okay, but
Deuteronomy 13:6-11
Suppose someone secretly entices you—even your brother, your son or daughter, your beloved wife, or your closest friend—and says, ‘Let us go worship other gods’—gods that neither you nor your ancestors have known. They might suggest that you worship the gods of peoples who live nearby or who come from the ends of the earth. But do not give in or listen. Have no pity, and do not spare or protect them. You must put them to death! Strike the first blow yourself, and then all the people must join in. Stone the guilty ones to death because they have tried to draw you away from the Lord your God, who rescued you from the land of Egypt, the place of slavery. Then all Israel will hear about it and be afraid, and no one will act so wickedly again.
and now the all-benevolent, infallible god can change his mind? how curious.
Benevolent doesn't mean without judgement, since you know, divine judge and all
Gonna have to call you out on that one. That's a straw man argument. He was talking about whether god qualifies as omnibenevolent and you subtly changed it to whether god qualifies as benevolent at all while still trying to construe it as the same question.
Personally I don't think a being could harm, or call for the harm, of any being for any reason (except if it was the only possible way to prevent an even greater evil; an exception which is categorically inapplicable to beings that are also omnipotent) and still qualify as omnibenevolent.
Huh, when you bring that up I realize that I'm not sure where I got the idea that he's said to be omnibenevolent at all. Maybe (and this isn't a dumb "agree to disagree" maybe, this is an "I estimate a greater than 40% chance" maybe) I'm wrong about that particular part of the belief system.
And yeah, anything that would dole out the
infinitely disproportionate punishment that christians tend to believe in (i don't think there's actually any real biblical evidence of
eternal punishment?) is infinitely evil.
And yeah, punishment is
entirely worthless unless it changes behavior. If it doesn't, then it's just cruelty. An infinitely-long punishment brooks no change.
Being religious is a very appealing prospect in the general sense because you reject the pursuit of an answer in one way or another, and feel smarter for it.
that's dumb
sorry, i mean I'm not sure if I can put that any other way, that's just sorta dumb. Feeling smarter because you worship your own ignorance? I can't think of any other way to put that concept other than "worshiping your own ignorance", either.
[singularity]
singularity stuff like what you describe is basically more religion, except that it worships Elon Musk or Ray Kurzweil or Eliezer Yudkowsky or whoever and so pretends not to be. You could say it's "better" because the thing you're worshiping is a
possibility, but then you could say the same about UFO cults or Charles Manson, and then you're going
way into crazy.
It is an appealing course of action, as one can see, because most answers to questions you believe to be important are, in fact, beyond your ability to determine (no matter how smugly one may state otherwise, see preceding paragraphs and probably the current one, too). And since it is strictly irrelevant which non-answer you ultimately pick, you might as well pick the one that lets you go places, meet interesting people and sing your heart out in praise for a great and sentient creator, and one that has a very nice historic document to go with it.
I can sorta see how one would get comfort in that, but I don't quite understand why anyone would
want any answers to be beyond one's ability to determine, that sounds way more discomforting than comforting. If anything actually turns out to be intractable or unknowable etc. (like whatever goes on in black holes, most likely), we should probably say "that sucks" and move on to something useful instead of saying "in there lives God" or whatever.
On-topic, free will: seems obviously false to me. There's nothing that could create free will that I know of within our current models of physics, and our current models of physics are hilariously accurate on the level of brains and neurons that make them up.
Our current laws of physics are both incomplete and almost certainly wrong somewhere, maybe everywhere lol
Heck, the assumption that energy cannot be made or destroyed must be wrong or else the big bang should just not have happened and nothing should exist
2spook8me
No, I don't really accept that. We're way too precise on some things to be
entirely wrong. Wrong
somewhere I can believe, yeah, but it's probably not in the range of general relativity or quantum mechanics,
especially between the orders of microns and meters (I.E where neurons and brains live), both of those things are fairly well-constrained and they both predict very well what's going to happen given some event or another (at least probabilisticly, in the case of QM).
Also, the assumption that energy cannot be made or destroyed is
already known to be false globally, we know that for a fact, the universe is expanding and space has a minimum amount of energy per volume, which means that energy is constantly created at long distances. Not to mention the whole "could've already been there at the moment of the Big Bang" thing.