just me wrote:We are big bags of chemical reactions.
then my conclusion is valid, you have no ability to choose otherwise....thanks
just me wrote:We are big bags of chemical reactions.
subgenius wrote:They have not surrendered their will...simply made choices in accordance with His will.
When you "agree" with someone you are not surrendering.
I think you may be confusing one's self with one's will.
PrickKicker wrote:subgenius wrote: 2 H2 + O2 will always yield 2 H2O
Genius could you explain your calculations?
I am no professor of chemistry but I would have thought that 2 H2 + O2 would yield 2 H2O2?
PrickKicker wrote:Since you calculate 2 2 parts Hydrogen and 2 parts Oxygen?
PrickKicker wrote:subgenius wrote:iron+oxygen=rust....always
Plus If Iron was kept in pure O2, without Hydrogen, would it rust?
PrickKicker wrote:Is it not the Hydrogen2 and Oxygen1 that makes H2O?
Themis wrote:Molok wrote:I don't understand the purpose of free will. One of the reasons people often give on this forum for not believing in God is that the could not believe that a just and loving God would allow so many people to live short, pointless lives full of suffering that most in the Western world could not fathom. The reason for this I most often hear from believers is that God cannot help these people because if God were to reveal himself to these people, and take a direct action in their lives, He would be taking away their free will.
Ok.
What about all the Latter Day Saints who know for certain that there is a God, because he communicates with them, comforts them, directs their lives? What about God appearing bodily to Joseph Smith? Isn't that interfering with their free will? The response I usually get to this is that these people have surrendered their free will to God, and they seek only to do His will.
Ok.
So we are given free will, just so we can give it back. What is the point of this? Why is free will such an important thing, if its ultimate purpose is to be given up? Why is that more important than preventing the suffering around the world?
It's an ignorant view of free will(if it exists). It's basically saying the more information you have the less freedom of choice you have.
Molok wrote:subgenius wrote:They have not surrendered their will...simply made choices in accordance with His will.
When you "agree" with someone you are not surrendering.
I think you may be confusing one's self with one's will.
Ok, let's go with this for a moment. From what you're saying here, I gather that knowing for certain that God exists, does not impede a person's free will.
Molok wrote:Why doesn't God reveal to everyone that he exists then? Not in vague, burning of the bosom ways, but revelation, descending from the heavens style? I can't think of any good reason, can you?
subgenius wrote:That would remove faith from the equation, and arguably that is a significant aspect in our relationship with Him. Not in the sense that he is like the Wizard of Oz and asks that we simply not look behind the curtain, but rather as a personal experience. For example, is there a positive experience in your life where you have "leaped before you looked"?. I am sure that there has been both positive and negative experiences associated with such behavior, but does the value of that experience differ from a similar experience where you "knew" for certain?
I hesitate to use a magic analogy due to the cynics reading this.
Molok wrote:subgenius wrote:That would remove faith from the equation, and arguably that is a significant aspect in our relationship with Him. Not in the sense that he is like the Wizard of Oz and asks that we simply not look behind the curtain, but rather as a personal experience. For example, is there a positive experience in your life where you have "leaped before you looked"?. I am sure that there has been both positive and negative experiences associated with such behavior, but does the value of that experience differ from a similar experience where you "knew" for certain?
I hesitate to use a magic analogy due to the cynics reading this.
Sure, I've gotten a thrill from venturing out and doing something unknown to me, and some of those experiences have been very positive. I don't think that any benefits of faith would be more valueable to me than knowing, for certain, there is a God. Having faith in something that seems pretty certain to be false makes faith feel like an arbitrary hoop to jump through to me. Life seems hard enough without having to wonder if the God I'm serving is real.
subgenius wrote:Themis wrote:Where is the proof or even some evidence for this big bag of assertions?
So, you need "proof" that chemical reactions are bound by the natural laws of the universe?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_law
Fundamental Chemical Laws
Charles' Law
Gay-Lussac's Law
Conservation of Mass
Conservation of Energy
Dalton's Law
Definite Composition
Dulong & Petit's Law
Faraday's Law
Henry's Law
Ideal Gas law
Periodic Law
etc...
I believe the above references are sufficient in proving that chemical reactions are predictable and unable to react "otherwise".
Are you suggesting that there is a manner that a human body can over-ride how one chemical will react with another?
So, if the human body and its existence is absolutely composed of only chemical reactions then these reactions are what "control" everything we do, everything we say, everything we feel, and everything we think....thus one chemical reaction is not capable of "choosing" how another chemical reaction will behave...for both reactions are predictable by the laws that govern them...they are incapable of reacting "otherwise"....they will always react the way they react.
For example:
2 H2 + O2 will always yield 2 H2O
it is impossible for the above reaction to "choose" to yield anything other than 2 H2O - the product of that reaction will always be the same.
iron+oxygen=rust....always
So, with that being said, by definition, the ability to choose otherwise must be supernatural.
Molok wrote:subgenius wrote:That would remove faith from the equation, and arguably that is a significant aspect in our relationship with Him. Not in the sense that he is like the Wizard of Oz and asks that we simply not look behind the curtain, but rather as a personal experience. For example, is there a positive experience in your life where you have "leaped before you looked"?. I am sure that there has been both positive and negative experiences associated with such behavior, but does the value of that experience differ from a similar experience where you "knew" for certain?
I hesitate to use a magic analogy due to the cynics reading this.
Sure, I've gotten a thrill from venturing out and doing something unknown to me, and some of those experiences have been very positive. I don't think that any benefits of faith would be more valueable to me than knowing, for certain, there is a God. Having faith in something that seems pretty certain to be false makes faith feel like an arbitrary hoop to jump through to me. Life seems hard enough without having to wonder if the God I'm serving is real.