sparsely fights the urge to post a picture of a famous movie whale in this thread. :helpsmile:
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sparsely fights the urge to post a picture of a famous movie whale in this thread. :helpsmile:
I'm sorry...but I see absolutly NO logic in your debate. So something knows what is going to happen, that doesn't make you confined to anything. Think about it at a much smaller scale. My girlfriend get jelouse very easily, often resulting in anger. My ex-girlfriend shows up at a party and gives me a hug. Now... I predict that my girlfriend is going to yell at me later. Wow...on the ride home...her anger comes out. She had a choice on how she was going to handle that. From what I knew about her, I predicted what was going to happen and I was right. Me making that prediction in no way changed her free will. It in no way affected how she chose to act. That was all her own doing. Well...if God is Omniscient, then he knows more about ourselves then we know about ourselves. He knew exactly how she was going to react, and exactly what she was going to say simply because he had all the information he could ever need to calculate what how things were going to turn out. He knows how much of her crap I can take and knows when I'm going to say enough is enough. He knows that we are going to go out to eat at a certain restaurant because he knows we used to go there all the time and we haven't gone for awhile. He knows that a hot waitress needed extra hours so she took over a co-workers shift. He knows what table were going to sit at because he knows why everyone else is going the same restaurant and the order that they are going to be seated and when they are going to leave. He knows that I'm a friendly person so that when the hot waitress comes over, I'm going to smile as I hand her the menu after ordering. He knows my girlfriend is gonna see that smile and freak out. And he knows that I'm going to break up with her the next day. How does he know that I'm going to wait until the next day? Because he knows me that well. Now....at no point did he ever do anything to effect anyones free will. He just knew what was going to happen with 100% detail because he knows everything else there is to know with 100% detail. He knows how everything is going to effect everything because he knows everything.
If God knows everything that has ever happened and that is ever going to happen, what was the point of him actually bothering to make the universe in the first place?Quote:
Originally posted by dwightfry@19 May 2004 - 08:59
Well...if God is Omniscient, then he knows more about ourselves then we know about ourselves. He knew exactly how she was going to react, and exactly what she was going to say simply because he had all the information he could ever need to calculate what how things were going to turn out. He knows how much of her crap I can take and knows when I'm going to say enough is enough. He knows that we are going to go out to eat at a certain restaurant because he knows we used to go there all the time and we haven't gone for awhile. He knows that a hot waitress needed extra hours so she took over a co-workers shift. He knows what table were going to sit at because he knows why everyone else is going the same restaurant and the order that they are going to be seated and when they are going to leave. He knows that I'm a friendly person so that when the hot waitress comes over, I'm going to smile as I hand her the menu after ordering. He knows my girlfriend is gonna see that smile and freak out. And he knows that I'm going to break up with her the next day. How does he know that I'm going to wait until the next day? Because he knows me that well. Now....at no point did he ever do anything to effect anyones free will. He just knew what was going to happen with 100% detail because he knows everything else there is to know with 100% detail. He knows how everything is going to effect everything because he knows everything.
Is he just trying to prove himself right? If so then logically (sic) God must have a sense of self-doubt, and hence does not really know everything, only thinks that he does (or assumes he does, believes he does, etc...)
:blink:
Did he know I was going to use a smiley I've never used before? We shall see...
:fear2:
I know that if she reads this you are in big trouble. :DQuote:
Originally posted by dwightfry@19 May 2004 - 08:59
I'm sorry...but I see absolutly NO logic in your debate. So something knows what is going to happen, that doesn't make you confined to anything. Think about it at a much smaller scale. My girlfriend get jelouse very easily, often resulting in anger. My ex-girlfriend shows up at a party and gives me a hug. Now... I predict that my girlfriend is going to yell at me later. Wow...on the ride home...her anger comes out. She had a choice on how she was going to handle that. From what I knew about her, I predicted what was going to happen and I was right. Me making that prediction in no way changed her free will. It in no way affected how she chose to act. That was all her own doing. Well...if God is Omniscient, then he knows more about ourselves then we know about ourselves. He knew exactly how she was going to react, and exactly what she was going to say simply because he had all the information he could ever need to calculate what how things were going to turn out. He knows how much of her crap I can take and knows when I'm going to say enough is enough. He knows that we are going to go out to eat at a certain restaurant because he knows we used to go there all the time and we haven't gone for awhile. He knows that a hot waitress needed extra hours so she took over a co-workers shift. He knows what table were going to sit at because he knows why everyone else is going the same restaurant and the order that they are going to be seated and when they are going to leave. He knows that I'm a friendly person so that when the hot waitress comes over, I'm going to smile as I hand her the menu after ordering. He knows my girlfriend is gonna see that smile and freak out. And he knows that I'm going to break up with her the next day. How does he know that I'm going to wait until the next day? Because he knows me that well. Now....at no point did he ever do anything to effect anyones free will. He just knew what was going to happen with 100% detail because he knows everything else there is to know with 100% detail. He knows how everything is going to effect everything because he knows everything.
And it's not even my turn to play God.
Actually she doesn't exist at the moment. :( :PQuote:
I know that if she reads this you are in big trouble.
I actually have my own beliefs on that. Everything posted before was my understanding of generic religios beliefs. It isn't actually what I believe really. In the beginning God was all there was. Being omniscient, he can obviously comprehend his own power but never really experience it. I can comprehend what it would be like to win the lottery, but that isn't the same as experiencing it. So...he took part of himself and turned it into souls. Souls, having been part of God also have the same powers as God but simply aren't as powerful as God. So now God can experience his true power by ruling over the souls. He's happy. But now the souls have the same problem. They are powerful and can comprehend there power but never experience it. So life was created. The soul chooses everything about your life before you are born, your sex, if you have a handicap, what kind of parents you have, all that. When you are born, your soul forgets everything and just experiences the life that they created. It is through experiencing life without the powers, they can experience their true power when we pass.Quote:
If God knows everything that has ever happened and that is ever going to happen, what was the point of him actually bothering to make the universe in the first place?
The same idea as if nothing was bad then how would you know what was good? How could you truly understand what you have?
From all the theory's I've heard on God, this one seemed to make the most sense to me. It seemed to answer the most, previously unanswerable, questions.
i just got it - free willieQuote:
Originally posted by Mr JP Fugley+19 May 2004 - 09:21--></div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (Mr JP Fugley @ 19 May 2004 - 09:21)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'><!--QuoteBegin-Sparsely@19 May 2004 - 08:45
sparsely fights the urge to post a picture of a famous movie whale in this thread. :helpsmile:
:lol: :lol: :lol:[/b][/quote]
Free Willie!!!!!
http://www.mmnet.cz/simpsons/images/misc/fbi-willie.jpg
(According to the mugshot, Willie is over 6 feet tall. I never would have guessed)
Why do you people keep misinterpreting me and keep refering to things that I never said? :huh:
I never said your beliefs were illogical. Beliefs are convictions that can either be logical or illogical. There are no ways to prove if they are logical or illogical, true or false. This is why they are called beliefs. I respect your beliefs and I'm sure you respect mine (I think I said this before, I'm agnostic).Quote:
The fact that you do not understand the entire universe and it's workings does not make other people's beliefs illogical.
If I were to say that your beliefs are stupid and wrong and mine were right, then I would sure be an arrogant bastard since I don't have any way of proving it.
Like I said before, I'm not claiming I'm right and everyone else is wrong. I can be wrong, God can be omniscient and we can still have free will. But from a logical point of view I still haven't seen anything to support that view.
I could say the same thing about you. How can you try to define a supernatural being who is capable of defying all logic, by using logical terms with logical definitions (omniscient, omnipotent and omnipresent), coined by finite and fallible humans? You, as a human, are also susceptible of being wrong when defining God the way you do.Quote:
Like I said, you are trying to explain the workings of the infinite within the framework of the finite (very much so) that simply cannot work.
It is not my intention to offend anyone's beliefs. If I did I apologise.Quote:
I like your posting style, familiar as it is. These repetitive diatribes must take quite a while to put together. At least it is not so rude this way.
As to my posting style, I'm sorry I can't be more eloquent, but English is not my first language. Perhaps that's why I'm constantly being misinterpreted. :unsure:
Who knows?Quote:
Speak to the frog, ask him about the internal combustion engine. Does he understand it yet.
Perhaps if you give the frog a few million years of learning, you might be surprised.
To dwightfry and his/her (perhaps too much :D ) detailed explanation:
You just proved my point again!
If an omniscient God knows everything, and I mean EVERYTHING, about you or anyone else, then he sure knew all about your future and your choices even before you were born. We agree on this, right? I will assume so.
I'm not saying he will force you in doing something you don't want to.
I'm saying that for him to "see" your future and your choices, they have to be already pre-determined by God since he can't be wrong in his predictions of your future. What he "sees" is what will happen, no matter what.
If you can't escape his predictions (if you did, you would prove that God isn't omniscient, which is impossible because he IS God and he IS omniscient) then you are confined to the future that he foresaw.
If you are confined to an already foreseen future (pre-determined), then you can't possibly have free will. What seems like choice to you is simply an illusion.
That's the conclusion that I also came up with. An omniscient God implies that he knows everything beforehand, which leads to the mind puzzling paradox described in your question.Quote:
If God knows everything that has ever happened and that is ever going to happen, what was the point of him actually bothering to make the universe in the first place?
I'm afraid this is not for me or any human to come up with an answer. That question can only be answered by God himself/herself/itself if he/she/it exists.
I agree 100%. This is why no one can say he/she is absolutely right, since in a near future, better theories or new evidence can debunk the old theories completely.Quote:
Try to explain the Universe in terms of Newtonian Physics, you can't because the physics is wrong. It seems right in a very limited way. However as our knowledge of the universe expanded then it became obvious that Newton got it wrong in a number of ways. It was "right" within the limited ability to observe and record at that time, but it was not right for the whole universe, so we had to move on to new understanding.
Fair enough. But the same applies to you. Which tools did you use to understand and define God the way you do?Quote:
Now try to explain the working of God in terms of human understanding of time and space. Nah, that doesn't work any better than the attempt to explain spacetime purely in terms of Newtonian physics.
The point is that you cannot understand or explain those things which you do not have the tools to understand or explain.
Let's be reasonable here. You and I are speculating. Saying that God is omniscient is a logical speculation. I merely applied some more logic into that speculation.
Again the misinterpretations.Quote:
So to deny the existence of God based on playground "logic" is an exercise in arrogance and futility.
You either didn't read, in full, my previous posts or I'm as lousy as I think I am when expressing myself in English (it's probably the latter :frusty: ).
In all my posts I've been trying to say that the existence of an omniscient God can't co-exist with free will.
What does this mean to you?
To me it means that God can still exist. He can be omniscient, omnipresent and omnipotent, but if this is true, humans can't have free will.
If you believe in God then I'm sure you won't be worried in having free will or not, since ultimately "it's all in the hands of God", like people usually say.
:D He also doesn't seem all that muscled, but when he tears his clothes apart... :DQuote:
(According to the mugshot, Willie is over 6 feet tall. I never would have guessed)
http://club.telepolis.com/iivangm/imgnes/willie1.gif
... Willie frees himself. :lol:
I believe that both exist, you said that logically they cannot both exist.Quote:
This is why if you want to keep your belief in an omniscient, omnipotent and omnipresent God creator of all things, you will have to discard the possibility of human free will, since, in a logical point of view, both can't co-exist.
You described my belief as being illogical.
People do understand what you are saying, it's just that you are wrong. It is not illogical to believe that free will can exist in the presence of an omniscient being. Just because you cannot explain it does not make it illogical. It just makes it beyond your understanding.
I said earlier, any being who does not have these attributes is not God. I am not placing attributes on God, I am describing what I understand Him to be.Quote:
by using logical terms with logical definitions (omniscient, omnipotent and omnipresent), coined by finite and fallible humans? You, as a human, are also susceptible of being wrong when defining God the way you do.
What do you mean by logical terms with logical definitions btw. These are words with meanings, what has logic got to do with it. Again I think you may see logic as some sort of magic word.
And perhaps in a few million years we may be advanced enough to have a better understanding of the nature of God. This is my point, like the frog we are not at that stage, but one day ....Quote:
QUOTE
Speak to the frog, ask him about the internal combustion engine. Does he understand it yet.
Who knows?
Perhaps if you give the frog a few million years of learning, you might be surprised.
I'm just not getting ya.
So, just explain this to me. How does my knowing that my girlfriend is going to get mad take away her 'ability or discretion to choose' to get mad? How is her choice 'constrained by external circumstances?'Quote:
free will
n.
1. The ability or discretion to choose; free choice: chose to remain behind of my own free will.
2. The power of making free choices that are unconstrained by external circumstances or by an agency such as fate or divine will.
God, being the omniscient being that he is, also knew that she was going to get mad.
So...even you say it isn't effected by an 'agency such as fate or divine will'.Quote:
I'm not saying he will force you in doing something you don't want to.
Where's the problem?!? :blink:
(B.T.W. I think your english is fine....better then mine even, and it's my only language)
To me your belief is illogical. To you it is logical. Just because it sounds illogical to me doesn't mean I'm right and everyone else is wrong.Quote:
I believe that both exist, you said that logically they cannot both exist.
You described my belief as being illogical.
People do understand what you are saying, it's just that you are wrong. It is not illogical to believe that free will can exist in the presence of an omniscient being. Just because you cannot explain it does not make it illogical. It just makes it beyond your understanding.
I already said over and over that I could be wrong. It's just that you "seem" wrong to me, but eventually you could be right.
When I started the topic I was hoping that people could put aside their emotions towards their beliefs and simply analyze the theory in a logical way.
But you clearly failed in doing that when you state, and I will quote again: "it's just that you are wrong."
If you are so convinced that you are right and I'm wrong, then could you please explain me how can both an omniscient God and free will possibly co-exist? I would be glad if you could enlighten me. :huh:
If you say that it's possible but we just can't understand it, then I will use the same argument on you and say that an omniscient God and free will can't possibly co-exist; you just can't understand it.
The problem is that you DO understand what I'm saying since it does follow logical thought. You simply refuse to accept it. But that's fine, we have different points of view and different beliefs. I'm not here trying to "force" or "convert" anyone into my beliefs. I'm merely exposing a theory.
True. The current definition of God, coined by humans, is an omniscient, omnipotent and omnipresent being. If he lacks one of those attributes he can no longer be called God according to the current definition. But the definition may change and you can still call him God even though he lacks some attributes. I'm getting carried away, this is just a semantics problem. :DQuote:
I said earlier, any being who does not have these attributes is not God. I am not placing attributes on God, I am describing what I understand Him to be.
Tell me, do you really understand God to be that way, or you just picked up the definition of God from others, and accepted it. There's a very big difference between understanding God by yourself and accepting what other people understand of God.
If you do understand God by yourself, and that leads you to the definition that was already coined by others, I would like to know how you did it, so I can also try to understand him the way you do.
Words, or terms, are logical definitions (multiple words) combined into just one. Instead of saying "someone or something that knows everything; having total knowledge; knowing everything" you simply say "omniscient".Quote:
What do you mean by logical terms with logical definitions btw. These are words with meanings, what has logic got to do with it. Again I think you may see logic as some sort of magic word.
If I tell you that God is hrgtgdjhjtss you will not understand (neither do I for that matter) because that is not a word, or better yet, it is not a term with a logical definition.
The "meaning" that you referred to, IS the logical definition behind a word.
So as you can see, logic isn't that magical after all. You use logic to write and to think.
So you agree with me that if proper time and thought is given to unknown subjects, they can eventually be understood to a certain extent.Quote:
And perhaps in a few million years we may be advanced enough to have a better understanding of the nature of God. This is my point, like the frog we are not at that stage, but one day ....
So after all you also agree with me in that logic can be applied in the understanding of a complex being such as God. It might be difficult, but it's possible.
But I'm still puzzled.
What makes you so sure that we are not coming about at "that stage"?
What would be necessary to reach "that stage"?
Better yet, what is "that stage"?
Some years ago no one would have thought that the "computer age" was just around the corner, until Alan Turing published his book "On Computable Numbers (...)".
It seemed like any other normal day, but something had already changed...
Ok first of all, you can't use yourself as an example since you're not omniscient.Quote:
How does my knowing that my girlfriend is going to get mad take away her 'ability or discretion to choose' to get mad? How is her decision 'constrained by external circumstances?'
God, being the omniscient being that he is, also knew that she was going to get mad.
Imagine that God predicted that she would get mad, but she actually didn't!
If God predicted one thing and the outcome was completely different, then God would have to be wrong; he would have to be surprised by the fact that she didn't got mad, unlike his prediction. She would really have free will.
Then you might ask the question:
But wait a minute, isn't God supposed to ALWAYS be right and NEVER be wrong?
Yes, of course! An omniscient God has to be right ALL THE TIME!
This leads us to the fact that she simply HAS to get mad because that was God's prediction of the future.
God's predictions HAVE to be her future, otherwise God would be wrong and that is impossible, if he is omniscient.
If she has to follow God's predictions then it is all pre-determined from the start.
If her future was already pre-determined, then she had no choice: she had to get mad at you, no matter what. If you can't choose your destiny, then you have no free will.
Being forced to do something and doing something because you "had to" or "you were meant to", are different things.Quote:
So...even you say it isn't effected by an 'agency such as fate or divine will'.
If God is responsible for a pre-determined future, then he is indirectly responsible for your choices (although not forcing you, he just makes you that way).
WOW!
That was a good 30 min-45 min read lol.
I'm not smart or anything, what's an agnostic? is that like an Athiest?
After reading and thinking...
Wouldnt some people assume that "God" or an Omnipotent being gave us free will?
Sure God might know what choices I will make, that does not restrain me from my everyday life of what I want to do. Sure God knows I'm going to go to the bathroom, or catch a cold. Sure he knows when a crime might be taking place. The fact God does not interfere with our daily lives must be proof that we indeed have "Free Will." So a Higher being knows what I will have for lunch. Atleast he doesnt force me to eat peas and carrots like my parents did when I was a child. Now, that's having no free will there, growing up. :P
Not trying to try start a debate or keep 1 going.
My my my.....what interesting debates we get into at 'FILEsharing.com'.
Try this.
1: Those who believe in the Christian God get our beliefs from a book called the Bible, maybe you've heard of it. :P
As for free will: God refers to us as his children. Most fathers can predict what thier kids are gonna do to a remarkable degree. Why? We know our kids. I don't have any, but I have a huge passle of nieces, nephew, and assorted cousins. I know, for instance, that if I tell my cousin July (Shes 9) that she can't spend the night with us, she'll pitch a hissy fit. I don't make her, it's sitll her choice to be a big girl. That I know affects her not at all.
Perhaps He was lonely. We were created in his image and we know lonliness, so might He. Perhaps He didn't make us perfect because perfect would be boring. He wanted us to grow to perfection. Thats why the question of "Why did God let this happen.." is pointless. He didn't, we did. Freewillie.....errr........free will in action. I know for example that my cousin Kim is in love with a possessive loser who's gonna break her heart. It's still her choice. She's grown, and like us, can exercise free will.
In an aside, a friend knew that when I stupidly put a shim under my Athlon XP2500+ I'd Bork it. He was right. Does that make it his fault? Did it die because of him? Because he 'knew'?
EDIT:Congrats. You're even more long winded than me! :P
If God,knowing what choice you are going to make does not intervene then the choice made is yours ... that He knew what the choice would be proves His omniscienceQuote:
Originally posted by Johnny_B@16 May 2004 - 20:07
Is free will real or just an illusion?
For those of you who believe in an omniscient and omnipotent God, consider this:
How can we have free will if God, as an omniscient entity, already knows what your choices will be?
someone prove me wrong here (pls, i really don't know if it's flawed)
my little theory/exp.
k, if god is all-knowing and all-powerful, as stated b4 me, if knows exactly wat ur going to do so it's a contradiction to free will, here goes:
suppose u build a time machine and u go forward, oh say, a week to the next thursday. then u observe one of ur friends for that entire day and write down everything he/she does that day in a book, go back in time and give ur friend the book, tell him/her to read it, and then tell him/her to do everything differently on thursday then wat the book states, PURE CONTRADICTION.
if god already knew wat u were going to do (ie no free will, all-knowing mega-being) on thursday (future) and that person did those things while another observed him/her and then went back in time and told that person to do everything differently than wat he/she did on thursday, then surely god is not all-knowing and therefore not all-powerful :blink: think about it, and pls prove me wrong, i'm getting scared here :unsure: :helpsmile: :helpsmile: maybe this is a reason we can't travel in time, if there is a god, maybe it doesn't want us to meddle wit his masterpiece (universe, humans, etc.) :blink:
Hey cap, you're assuming that God doesn't know that you're going to next Thursday, writing down all that crap, that you're going to tell you're friend and He won't know what your friend is going to do with the information.
If he/she can change that day, freewilly....er...will is proven, but only freewill. You haven't proven that God didn't know what would happen. What, did you think God would be fooled by a mere time machine? He created time, so it'll have no mysteries for Him.
no, god knows wat's going to happen, he knows ur going forward in time. but the point is IF god pre-determined wat ur friend is going to do on thursday, then surely u cannot change the chain of events on thursday for ur friend even if u show/tell him wat he is "supposed" to do on thursday. simply put, if ur friend does things absolutely differently on thursday then wat u observed, free will is REAL and god is still all-knowing (if there is a god) but does not control u in that way (fate, pre-determination, blah blah blah), but if ur friend cannot change the chain of events of thursday (forced to by some supernatural force), then surely god is real (or some mega-all-knowing being) and there is no free will, my "theory" shows that both possibilities are true (both pre-determination [no free will], and free will can be true, but one has to prove the other wrong), yet they both are false, until we actually build a time machine to test this "theory" (highly unlikely), then i guess we really will never know. personally, i believe there is a god, but i do believe there is free will (thus the "prove me wrong"), now if u'll excuse me, i'm gonna make an attempt to make a time machine :lol: :D
Well...
Since time travel is not possible, you cannot use it as an example that proves that God isn't omnipotent. That's nonsense. :lol:
It's like saying:
Clear gibberish! B)Quote:
Originally posted by imaginary
To determine whether light travels in straight lines *** , if I could see round corners then light doesn't travel in straight lines, therefore light doesn't travel in straight lines. (Now I gotta work out a way to see round corners!)
(*** Not counting any relativistic gravitational lens effects. <_< )
damnit, i was gonna use that as my rebuttle :angry: :lol: , ya, time travel is not possible, but i guess i kinda wanted to make an analogy (obviously i'm not saying that anyone's ever going to try this experiment) but i guess it backfired <_< :angry: :angry: :( :helpsmile: :helpsmile:Quote:
Not counting any relativistic gravitational lens effects
Kind of, but not really. Agnostic generally allows for the possibility of a diety to exist, but requires some sort of evidence before ruling on the existence of any diety.Quote:
Originally posted by Canadian Knight@14 June 2004 - 07:19
...I'm not smart or anything, what's an agnostic? is that like an Athiest?...
:ninja:
What a stunningly magnificent load of bollocks you all have contributed to, here.
Profound indeed, but not in so sustained a manner as to be even the least bit boring.
My congratulations to the executive producer of this fine mess! ;)
There's no way that God could have foreseen this thread, hey? :lol:
God?Quote:
Originally posted by barbarossa@2 July 2004 - 04:29
There's no way that God could have foreseen this thread, hey? :lol:
Who's He?
JUST KIDDING, OF COURSE!
I'm a bit surprised he's been allowed to play such a large part in this thread, given the prevailing attitude on the board.
I'm very much gratified, in fact. :)
Me too. 'Course, MN is a pretty damn cool mod. Now if RatFaced see's this, all hell is gonna break loose!! :lol: Just kidding, Rat.Quote:
I'm a bit surprised he's been allowed to play such a large part in this thread, given the prevailing attitude on the board.
I'm very much gratified, in fact.
Hey! Step away from the ban button! I repeat: Step away from the ban button! This is you finall warning!! Ummm...errr...hey rat, did I say please??
Later taters....forever? :rolleyes:
BoNe
EDIT:God knew this was gonna happen! Why didn't he stop me? FREEWILLY...WILL! B)
Yes, indeed; MN is a truly tolerant mod. ;)
He abides me that I might make him giggle and thus provide him a measure of warmth in his far-north abode. :)
Rat, on the other hand, provides his own heat, so to speak. :D
As always a pleasure to amuse.Quote:
Originally posted by j2k4@2 July 2004 - 02:29
What a stunningly magnificent load of bollocks you all have contributed to, here.
Profound indeed, but not in so sustained a manner as to be even the least bit boring.
My congratulations to the executive producer of this fine mess! ;)
Did you realize there was a lot more, but quite a bit got lost in the great trashcan incident.
I remember I posted a lot of absolutely brilliant material, pure gold it was. Unfortunately all now lost.
As always a pleasure to amuse.Quote:
Originally posted by J'Pol+3 July 2004 - 13:49--></div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (J'Pol @ 3 July 2004 - 13:49)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'> <!--QuoteBegin-j2k4@2 July 2004 - 02:29
What a stunningly magnificent load of bollocks you all have contributed to, here.
Profound indeed, but not in so sustained a manner as to be even the least bit boring.
My congratulations to the executive producer of this fine mess! ;)
Did you realize there was a lot more, but quite a bit got lost in the great trashcan incident.
I remember I posted a lot of absolutely brilliant material, pure gold it was. Unfortunately all now lost. [/b][/quote]
What remains should be published, I tell you.
I remember when we amused ourselves with "three-word-stories" and such; this whole board has come a ways since then, I think. ;)
BTW-Welcome back, you old rascal! :)
What remains should be published, I tell you.Quote:
Originally posted by j2k4+3 July 2004 - 20:30--></div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (j2k4 @ 3 July 2004 - 20:30)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'>Quote:
Originally posted by J'Pol@3 July 2004 - 13:49
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@2 July 2004 - 02:29
What a stunningly magnificent load of bollocks you all have contributed to, here.
Profound indeed, but not in so sustained a manner as to be even the least bit boring.
My congratulations to the executive producer of this fine mess! ;)
As always a pleasure to amuse.
Did you realize there was a lot more, but quite a bit got lost in the great trashcan incident.
I remember I posted a lot of absolutely brilliant material, pure gold it was. Unfortunately all now lost.
I remember when we amused ourselves with "three-word-stories" and such; this whole board has come a ways since then, I think. ;)
BTW-Welcome back, you old rascal! :) [/b][/quote]
Thank you, scallywag.
Okay this is my theory on this discussion. I'm very sketchy on beliefs at the moment since mine resemble paint splattered on a wall but I think that god did pre-determine our fate as a whole. If god is everything we say he is then he created all the problems and made sure that they would occur. Proof of this is that god created Lucifer who later became Satan. For those who don't know of the bible story Lucifer used to be gods right hand man untill he got sick of working under gods rule and decided to start his own taking some of gods angels to be his now demons (which is where the term fallen angels came from). Now if god could see into the future and he also claims to love us then why would he create something that would lead us away from perfection? Also it's evident that Adam and Eve in fact were not perfect. If they were then they would have refused the temptation that Satan had for them to taste of the fruit of the knowledge of good and evil. Another thing that comes into play is that god knew that they would be tempted by the tree since it is human nature to be curious since if we weren't then everything we have come to know wouldn't exist since we wouldn't have cared enough to discover anything. I think it's compleatly possible that we're one huge experiment that he's almost done with. If god wanted to the devil would have been done away with long ago. God could have given free will but I think he knew exactly what we were going to do or else why would he have written an entire book of prophocies ( the bible) without being sure that it was going to be right in the end. So sure it's possible that god did give us free will but he did stick a few things in life to make sure we made the decision that he predicts. I mean wouldn't you look like a fool if you told someone that a building was going to fall in two hours , three minutes, and twenty six seconds and then it didn't .So to make sure it did you would plant a bomb so that you wouldn't look like a compleat fool. So I guess my answer on this is yes, our lives are pre-determined.
Also as for the theory of time travel and changing the future for a friend by telling them what to do and say how do you know that god didn't expect you to do that as well?
Amen to that poeple
How's your mind?
there's the loophole i was looking 4 ;)Quote:
how do you know that god didn't expect you to do that as well?