’d better take it up with your MP.
The law does not say that inventing a speed limit provides the idea and opportunity to break the speed limit and thereby induced the crime of speeding. I sometimes drive at 30mph and then I see a speed limit of 40mph - that does induce me to speed up and then the speed limit goes back down to 30 mph - and I am now driving at 35mph and the speed camera goes off - I can't rely on the defence of entrapment.

Your entrapment argument doesn't work for me in the A&E story either.
I identify as a Sword because I have abstract social constructs e.g. honour and patriotism. My preferred pronouns are "kill/ maim/ dismember"

Quite handy with weapons - available for hire to defeat money laundering crooks around the world.

“Forget safety. Live where you fear to live.” Rumi

floo

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22302 on: September 20, 2017, 12:05:31 PM »
An omnipotent god would surely know the suffering badness would cause when it supposedly created the human character! In which case one can only assume it gets pleasure from that side of human nature.

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22303 on: September 20, 2017, 01:37:46 PM »
Vlad the Confusionist,

You do realise that that’s a point against you right?

If they “had no knowledge of what the crime of evil is” there could have been no consequences visible to them, regardless of choice they made.
 
They sat ignorance of the law is no defence Hillside....But they weren't even ignorant of the law since they had been informed of it.

What they were ignorant of were the consequences but not that consequences of actions are possible. As they say ignorance of the sentence is no defence in law.

Try it. ''Sorry your honour if I knew it meant 30 years in the chokey I wouldn't have murdered him.''

Enki

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22304 on: September 20, 2017, 01:39:50 PM »
Vlad, Thank you for the detailed response.


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I'm not disputing that but that does not distract from the palpable sense of alienation. I'm not sure we deserve praise for how we should be living in any case
Nor I. Praise doesn't come into it.

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I look forward to it.
Then I suggest you read it.

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Forgiveness is mentioned in the Bible so eternal damnation is IMHO not a foregone conclusion. Indeed the conclusion of the allegory of Adam and Eve is the expulsion from the Garden. In reality that is being in the world as it is with alienation and evil but having a sense that many things should not be the way they are.
Really! Yet this entity cursed the ground, increased the sorrow that Eve would have, especially increasing pain in childbirth, and decided that Adam should lead a life of hardship before experiencing death. Of course this represents the world as it is to some extent but the story aligns itself with the idea that all this is some form of punishment instead of just seeing it as the natural state of affairs. In other words the idea of a God has been superimposed on the hardships which we all experience, in a particularly nasty and unforgiving way. No amount of 'forgiveness' has altered these 'punishments' has it?

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f you have partaken of evil then there are consequences because of what you have done for example to your conscience and the alienation that ensues. And that is before we even deal with the laws of society and God
There may well be consequences, but not always. Some people are not troubled by their conscience, some people manage to evade the laws of society. As for God, you may believe in Him but as I have no evidence that any such entity exists, it is purely a personal opinion that this God will produce consequences for the person who has committed evil.
To return to the Adam and Eve story though, disobeying a command from a powerful entity, to which incidentally you may not feel any allegiance to, does not necessarily count as partaking of evil in my book. It seems you think that evil was enacted simply by not obeying this command.

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And in terms of the alienation and subsequent psychological gymnastics and conscience
suppression associated with getting back on an even keel
We use the words guilty/innocent both on a personal and a social/political level. Alienation is one of the reactions of a person/society to those whose actions which are considered harmful in some way. The idea of guilt may well be in the eye of the beholder rather than the  doer. Conscience may well be suppressed, or it may be absent altogether.

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Not sure what you are trying to say here
Fair point. You said that 'an innocent life is notionally feasible but, I think you'll agree practically extremely rare.', suggesting, I assume, that once we are aware of good and evil we can no longer be innocent. At least that is what I took you to mean, although I did start this part by saying,'Not quite sure what you mean exactly here'. My point is that amoral persons lack the ability to distinguish between good and evil, hence are probably the only applicants to be labelled 'innocent' because they would tend to be not aware of the difference between good and evil.

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I would suspect you are rating all allegories as somehow equal then
Equal, in what sense? I find many of them quite colourful and fanciful.(e.g. the Tasmanian aborigine myth of the God, Moinee, who forgot to give the first humans knees but gave them very big tails!  or the story of Odin who turned two great tree trunks into the first humans) .I doubt if most of them were meant to be taken seriously, but they do tell us quite a lot about the people who created them. I have no particular preferences.

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But we are back to the question should we do something because we can? Finally the allegory is not about intellectual curiosity since facts are morally neutral.

No, if we know something to be wrong, we shouldn't do it. However it is surely true that we are an innovative and curious species, and simply because some entity forbids us to do something is no reason not to do it with the proviso, of course, that fear of punishment might well curtail our activities. Facts are indeed, using your word, neutral, so the allegory here rests on the idea of disobeying a command and the punishment that will follow, at least that is how I see it.

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Enki I read the last comment as an attempt to turn a flaw(evil) into something heroic (innate curiousity). If you insist on evil being useful and celibrating it then you can have no serious complaint at God allowing it.

Whatever you believe is up to you. However it seems to me  that temptation is part of the human make up. It is neither heroic(since when should innate curiosity be termed heroic?) nor evil. I don't celebrate it at all, I simply acknowledge that it is part of human nature. If one takes this story at face value, then yes, your God allowed it, indeed He created the quality of temptation(or curiosity) in the first place. He also created the snake. I have no complaint about your God allowing it, as I have no belief that He actually existed, but, in terms of the story, my moral sense leads me to the conclusion that the real perpetrator of evil here would be this God for not accepting responsibility for what he had knowingly created and using punishment as a weapon to castigate those who went against His commands.




 
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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22305 on: September 20, 2017, 01:40:21 PM »
An omnipotent god would surely know the suffering badness would cause when it supposedly created the human character! In which case one can only assume it gets pleasure from that side of human nature.
Not really otherwise God would induce humans into it. As has been demonstrated he doesn't.

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22306 on: September 20, 2017, 01:56:47 PM »
Gabriella,

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Yes I was pretty sure you weren't arguing that but was not sure what the relevance of your comment about flying planes into buildings had to do with your current point about equality legislation.

The ‘planes thing was pointing out that you can justify anything when you reference your faith. The equality legislation point argued that you shouldn’t be exempt from it if you also benefit from tax breaks funded by everyone.

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Exempting tax-payer funded organisations from equality legislation is a very different issue to mass murder.

Of course it is. Both though legitimise faith by privileging it over just guessing about stuff. A suicide bomber for example could say, “but clearly you think faith is better than guessing too because you allow it special privileges in your society” could he not? It’s the slippery slope point.   

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Exemptions occur in the public and private sector where it is judged that the exemption is justified - that's for Parliament and the courts to decide, and yes you are free to disagree with the decision, but again you have not demonstrated any special problem caused by exemption for religious organisations.

I think I have. When the defence used by the CofE for special treatment is the same defence used by the suicide bomber – ie, “faith – how should we argue against one but not the other?   

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No it doesn't. What I am doing is saying you are creating an issue where none exists because it is just normal human behaviour to hold beliefs and you are trying to discriminate against one category of beliefs based on your personal bias.

Yes it does. The rightness or wrongness of a position in one sphere doesn’t change because you might be able to find examples of the same rationale used elsewhere.   

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Absolutely. As is the rational response to any moral or political or any other non-religious belief that can be used to argue for anything. Literally.

Nope. Religious faith is religious faith – that’s the beginning and end of the conversation. It’s epistemically no better than guessing. Moral and political judgments on the other hand tend at least to have reason and evidence to support them – moral philosophy and economics as examples. That’s not to say that either provide certainty (indeed it’s a strength that they don’t claim too – another difference from religious faith by the way – because that way they’re amenable to change), but they’re qualitatively different in that respect from the finger in the air certainties of faith. 

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I agree, just as much as if they tried to rely on the defence "but that's my moral or political belief", then the defence must fail as it did in the case of Nelson Mandela....except where they have a justified exemption or where the court shares their belief e.g. killing in self-defence or defence of others is permissible

No, because one of those defences could be evidence. “On the basis of the evidence available to me at the time, I had no choice but to act as I did” would be taken into account by a court of law. “But that was my faith belief” on the other hand would not.         

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I don't see what the problem is then - this applies to all beliefs. There is an adequate legal process and you have to justify to the courts why your religious or non-religious faith or belief that led you to commit an act exempts you from being convicted of a crime.

No it doesn’t. My belief in the fact of Mars is qualitatively different from someone else’s belief that there are little green men living there.

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I thought your issue was that this should not succeed as a defence against breaking the law? As far as I know, there is no suggestion that religious people are trying to use their faith as a defence against being convicted for driving vehicles into pedestrians  is there?

No, but some use their faith beliefs to validate the atrocities they commit. The 9/11 hijackers for example were pious men. That’s the point.

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So I don't see the problem here. If anything such criminals often cite the country's domestic or foreign policy as justification for their acts based on their belief that the government is acting immorally  - including terrorists such as Timothy McVeigh and Anders Brevik. Ted Kaczynski, for example, cited the threat of industrialisation on Nature. None of them succeeded in their defence in court.

When they do that those types of defences can be weighed and taken into account or not. Public interest for example is sometimes a successful defence for breaking privacy laws. By contrast, “but that’s my faith” is evidentially white noise. 

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Ok - well it's part of the story that they understood that going near the tree was wrong - the story to me seems to be about self-control. If it means something else to Vlad that's between you and him.

We’re going round in circles here – there was no “wrong” in their minds if you also want the premise that they “knew only good”.     

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I disagree that this is a case of entrapment.
 

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I disagree that a court would consider it entrapment.

Well, neither of us knows for sure as it hasn’t been tested. Entrapment rules vary country-by-country too, and indeed state-by-state in the US. In general though most courts would ask:

1. Did the official create an opportunity that would not otherwise have existed? (yes)

2. Did the official seek out the accused to tell them about the opportunity he’d created? (yes)

3. Did the accused have a predisposition to criminal activity? (no)

4. Did the official give any reason for not disobeying him other than, “because I say so”? (no)

5. Could the accused reasonably have understood that what they did would be criminal or even objectively wrong rather than just disobeying someone who claimed to be authoritative? (no)

Looks like a slam dunk case of entrapment to me.

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I don't think being curious, skeptical or enquiring is a problem but as to whether they nevertheless follow my order despite feeling curious, skeptical or enquiring or whether they decide for themselves depends on the situation. Lots of decisions I leave to them to make, but sometimes I tell them to follow an order. If they disobey the order I will punish them on the basis that only one of us is the parent and if a decision has to be made, while I am responsible for them it means I get to make that particular decision and when they are responsible for themselves they can make that particular decision for themselves. For example, I have ordered them to do homework and threatened to punish them if they don't, no matter how skeptical they are about the benefits of Mandarin homework.

Couple of problems there. First, when they ask why, do you reply “because I say so” or do you give them reasons? If it’s the latter, the analogy fails.

Second, you’ve introduced the notion of punishment – ie, a consequence for wrongdoing. Again, that disqualifies the analogy. In the myth, the deal is that “God” says, “Look, I’m a talking snake acting on behalf of God. No really. I am I tell you. Only you just have to take my word for that. Anyways…let me draw your attention to this tree I’ve set up specially for you not to pay any attention too. And I’d rather you didn’t pay any attention to it because, well, I say so. Bye then.”

Hmmm…     

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Probably I would do those things even if I understood the horrible consequences - other people certainly have - inventing nuclear weapons and climate change issues spring to mind. Your analogy depends on A&E having no concept of a bad outcome - my understanding of the story is they had a concept of right and wrong.

Not according to Vlad’s premise they didn’t.

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The law does not say that inventing a speed limit provides the idea and opportunity to break the speed limit and thereby induced the crime of speeding. I sometimes drive at 30mph and then I see a speed limit of 40mph - that does induce me to speed up and then the speed limit goes back down to 30 mph - and I am now driving at 35mph and the speed camera goes off - I can't rely on the defence of entrapment.

That’s right, you can’t. The tests for entrapment are different from and much tougher than that – see above.

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Your entrapment argument doesn't work for me in the A&E story either.

The point rather is whether it “works” for the legal definition(s), which it does – see above.
"Don't make me come down there."

God

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22307 on: September 20, 2017, 01:58:49 PM »
Vlad the Mendacious,

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Not really otherwise God would induce humans into it. As has been demonstrated he doesn't.

It's been asserted, not demonstrated - and that assertion has been substantially falsified. See my last to Gabriella for details. 
"Don't make me come down there."

God

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22308 on: September 20, 2017, 02:19:44 PM »

Really! Yet this entity cursed the ground, increased the sorrow that Eve would have, especially increasing pain in childbirth, and decided that Adam should lead a life of hardship before experiencing death. Of course this represents the world as it is to some extent but the story aligns itself with the idea that all this is some form of punishment instead of just seeing it as the natural state of affairs. In other words the idea of a God has been superimposed on the hardships which we all experience,
Enki forgive me on focussing on sections of what you have written and answering in terms of what your post has produced in terms of my thinking.

I'm thinking that, remaining in the allegory, we are at the point where they have been caught and convicted and we have moved to sentencing.

First and the important part for me is the expulsion. This is no punching of the air and running down the road having pulled one's T shirt over the head occasion. They have been expelled from paradise. What remains is worse, all round including, logically, pain. Privileges are withdrawn. God allows actions to have consequences in fact the increased pain is part of the newly acquired knowledge of Good and evil.

Of course not being a bible literalist in regards to the A and E allegory. I am not suggesting there was no pain in childbirth just like I am not suggesting there weren't pre-fall hominids but I think post fall Humans interpret pain in a way that involves thoughts and concepts that revolve around whether such misfortune is justified and awareness that such a condition is not paradisal and sub ideal.


Finally, I think am right to ask you this:

If expulsion from a paradisal state is bad, if making post paradisal conditions worse than paradise is inappropriate.
What response would be appropriate?


Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22309 on: September 20, 2017, 02:23:17 PM »
Vlad the Mendacious,

It's been asserted, not demonstrated - and that assertion has been substantially falsified. See my last to Gabriella for details.
You accused, You defined the accusation, you failed to show how the accused fitted the definitions.

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22310 on: September 20, 2017, 02:26:26 PM »
Vlad the Sweepingunderthecarpetist,

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I'm thinking that, remaining in the allegory, we are at the point where they have been caught and convicted and we have moved to sentencing.

But "caught and convicted" by the same bent copper who fitted them up in the first place remember. 
"Don't make me come down there."

God

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22311 on: September 20, 2017, 02:29:07 PM »
Vlad the Mendacious,

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You accused, You defined the accusation, you failed to show how the accused fitted the definitions.

Wrong again. As you seem to have missed it here's the relevant part from my last reply to Gabriella:

"Well, neither of us knows for sure as it hasn’t been tested. Entrapment rules vary country-by-country too, and indeed state-by-state in the US. In general though most courts would ask:

1. Did the official create an opportunity that would not otherwise have existed? (yes)

2. Did the official seek out the accused to tell them about the opportunity he’d created? (yes)

3. Did the accused have a predisposition to criminal activity? (no)

4. Did the official give any reason for not disobeying him other than, “because I say so”? (no)

5. Could the accused reasonably have understood that what they did would be criminal or even objectively wrong rather than just disobeying someone who claimed to be authoritative? (no)

Looks like a slam dunk case of entrapment to me.
"

Given your last effort, I'd add as a rider that the dodgy official in this case also turned out to be judge, jury and "executioner". 
« Last Edit: September 20, 2017, 02:36:51 PM by bluehillside »
"Don't make me come down there."

God

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22312 on: September 20, 2017, 02:31:34 PM »
Vlad the Mendacious,
 See my last to Gabriella for details.
I did.....standard Hillside category rogering i'm afraid.

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22313 on: September 20, 2017, 02:38:17 PM »
Vlad the Assertionist,

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I did.....standard Hillside category rogering i'm afraid.

Did you have an argument to make here, or have you just spat the dummy again?
"Don't make me come down there."

God

Sebastian Toe

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22314 on: September 20, 2017, 02:40:14 PM »
pre-fall hominids
 post fall Humans 
Pardon?
"The word God is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weaknesses, the Bible a collection of honourable, but still primitive legends.'
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floo

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22315 on: September 20, 2017, 02:47:05 PM »
Not really otherwise God would induce humans into it. As has been demonstrated he doesn't.

I just don't get that?

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22316 on: September 20, 2017, 02:50:43 PM »
Floo,

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I just don't get that?

That'll be because it's not true.
"Don't make me come down there."

God

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22317 on: September 20, 2017, 02:51:17 PM »
Vlad the Mendacious,

Wrong again. As you seem to have missed it here's the relevant part from my last reply to Gabriella:

"Well, neither of us knows for sure as it hasn’t been tested. Entrapment rules vary country-by-country too, and indeed state-by-state in the US. In general though most courts would ask:

1. Did the official create an opportunity that would not otherwise have existed? (yes)

2. Did the official seek out the accused to tell them about the opportunity he’d created? (yes)

3. Did the accused have a predisposition to criminal activity? (no)

4. Did the official give any reason for not disobeying him other than, “because I say so”? (no)

5. Could the accused reasonably have understood that what they did would be criminal or even objectively wrong rather than just disobeying someone who claimed to be authoritative? (no)

Looks like a slam dunk case of entrapment to me.
"

Given your last effort, I'd add as a rider that the dodgy official in this case also turned out to be judge and "executioner".
Point 4!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
breaking the law just because it is the law is no defence.
Did the official provide any reason for the disobedience (No)  No entrapment.
The accused took it upon themselves to break the law.
Point 5 what evidence did they have that the Law was not authoritative or that the officer did not represent the Law. None.

Did they plot to elevate themselves as equal to the officer and to establish there own law. In other words to be above the law? Yes.



Was there any evidence that this would be the case. No.

Oh Hillside. Hillside, Hillside.........I suppose it is fitting that I'm there at the end of your illustrious forum career.


floo

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22318 on: September 20, 2017, 03:10:23 PM »
Floo,

That'll be because it's not true.

What isn't true, the fact that no god created us, with which I agree?

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22319 on: September 20, 2017, 03:11:33 PM »
A response to Hillside's flaky five on entrapment


1. Did the official create an opportunity that would not otherwise have existed? If I didn't exist I wouldn't have robbed the bank. If the bank didn't exist I wouldn't have robbed it your honour
2. Did the official seek out the accused to tell them about the opportunity he’d created? I knew there was a bank there because there was an advert on TV your honour
3. Did the accused have a predisposition to criminal activity? The presence of the bank and particularly a policeman nearby telling me to move along as I could be arrested on suspicion put the disposition into me your honour.
4. Did the official give any reason for not disobeying him other than, “because I say so”? I suppose so your honour, he was after all a policeman.
5. Could the accused reasonably have understood that what they did would be criminal or even objectively wrong rather than just disobeying someone who claimed to be authoritative? yes there was a policeman
Doesn't Look like a slam dunk case of entrapment to me.



bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22320 on: September 20, 2017, 03:12:55 PM »
Vlad the Delusionist,

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Point 4!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
breaking the law just because it is the law is no defence.

No it wouldn’t be. As that’s got nothing to do with anything I’ve said though, we can safely ignore that straw man.

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Did the official provide any reason for the disobedience (No)  No entrapment.

Try again. Entrapment as a defence requires several conditions to be satisfied. Someone who claims to be an official by providing only a “because I say so” would be just one of them. 

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The accused took it upon themselves to break the law.

The accused in this case had no good reason to think there was “a law”, let alone that they were breaking it. 

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Point 5 what evidence did they have that the Law was not authoritative…

What evidence did they have that there was any law at all, or even that there was such a thing as “law”? None. 

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…or that the officer did not represent the Law. None.

You never have grasped how the burden of proof issue works have you. If an official says “I represent the law” (or more accurately I suppose, “I am the law” given the absence of any code they could have referred to) you seem to think they should just have taken his word for it.

Why? 

And about this bridge I have for sale...

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Did they plot to elevate themselves as equal to the officer and to establish there own law. In other words to be above the law? Yes.

No. They had no reason to think he (or Hissing Sid acting on his behalf) was an “officer” (ie, authoritative), that he represented anything, or that there was such a thing as “law” at all. 

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Was there any evidence that this would be the case. No.

That what would be the case? There was no evidence of any kind – just an instruction not to do the thing they’d been fitted up to do.

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Oh Hillside. Hillside, Hillside.........I suppose it is fitting that I'm there at the end of your illustrious forum career.

I suppose given how delusional your religious beliefs are it should come as no surprise that you delude yourself with equal facility.
"Don't make me come down there."

God

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22321 on: September 20, 2017, 03:14:26 PM »
Vlad the Hallucinogist,

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A response to Hillside's flaky five on entrapment


1. Did the official create an opportunity that would not otherwise have existed?
If I didn't exist I wouldn't have robbed the bank. If the bank didn't exist I wouldn't have robbed it your honour

2. Did the official seek out the accused to tell them about the opportunity he’d created?
I knew there was a bank there because there was an advert on TV your honour

3. Did the accused have a predisposition to criminal activity?
The presence of the bank and particularly a policeman nearby telling me to move along as I could be arrested on suspicion put the disposition into me your honour.

4. Did the official give any reason for not disobeying him other than, “because I say so”?
I suppose so your honour, he was after all a policeman.

5. Could the accused reasonably have understood that what they did would be criminal or even objectively wrong rather than just disobeying someone who claimed to be authoritative?
yes there was a policeman

Doesn't Look like a slam dunk case of entrapment to me.

Nurse! He's tripping again!
"Don't make me come down there."

God

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22322 on: September 20, 2017, 03:20:39 PM »
Vlad the Hallucinogist,

Nurse! He's tripping again!
Point two Hillside.

Did the official seek out the accused to tell them about the opportunity he’d created?
Not specifically. He told them what was acceptable legally and what wasn't. There was no suggestion of opportunity.

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22323 on: September 20, 2017, 03:45:49 PM »


You never have grasped how the burden of proof issue works have you. If an official says “I represent the law” (or more accurately I suppose, “I am the law” given the absence of any code they could have referred to) you seem to think they should just have taken his word for it.

They had already accepted the law and the official and as part of the natural order.
They took it upon themselves to override the law and natural order of things and the resident authority(The law) to place themselves as the law. They had no evidence or warrant for that assumption Particularly as they had God with them.

They acted as if there was a higher authority.
They acted as if that higher authority was themselves.........sound familiar, Hillside?

Enki

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #22324 on: September 20, 2017, 03:49:37 PM »
Vlad,

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Finally, I think am right to ask you this:

If expulsion from a paradisal state is bad, if making post paradisal conditions worse than paradise is inappropriate.
What response would be appropriate?


You are asking me to conduct a thought experiment. Firstly there is a paradisal state. Secondly post paradisal conditions are worse than the paradisal state. Therefore

1) A paradisal state has been created

2) Humans have been created

3) Expulsion from this state is bad

No response is needed, whether the humans chose to disobey a command or not, because the entity who is responsible for all the above(including the quality/imposition of free choice, temptation, curiosity etc.)is that which created it. Hence there is no need to create a state with such post paradisal conditions. I would see that as completely appropriate.

unless

this entity wanted to transfer the responsibility for humans not obeying commands onto the humans themselves and then punishing them for their choices by expelling them from this paradisal state to a newly created state.

I would see that as entirely inappropriate.


Sometimes I wish my first word was 'quote,' so that on my death bed, my last words could be 'end quote.'
Steven Wright