OPFOR77 wrote:Lydiot wrote:But if you create someone with a choice, and you know what choice they'll make, and you then tell them to choose wisely or they'll burn in hell for an eternity, then you're not "nice". There's is absolutely nothing moral about that.
This is oversimplifying it greatly.
If I gave you a choice between water and poison, and told you that you need to drink the water or you'll die, I can safely assume that you'll choose the water. But, per you, I'm now not "nice" and am completely immoral?
You're not creating a correct analogy. In your analogy I exist and you give me a choice. There is no mention of where I came from. Your analogy would correct if it read:
"If I was omnipotent and chose to create you the way you are, and then gave you a choice knowing which one you'd make, and that choice would be poison...." etc.
OPFOR77 wrote:Lydiot wrote:And I absolutely maintain that if a person has foreknowledge about the choices that will be made then the distinction between "free will" or "control" is practically speaking moot. I may think I have a choice, that I have "free will", but if god created me with this free will yet knows what I will choose, how can I choose different from what he already can foresee?
False dilemna bro. Google it.
No "bro", it ain't. Google it.
OPFOR77 wrote:Plus, what if it's possible that he can see all possible outcomes, and knows all possible contingencies, and has planned for that? It's like chess; I make this move, you make that move, and I can see an infinite number of moves ahead of you and have planned for every possible move you make.
Again an analogy that doesn't work. I either have a choice or I don't. If you were the creator of me and were omnipotent you wouldn't only see all possible moves I could make, you'd know them in advance - i.e. not just the possible ones but the ones I'd eventually make. That's the difference.
OPFOR77 wrote:Lydiot wrote:The truth is that morality is something a lot of religious people say god gave us only to then make every single excuse possible for the immorality of god himself.
This is the foundation of the Euthyphro dilemma. Saying God is immoral based on the framework of God is a self defeating statement. But, provide an example of God being immoral.
Why is it self-defeating?
Look, the fundamental problem here is that logic is never ever going to convince a person set in his faith. Not gonna happen. If god gave man morality you would
think that the morality is objective. You'd
think that this morality is universal. Yet I bet that if we discuss what is moral and come to the conclusion that, oh, say genocide is immoral, and it is pointed out that god commanded it, then you'll have an exception for it. Such an exception won't be acceptable for people, which means that this morality was never objective in the first place. It's highly subjective. It's subject to god's opinion on any given topic on any given day.
Only god can judge god. Or something similar.
And since god is omnipotent it's entirely possible. But so is everything else. Including creating us purely good and living in eternity in happiness without the need to love him....