Battleground God
I for one got the medal of honor. No direct hits, no bitten bullets.
You've just taken a direct hit!
Earlier you agreed that it is rational to believe that the Loch Ness monster does not exist if there is an absence of strong evidence or argument that it does. No strong evidence or argument was required to show that the monster does not exist - absence of evidence or argument was enough. But now you claim that the atheist needs to be able to provide strong arguments or evidence if their belief in the non-existence of God is to be rational rather than a matter of faith.
The contradiction is that on the first ocassion (Loch Ness monster) you agreed that the absence of evidence or argument is enough to rationally justify belief in the non-existence of the Loch Ness monster, but on this occasion (God), you do not.[/b]
Objection! They asked for beleifs, not knoledge! Somebody can beleive in something reasonably without knowing it exists! It is reasonable for me to beleive what ever I want, as long as I do not let that convolute accepted fact. There is no proof for or against a god, therefor it isn't unreasonable to beleive he/she/it exists, but it is unreasonable to know for sure. This is opposed to the earlyer example, with Nessy. That was asking it is reasonable to assume knoledge of this monsters existance.
You've just bitten a bullet!
In saying that God has the freedom and power to do that which is logically impossible (like creating square circles), you are saying that any discussion of God and ultimate reality cannot be constrained by basic principles of rationality. This would seem to make rational discourse about God impossible. If rational discourse about God is impossible, there is nothing rational we can say about God and nothing rational we can say to support our belief or disbelief in God. To reject rational constraints on religious discourse in this fashion requires accepting that religious convictions, including your religious convictions, are beyond any debate or rational discussion. This is to bite a bullet.
Rationality is found by a measure of the natrual world, but god exists in a super natural world, thus why science can not measure of quantify any existance or lack of existance of a god. As such god, by bible definitions, and the definitions I got away with earlyer in the test, can do things that can not rationaly be done.
But that isn't even needed for that question to be true, because god could just redefine what a squair, or 72 are in the human mind, keeping logic and reason intact, but changing human knoledge.
Congratulations!
You have been awarded the TPM service medal! This is our third highest award for outstanding service on the intellectual battleground.
The fact that you have progressed through this activity without suffering many hits and biting only one bullet suggests that whilst there are inconsistencies in your beliefs about God, on the whole they are well thought-out.
The direct hits you suffered occurred because some of your answers implied logical contradictions. The bitten bullet occurred because you responded in a way that required that you held a view that most people would have found strange, incredible or unpalatable. At the bottom of this page, we have reproduced the analyses of your direct hits and bitten bullet.
The fact that you did not suffer many hits and only bit one bullet means that you qualify for our third highest award. Well done!
Well it feels good for winning an award for filling out a quiz on morals and reason when these things tend to be a little subjective, and I was never given a chance to explain myself. If I can't give my point, evidence and reasoning, it isn't a very fair test. I als object to this question.
People who die of horrible, painful diseases need to die in such a way for some higher purpose.
Our immune system is our reward for billions upon billions of deaths by disease. Thank you evolution. So this question is a very, very grey topic. A natural system such as evolution could be seen as a higher purpose then human kind.