Author Topic: Searching for GOD...  (Read 3853813 times)

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51700 on: November 12, 2024, 04:42:00 PM »
NS,

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The probability of rolling a die six times and getting a 6 isn't one since each time you roll it there are 6 possible outcomes. It works out, iirc, 6 to the power 6 -5 to the power 6 over 6 to the power 6, and is according to my phone calculator 0.6651.

You’re quite right – thank you. The probability is indeed about 66.5%, though the general point about probability and the size of sample set remains. 
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Nearly Sane

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51701 on: November 12, 2024, 04:43:17 PM »
And, of course, I'm contractually bound to remind anyone claiming probability to demonstrate supernatural claims is missing that probability is a methodologically naturalistic approach,  and that it has no meaning in the world of the supernatural where there is no such method, or indeed any methodology.
« Last Edit: November 12, 2024, 04:52:23 PM by Nearly Sane »

Nearly Sane

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51702 on: November 12, 2024, 04:57:55 PM »
The accuacy of the cosmological constant needed to balance the forces in our universe to enable the formation of stars and planets has been calculated as 10 to the power of 120.
I do not have figures for the probability of the correct ingredients and environment needed for life, but even assuming we have these, professor Sir Fred Hoyle made the following calculation:
“The likelihood of the formation of life from inanimate matter is one to a number with 40,000 naughts after it ... It is big enough to bury Darwin and the whole theory of evolution. There was no primeval soup, neither on this planet nor any other, and if the beginnings of life were not random, they must therefore have been the product of purposeful intelligence.”
And just to point put that you, and Fred, are mistaking abiogenesis for evolution. Not really much of a biologist, Fred.

Alan Burns

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51703 on: November 12, 2024, 05:16:23 PM »
And just to point put that you, and Fred, are mistaking abiogenesis for evolution. Not really much of a biologist, Fred.
The point Fred was making was the enormous unlikelihood for process of evolution to even get started without intentional guidance..
And intentional guidance does exist in this universe - humans do it all the time.
« Last Edit: November 12, 2024, 05:19:09 PM by Alan Burns »
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Nearly Sane

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51704 on: November 12, 2024, 05:20:38 PM »
The point Fred was making was the enormous unlikelihood for process of evolution to even get started without intentional guidance..
Which misses thar abiogenesis isn't evolution but then if you want to present random quotes that miss the point, and make you look foolish while ignoring what people say, then on you go.

I see you've added a second sentence

"And intentional guidance does exist in this universe - humans do it all the time."

Not sure what point you are trying to make with that since it seems to be addressing a strawman. That there is intent in the universe isn't denied but that's based on a methodological naturalistic approach, and since that's not about what you are claiming is irrelevant, and indeed highlights the problem of your 'logic' 

« Last Edit: November 12, 2024, 05:24:31 PM by Nearly Sane »

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51705 on: November 12, 2024, 05:21:24 PM »
AB,

Quote
The point Fred was making was the enormous unlikelihood for process of evolution to even get started without intentional guidance..
And intentional guidance does exist in this universe - humans do it all the time.

So he made the same circular reasoning mistake you're making then? 
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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51706 on: November 12, 2024, 05:27:37 PM »
The accuacy of the cosmological constant needed to balance the forces in our universe to enable the formation of stars and planets has been calculated as 10 to the power of 120.

I curious as to what information was used to determine that. What are the other options? What constrains that cosmological constant? Can it vary? What are the other options? How many times has it been deployed? Without answers to any of these questions - and so far as I can tell there are no answers to those questions - any number is just pulled out someone's spiritual arse.

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I do not have figures for the probability of the correct ingredients and environment needed for life, but even assuming we have these, professor Sir Fred Hoyle made the following calculation: “The likelihood of the formation of life from inanimate matter is one to a number with 40,000 naughts after it ...


OK, so two billion trillion stars in just our universe - and, we have no idea how many other universes are out there, some with marginally differing cosmological constants, perhaps - and those two sextillion planets in our own universe have had upwards of 12 billion years of opportunity to produce life once. With a 1 in 1040,000 chance that's pretty good odds, to be fair, there should be dozens of life-bearing planets spread across the universes.

Even if there aren't, though, even if there's just this one universe, and just this one planet of life to be found in it, as improbable as you seem to think that is, that improbability is still not an argument for the magic that you offer as an alternative.

In the 'unlikely vs magic' debate, I'm going to pick the long odds every single time because magic isn't real.

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Nearly Sane

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51707 on: November 12, 2024, 05:40:16 PM »
I curious as to what information was used to determine that. What are the other options? What constrains that cosmological constant? Can it vary? What are the other options? How many times has it been deployed? Without answers to any of these questions - and so far as I can tell there are no answers to those questions - any number is just pulled out someone's spiritual arse.
 

OK, so two billion trillion stars in just our universe - and, we have no idea how many other universes are out there, some with marginally differing cosmological constants, perhaps - and those two sextillion planets in our own universe have had upwards of 12 billion years of opportunity to produce life once. With a 1 in 1040,000 chance that's pretty good odds, to be fair, there should be dozens of life-bearing planets spread across the universes.

Even if there aren't, though, even if there's just this one universe, and just this one planet of life to be found in it, as improbable as you seem to think that is, that improbability is still not an argument for the magic that you offer as an alternative.

In the 'unlikely vs magic' debate, I'm going to pick the long odds every single time because magic isn't real.

O.
Agree with a lot of this but I would suggest that you are doing much the same on the question of the odds of abiogenesis. We don't have enough information to calculate those odds, and while the number of planets are a factor the rest of the equation is both unfilled, and in some parts unwritten.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51708 on: November 12, 2024, 06:00:27 PM »
AB,

Yes there is. You don’t like it or don’t find it credible, but it’s still there nonetheless. Just because there are still lots of unanswered questions about consciousness does not for one moment justify your entirely un-evidenced assertion that a materialistic explanation for it is therefore impossible.
There is no material definition for what comprises a thought or how it is generated - you may continue to presume that it is some sort of pattern of material reactions, but that denies our demonstrable ability to control our thoughts - I know that you will continue use this ability to try to claim this as a logical impossibility, but reality will trump your claim.
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A useful rule of thumb here is that a jig-saw with some pieces is more likely to give you an accurate picture than a jig-saw with no pieces at all. You should try to remember this.   
We are both starting with an unfinished an unfinished jigsaw of reality - I do not deny any of the existing pieces, but I see lots of evidence that they form part of an intentional finished picture.
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No, I only “presume” to accept for now the evidence I do have rather than to abandon it in favour of a logically impossible alternative for which there’s no evidence of any kind.
I am not abandoning any existing evidence - I see it all as evidence of a creative force beyond our understanding.
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“The reality we all perceive” is just a convenient but wrong fiction for the reasons that have been explained to you countless times without rebuttal.
The reality I perceive confirms our ability to consciously drive our own thought processes - you continue to use this ability to try to deny such an ability
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Wrong again. It’s not that it’s just “perceived by me” – it’s perceived by anyone capable of rational thought, and it stands until and unless someone produces more robust reasoning – something you’ve never managed to do.
You have yet to give a feasible explanation for how any rational thought can take place without conscious ability to guide our thoughts.
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Yes it feels that way doesn’t it. Had you but a basic grasp of reason though, you’d know that reality must be otherwise.
It feels that way because that is the way it is.  It enables our ability to reason.
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Free will, though it makes evil possible, is also the only thing that makes possible any love or goodness or joy worth having. - CS Lewis
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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51709 on: November 12, 2024, 06:38:24 PM »
AB,

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There is no material definition for what comprises a thought or how it is generated -…

Yes there is:

Fundamentally, our thoughts are maps representing and corresponding to things that our brains have either perceived with our senses, felt with our emotions, or formed as an action plan (e.g. forming an image of reaching for a ripe fruit on a tree branch). All of these are electrochemically mediated processes. Thoughts may be fleeting, or they may later be consolidated as memories. Memory too is a physical process, encoded by structural molecular changes in neuronal connections.

https://www.psychologytoday.com/intl/blog/finding-purpose/201902/what-actually-is-a-thought-and-how-is-information-physical#:~:text=Fundamentally%2C%20our%20thoughts%20are%20maps,these%20are%20electrochemically%20mediated%20processes

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…you may continue to presume that it is some sort of pattern of material reactions, but that denies our demonstrable ability to control our thoughts - I know that you will continue use this ability to try to claim this as a logical impossibility, but reality will trump your claim.

I don’t just presume it – I accept the evidence available to me as my working hypothesis, and the rest is just another repetition of your claim to demonstrate something without ever actually demonstrating it.

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We are both starting with an unfinished an unfinished jigsaw of reality - I do not deny any of the existing pieces, but I see lots of evidence that they form part of an intentional finished picture.

I start with all the pieces available to me from neuroscience. There are no pieces available to you from the white noise claim “soul”. QED   

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I am not abandoning any existing evidence - I see it all as evidence of a creative force beyond our understanding.

Of course you are – the evidence from neuroscience just for starters, and there’s no evidence at all for “how you see it” actually indicating a creative force. That’s just a blind faith claim.

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The reality I perceive confirms our ability to consciously drive our own thought processes - you continue to use this ability to try to deny such an ability

Drivel. All it “confirms” is that you’re victim to simplistic and evidence-denying narratives that happen to shore up your religious beliefs. 

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You have yet to give a feasible explanation for how any rational thought can take place without conscious ability to guide our thoughts.

Not true, but even if it was true that wouldn’t help you. You’re the one claiming that a materialistic explanation for consciousness is impossible so it’s your job to demonstrate that rather than just to assert it. Telling us instead that you’re not satisfied with the materialistic explanations you are given (so what?) doesn’t explain one damn thing about why you think it’s also impossible. So far as I recall, never once have you taken even one step toward doing that and you have no excuse now for not realising that shifting the burden of proof is yet another of the fallacies on which your tottering house of sand rests.     

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It feels that way because that is the way it is.  It enables our ability to reason.

No, it only feels that way because you refuse to think about why in this case perception and reality are misaligned. 

Oh, and you still haven't addressed the circular reasoning problem with your fine tuning argument. 
« Last Edit: November 12, 2024, 07:38:10 PM by bluehillside Retd. »
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torridon

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51710 on: November 12, 2024, 07:51:04 PM »
The accuacy of the cosmological constant needed to balance the forces in our universe to enable the formation of stars and planets has been calculated as 10 to the power of 120.
I do not have figures for the probability of the correct ingredients and environment needed for life, but even assuming we have these, professor Sir Fred Hoyle made the following calculation:
“The likelihood of the formation of life from inanimate matter is one to a number with 40,000 naughts after it ... It is big enough to bury Darwin and the whole theory of evolution. There was no primeval soup, neither on this planet nor any other, and if the beginnings of life were not random, they must therefore have been the product of purposeful intelligence.”

However, things have moved on quite a bit since Hoyle's day.  There is a widespread anticipation among scientists that we will find life elsewhere in the universe, and maybe even in our own Solar System.  You just need a habitable zone with water and you have the basic requirements for life.  Chemistry will do its stuff, given time.

Nearly Sane

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51711 on: November 12, 2024, 08:04:14 PM »
However, things have moved on quite a bit since Hoyle's day.  There is a widespread anticipation among scientists that we will find life elsewhere in the universe, and maybe even in our own Solar System.  You just need a habitable zone with water and you have the basic requirements for life.  Chemistry will do its stuff, given time.
I think that misses the point that probability is not a useful guide to methodological naturalist claims that are being made here.
« Last Edit: November 12, 2024, 08:26:34 PM by Nearly Sane »

jeremyp

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51712 on: November 13, 2024, 09:09:07 AM »
And, of course, I'm contractually bound to remind anyone claiming probability to demonstrate supernatural claims is missing that probability is a methodologically naturalistic approach,  and that it has no meaning in the world of the supernatural where there is no such method, or indeed any methodology.

Probability isn't an argument in a multiverse either or in an infinitely large single Universe. This is one reason I don't like either as a concept, but, of course, me not liking it doesn't make it false.
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Outrider

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51713 on: November 13, 2024, 09:26:02 AM »
Agree with a lot of this but I would suggest that you are doing much the same on the question of the odds of abiogenesis. We don't have enough information to calculate those odds, and while the number of planets are a factor the rest of the equation is both unfilled, and in some parts unwritten.

Largely I'd agree with that - I certainly wouldn't normally just accept those numbers (or probably any numbers) on probability without seeing some rigorous support for it, but it was just an attempt to show that the size of the universe puts seemingly unbelievable odds into perspective.

O.
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Alan Burns

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51714 on: November 13, 2024, 11:38:46 AM »
AB,

Yes there is:

Fundamentally, our thoughts are maps representing and corresponding to things that our brains have either perceived with our senses, felt with our emotions, or formed as an action plan (e.g. forming an image of reaching for a ripe fruit on a tree branch). All of these are electrochemically mediated processes. Thoughts may be fleeting, or they may later be consolidated as memories. Memory too is a physical process, encoded by structural molecular changes in neuronal connections.

https://www.psychologytoday.com/intl/blog/finding-purpose/201902/what-actually-is-a-thought-and-how-is-information-physical#:~:text=Fundamentally%2C%20our%20thoughts%20are%20maps,these%20are%20electrochemically%20mediated%20processes

I don’t just presume it – I accept the evidence available to me as my working hypothesis, and the rest is just another repetition of your claim to demonstrate something without ever actually demonstrating it.

I start with all the pieces available to me from neuroscience. There are no pieces available to you from the white noise claim “soul”. QED   

Of course you are – the evidence from neuroscience just for starters, and there’s no evidence at all for “how you see it” actually indicating a creative force. That’s just a blind faith claim.

Drivel. All it “confirms” is that you’re victim to simplistic and evidence-denying narratives that happen to shore up your religious beliefs. 

Not true, but even if it was true that wouldn’t help you. You’re the one claiming that a materialistic explanation for consciousness is impossible so it’s your job to demonstrate that rather than just to assert it. Telling us instead that you’re not satisfied with the materialistic explanations you are given (so what?) doesn’t explain one damn thing about why you think it’s also impossible. So far as I recall, never once have you taken even one step toward doing that and you have no excuse now for not realising that shifting the burden of proof is yet another of the fallacies on which your tottering house of sand rests.     

No, it only feels that way because you refuse to think about why in this case perception and reality are misaligned. 

Oh, and you still haven't addressed the circular reasoning problem with your fine tuning argument.
It would appear that we look upon the reality of our existence through very different eyes, Blue.
I look with wonder and awe at the evidence all around us of God's amazing creativity.
I see the precious gift of God's love in action between people on this earth.
I also perceive the dreadful power of evil which has infiltrated humanity and hides the truth from so many.

You seem to perceive nothing but the unintended consequences of unguided material reactions.

I look forward to the true fulfilment of my soul in heaven as God intended.
You, sadly, have nothing to look forward to but eternal oblivion after your brief life on this earth.

I hope and pray that you, and everyone else on this forum, will one day see the light.
The truth will set you free  - John 8:32
Truth is not an abstraction, but a person - Edith Stein
Free will, though it makes evil possible, is also the only thing that makes possible any love or goodness or joy worth having. - CS Lewis
Joy is the Gigantic Secret of Christians - GK Chesterton

The Accountant, OBE, KC

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51715 on: November 13, 2024, 02:43:59 PM »
NS,

The assertions clerics make about this world may well be about, say, who people should and should not go to bed with but they still cite their supposed gods’ supposed wishes about that and so there’s nothing to test. Politicians on the other hand generally produce manifestos whose promises can be tested after the event, which seems to me to be a pretty important difference between the two groups.     
 
No, what changes is that for the religious faith is put front and centre as if it had epistemological value, whereas politicians rarely in my experience rely on faith claims and instead anchor their statements to real world outcomes that are testable. I can see that in a Venn diagram there is some overlap between the two, but the bigger parts of the two circles are separate.     

Yes.
Politicians make an appeal to voters to vote for them based on voters assessing (1) the ethics of the politician's policies or campaign promises (so an appeal to abstract beliefs about right and wrong and fairness and justice) and (2) whether the voter believes if the politician will deliver on those policies or promises.

The voter's beliefs about ethics or whether the politician will deliver on their promise or policy is not based on a statistical analysis.

Eg. Trump promised if elected he would carry out the largest domestic deportation operation in American history. In response, Voters would first form an opinion on whether mass deportation is ethical or constitutional - much like the religious deciding "who people should and should not go to bed with". What would you suggest voters test in order to decide on the ethics of mass deportation in order to decide how they should vote?

Voters would then form an opinion on the likelihood of Trump keeping his promise. Voters have not analysed how they would verify it was the "largest domestic deportation operation".  Trump has not specified a deportation target or time frame or cost of this operation. So what would voters test?
I identify as a Sword because I have abstract social constructs e.g. honour and patriotism. My preferred pronouns are "kill/ maim/ dismember"

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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51716 on: November 13, 2024, 03:36:36 PM »
AB,

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It would appear that we look upon the reality of our existence through very different eyes, Blue.

Yes – reason- and evidence-based working hypotheses vs heavily enculturated wishful thinking.
 
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I look with wonder and awe at the evidence all around us of God's amazing creativity.
I see the precious gift of God's love in action between people on this earth.
I also perceive the dreadful power of evil which has infiltrated humanity and hides the truth from so many.

And someone else looks at rainbows as evidence for the joyous beneficence of leprechauns. So what?

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You seem to perceive nothing but the unintended consequences of unguided material reactions.

No, I perceive lots of other things too but what I don’t perceive is the frankly bizarre menagerie of spooks whose supposed existence you seek to justify only with very, very bad arguments. Your avoidance of you circular reasoning mistake on which the fine-tuning argument rests is just one example of that.     

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I look forward to the true fulfilment of my soul in heaven as God intended.

Good luck with that.

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You, sadly, have nothing to look forward to but eternal oblivion after your brief life on this earth.

Spoken like a true Christian. Would Jesus be proud of you for that do you think?

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I hope and pray that you, and everyone else on this forum, will one day see the light.

Your total reliance on false arguments to justify your religious claims suggest strongly that the "light" you perceive is actually about as light as a black cat in a coal cellar…

…wearing Ray-bans.   
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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51717 on: November 13, 2024, 04:49:09 PM »
VG,

Quote
Politicians make an appeal to voters to vote for them based on voters assessing (1) the ethics of the politician's policies or campaign promises (so an appeal to abstract beliefs about right and wrong and fairness and justice) and (2) whether the voter believes if the politician will deliver on those policies or promises.

For politicians (1) policies are much less prevalent than (2) policies though. Consider for example Sunak’s five promises on which he wanted to be judged – all were measurable. Clerics on the other hand have only (1) statements. That's the difference – there's nothing to measure.   

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The voter's beliefs about ethics or whether the politician will deliver on their promise or policy is not based on a statistical analysis.

Yes they are. Either inflation came down or it didn’t; either the number of small boats crossing the Channel reduced or it didn’t. There are of course political ethical policy points sometimes too – on equal marriage for example – which are typically free votes not enforced by the party whips, but they’re relatively few in number. 

Clerics on the other hand are almost entirely concerned with (1) statements rather than (2) statements, which are unmeasurable and unverifiable. 

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Eg. Trump promised if elected he would carry out the largest domestic deportation operation in American history. In response, Voters would first form an opinion on whether mass deportation is ethical or constitutional - much like the religious deciding "who people should and should not go to bed with". What would you suggest voters test in order to decide on the ethics of mass deportation in order to decide how they should vote?

And at the end of Trump’s term those same voters could count the number of deportations to decide whether or not he’d delivered on the promise. What would you suggest the parishioners count in response to a cleric saying, for example, that same sex people shouldn’t go to bed together? That's a significant difference I think.

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Voters would then form an opinion on the likelihood of Trump keeping his promise. Voters have not analysed how they would verify it was the "largest domestic deportation operation".  Trump has not specified a deportation target or time frame or cost of this operation. So what would voters test?

Numbers. See above.
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God

Sebastian Toe

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51718 on: November 14, 2024, 06:08:15 PM »

You, sadly, have nothing to look forward to but eternal oblivion after your brief life on this earth.

I'm intrigued, what exactly is eternal oblivion?
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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51719 on: November 14, 2024, 08:28:47 PM »
It would appear that we look upon the reality of our existence through very different eyes, Blue.

There are none so blind as those who will not see...

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I look with wonder and awe at the evidence all around us of God's amazing creativity.

I look with wonder and awe at the world, I just don't need to make up a god to put it all on, it's spectacular in its own right.

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I see the precious gift of God's love in action between people on this earth.

40,000 and some Palestinians in Gaza wouldn't agree with you if they still had the chance, but they don't.

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I also perceive the dreadful power of evil which has infiltrated humanity and hides the truth from so many.

"With or without religion, good people can behave well and bad people can do evil; but for good people to do evil - that requires religion." Steven Weinberg. Or, if you prefer:

"Religion. It's given people hope in a world torn apart by religion." Jon Stewart (The late night host, not the Green Lantern).

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You seem to perceive nothing but the unintended consequences of unguided material reactions.

You perceive those, too, but misunderstand and attribute intent to them in the absence of any basis.

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I look forward to the true fulfilment of my soul in heaven as God intended.

Don't put off the life you do have for the promise of one that you probably won't.

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You, sadly, have nothing to look forward to but eternal oblivion after your brief life on this earth.

Oh, no, not the same eternity of not existing to not be suffering that I had before I was born to no ill effect. Oh the humanity...

O.
Universes are forever, not just for creation...

New Atheism - because, apparently, there's a use-by date on unanswered questions.

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The Accountant, OBE, KC

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51720 on: November 15, 2024, 08:53:44 AM »
VG,

For politicians (1) policies are much less prevalent than (2) policies though. Consider for example Sunak’s five promises on which he wanted to be judged – all were measurable. Clerics on the other hand have only (1) statements. That's the difference – there's nothing to measure.

Yes they are. Either inflation came down or it didn’t; either the number of small boats crossing the Channel reduced or it didn’t. There are of course political ethical policy points sometimes too – on equal marriage for example – which are typically free votes not enforced by the party whips, but they’re relatively few in number.

Clerics on the other hand are almost entirely concerned with (1) statements rather than (2) statements, which are unmeasurable and unverifiable. 

And at the end of Trump’s term those same voters could count the number of deportations to decide whether or not he’d delivered on the promise. What would you suggest the parishioners count in response to a cleric saying, for example, that same sex people shouldn’t go to bed together? That's a significant difference I think.

Numbers. See above.
Totally disagree and think your arguments are inaccurate, simplistic and do not reflect the world we actually live in.

Democratic government exists because of abstract thought - e.g. because we think people in a society have certain rights and should have a say in what those rights are.

Governments exist to uphold rights, to protect people and establish law and order, to redistribute wealth from the rich to the poor in order to provide services to protect and care for the vulnerable according to what is fair. What is fair is not something that can be objectively measured - it depends on ethics.

Yes we need objectives we can measure but that is a small part of the equation in politics. Some people would be willing to pay higher taxes  if they thought the elected government was capable or competent enough to meet certain measurable stats without wasting money on inefficient bureaucracy or corrupt procurement processes, but other people would not agree that it is the job of the government or the more wealthy to even help the poor/ vulnerable/ less well-off beyond a certain point.

That idea of whether we even owe a duty of care is not something that can be decided based on measuring statistics. When Boris Johnson supposedly indicated that he was willing to let the bodies pile high in order to achieve herd immunity / avoid a 3rd lockdown - the disagreements were over abstract issues of what was a fair price for the rest of society to pay in order to protect the more vulnerable from dying from Covid-19.

How much taxes are spent on IVF or cancer screening or cancer drugs or salaries for teachers etc determines which groups of people have access to options without paying and how good the service will be. How much access people have to government help to get a good level of service is a fundamental issue of fairness and that is what politics is about. Your simplistic examples of inflation rates barely scratch the surface of politics.
« Last Edit: November 15, 2024, 09:12:18 AM by The Accountant, OBE, KC »
I identify as a Sword because I have abstract social constructs e.g. honour and patriotism. My preferred pronouns are "kill/ maim/ dismember"

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The Accountant, OBE, KC

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51721 on: November 15, 2024, 09:08:33 AM »

"With or without religion or politics, good people can behave well and bad people can do evil; but for good people to do evil - that requires religion or politics." Or, if you prefer:

"Religion or politics. It's given people hope in a world torn apart by religion or politics."
Fixed it for you.
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

Nearly Sane

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51722 on: November 15, 2024, 09:33:51 AM »
Fixed it for you.
I think it's simpler to substitute ideology for religion

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51723 on: November 15, 2024, 10:24:11 AM »
VG,

Quote
Totally disagree and think your arguments are inaccurate, simplistic and do not reflect the world we actually live in.

Of course you do. This from the first page of Labour’s 2024 election manifesto:

"Labour’s plan to kickstart growth will:

• Restore economic stability with tough new spending rules, allow businesses to plan, with a cap on corporation tax at 25%, and a new industrial strategy to give business long-term certainty for investment decisions.

• Unleash investment with a new National Wealth Fund to invest in the industries for the future, and Great British Energy to accelerate the transition to Clean Power. Our plan will create 650,000 jobs in the industries of the future.

• Reform our planning rules to build the railways, roads, labs and 1.5 million homes we need and develop a new 10-year infrastructure strategy.

• Reform decision-making to shift power away from Westminster to turbo-charge the efforts of mayors across the country, with new powers over transport, skills, housing and planning, and employment support, along with new growth plans for towns across the country.

• Reform our jobs market by getting people back into work with careers and job centre reform, a New Deal for Working people to make work pay, a new childcare offer to get people into work, and a plan to tackle our health and mental health challenges to get people back to work.

• Reform the immigration and skills system to ensure Britain is developing home-grown skills with workforce plans to meet the needs of industries and the economy.

• Introduce a modern industrial strategy, working in partnership with businesses and workers to grasp the opportunities of new technologies, with an AI sector plan, a new national data library to support cutting-edge research, 10-year budgets for key world innovation institutions, and planning reform to build the datacentres and infrastructure we need.
"

And here’s the Conservative equivalent:

- Cut tax for workers by taking another 2p off employee National Insurance so that we will have halved it from 12% at the beginning of this year to 6% by April 2027, a total tax cut of £1,350 for the average worker on £35,000 – and the next step in our
longterm ambition to end the double tax on work when financial conditions allow.

- Cut taxes to support the self-employed by abolishing the main rate of self-employed National Insurance entirely by the end of the Parliament.

- Cut tax for pensioners with the new Triple Lock Plus, guaranteeing that both the State Pension and the tax free allowance for pensioners always rise with the highest of inflation, earnings or 2.5% – so the new State Pension doesn’t get dragged into income tax.

- Give working parents 30 hours of free childcare a week from when their child is nine months old to when they start school, saving eligible families an average of £6,900 per year.

- End the unfairness in Child Benefit by moving to a household system, so families don’t start losing Child Benefit until their combined income reaches £120,000 – saving the average family which benefits £1,500.

- Cut the cost of net zero for consumers by taking a more pragmatic approach, guaranteeing no new green levies or charges while accelerating the rollout of renewables.

- Seize the benefits of Brexit by signing further trade deals, speeding up infrastructure and unblocking 100,000 homes, cutting red tape for business, and creating new fishing opportunities. To provide young people with a secure future

- Give young people the skills and opportunities they deserve by introducing mandatory National Service for all school leavers at 18, with the choice between a competitive placement in the military or civic service roles.

- Fund 100,000 high-quality apprenticeships for young people, paid for by curbing the number of poor-quality university degrees that leave young people worse off.

- Protect children by requiring schools to ban the use of mobile phones during the school day and ensuring parents can see what their children are being taught, especially on sensitive matters like sex education.

- Transform 16-19 education by introducing the Advanced British Standard, enabling young people to receive a broader education and removing the artificial divide between academic and technical learning. To safeguard our borders and national security

- Boost defence spending to our new NATO standard of 2.5% of GDP by 2030, so we can protect British interests at home and abroad in an increasingly hostile world.

- Introduce a legal cap on migration to guarantee that numbers will fall every year, so public services are protected while bringing in the skills our businesses and NHS needs.

- Stop the boats by removing illegal migrants to Rwanda.

- Work with other countries to rewrite asylum treaties to make them fit for the challenges we face. To strengthen our communities

- Increase NHS spending above inflation every year, recruiting 92,000 more nurses and 28,000 more doctors, driving up productivity in the NHS and moving care closer to people’s homes through Pharmacy First, new and modernised GP surgeries and more Community Diagnostic Centres.

- Protect female-only spaces and competitiveness in sport by making clear that sex means biological sex in the Equality Act.

- Deliver 1.6 million well-designed homes in the right places while protecting our countryside, permanently abolish Stamp Duty for homes up to £425,000 for first time buyers and introduce a new Help to Buy scheme.

- Recruit 8,000 more full-time, fully warranted police officers to ensure a new police officer for every neighbourhood.

- Cut anti-social behaviour in town centres by rolling out Hotspot Policing, expanding community payback and legislating to evict social tenants who repeatedly disrupt their neighbours.

- Invest £36 billion in local roads, rail and buses to drive regional growth, including £8.3 billion to fill potholes and resurface roads, funded by cancelling the second phase of HS2.

- Back drivers by stopping road pricing, reversing the London Mayor’s ULEZ expansion and applying local referendums to new 20mph zones and Low Traffic Neighbourhoods.

- Champion our rural communities by backing farmers with a legal target and additional investment for food security, and protecting our best agricultural land from solar farms.

- Continue to directly invest in communities across Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, protect the UK’s internal market and the integrity of our United Kingdom.


Do you notice anything about them? Yes – they’re all measurable, and that measurability leads to accountability – if they don’t deliver on these targets they can be removed and dismissed. Now find me a religion or a cleric who commits to that kind of specificity and accountability rather than pronounce that god doesn't want you to eat shellfish or go to bed with your boyfriend and we can have a conversation. 

Quote
Democratic government exists because of abstract thought - e.g. because we think people in a society have certain rights and should have a say in what those rights are.

Governments exist to uphold rights, to protect people and establish law and order, to redistribute wealth from the rich to the poor in order to provide services to protect and care for the vulnerable according to what is fair. What is fair is not something that can be objectively measured - it depends on ethics.

Yes we need objectives we can measure but that is a small part of the equation in politics. Some people would be willing to pay higher taxes  if they thought the elected government was capable or competent enough to meet certain measurable stats without wasting money on inefficient bureaucracy or corrupt procurement processes, but other people would not agree that it is the job of the government or the more wealthy to even help the poor/ vulnerable/ less well-off beyond a certain point.

That idea of whether we even owe a duty of care is not something that can be decided based on measuring statistics. When Boris Johnson supposedly indicated that he was willing to let the bodies pile high in order to achieve herd immunity / avoid a 3rd lockdown - the disagreements were over abstract issues of what was a fair price for the rest of society to pay in order to protect the more vulnerable from dying from Covid-19.

How much taxes are spent on IVF or cancer screening or cancer drugs or salaries for teachers etc determines which groups of people have access to options without paying and how good the service will be. How much access people have to government help to get a good level of service is a fundamental issue of fairness and that is what politics is about. Your simplistic examples of inflation rates barely scratch the surface of politics.

See above. Sitting behind politics’ engagement with the real world is often an ideology of some sort for sure, but the point here is that for the religious the ideology is all there is. There’s nothing to measure that would lead to accountability – that in part at least is why they often last so long.

If you can’t see a difference between the two or don’t think the difference is important then we’ll continue to disagree, but difference there is nonetheless and it’s an important one too in my view.     
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God

jeremyp

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #51724 on: November 15, 2024, 10:46:40 AM »
Fixed it for you.

I think it's better to use the term "ideology". That covers religion and some aspects of politics.

Edit: Ninja'd by NS
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