Free Will |
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Colin
Senior Member Joined: 23 September 2001 Status: Offline Points: 1260 |
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Good idea...
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AhmadJoyia
Senior Member Joined: 20 March 2005 Status: Offline Points: 1647 |
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My dear brother Tim, thanks for your input, I was desperately waiting for your comments.
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AhmadJoyia
Senior Member Joined: 20 March 2005 Status: Offline Points: 1647 |
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I am sorry. I have corrected the mistake in my response to your last but one reply on line one. I have added "without" before the word "faith". Kindly see, now if it makes sense. Thanks. Edited by AhmadJoyia |
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Ketchup
Senior Member Joined: 10 February 2006 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 349 |
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Can we be moral if there is no god? Why not? By nature man is happy chap, and lives in pursuit of happiness so if you value happiness then you also value the happiness of others around you... Man can be bad but is essentialy good on the inside so does he really need a god to be good? Can morals not be be learned through logic, reason and emotion? Is being good instinctive, and part of human nature or is it beaten into us? If we are forced to be good then a god is essential in creating a moral belief.. if we are only good in this life because the rewards in the next one are far greater then I consider that immoral and pretty selfish. How can this be morally correct? That means the existance of morals does not necessarily mean there is a god.. just that som,e need a guiding spirit because they know they can stray off the path. Has it occured to you that God is just a mispelling of Good? You say that god exists because we have a set of values that we all follow and cite your reasons that what is good and bad is defined by god.... I see no good reason why man should believe in a god... Some of the worst atrocities in history are accountable to religion even if they are now in a state of peace or semi peace. I see no logic in religion, just fear and guilt. Why should I believe in god? |
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AhmadJoyia
Senior Member Joined: 20 March 2005 Status: Offline Points: 1647 |
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Good thoughts!! However, just imagine if there is no god, then obviously speaking, there is no evil as well. Isn't it? Therefore, there is no concept of morality left out for being either good or bad without the concept of God. I can't be more expletive than this, at the moment, to make you better understand my point. Secondly, logic in religion must be made independant of the historical persuits among nations, though its a fallacy to assume that most of them were religous motivated. "Fear and guilt" are not the common denominators of all religions, not of Islam at least. |
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Tim Evans
Senior Member Joined: 31 January 2006 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 273 |
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Human social organisation is driven by necessity. Religion was a way in which people attempted to explain complexities and the down-right baffling. Hunter-gather communities, nomads, and urban dwellers have all developed distinctive religious cultures. With the growth of the city states with centralised monarchical government the tendency was towads unified religious imagery i.e. monotheism, 'one-god' patriarchal hierarchy, unsurprisingly just like the 'earthy' arrangements. The morality that grew up reflected, especially in family-life, morality was governed by and reflected property rights,ownership and inheritance. Edited by Tim Evans |
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Tim in Britain
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AhmadJoyia
Senior Member Joined: 20 March 2005 Status: Offline Points: 1647 |
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Bro Tim, since I am too dumb to under your abstracts, can you please be little more specific as what are you trying to convey in your post? Kindly note that I have not glorified people of "faith" over "no faith" or vice versa but tried to explain the concept of morals (good or bad) can only be viewed with polar glasses of faith (God and Evil), simply because, without "faith", there is no such concept of good or bad. Can we expect morality among the animals? I don't think. For them, only instinct works, but for humans, only the free will dictates as what to do. I hope I replied your comments appropriately.
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Tim Evans
Senior Member Joined: 31 January 2006 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 273 |
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Morality grows out of the prevailing economic, political, social and religious history. For sample, until recently the dominant moral landscape in Europe was a Judaic-Christian tradition founded on the Ten Commandment. These commandments were written (I believe) by people, to reflect and regulate the social life of the tribes and families. It could be argued that the idea of one-god was from the experiences of life in Egypt as slaves under a unified kingdom. Without this disciplined, centralized state it would have been impossible to conquer and rule their neighbors land. Edited by Tim Evans |
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Tim in Britain
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