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#1
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*I had this thought last night. I'm posting this in the debate forum just in case. However, this is intended to provoke thought and meaningful discussion, not hateful debate.*
Suppose you gave birth to a child who was blind and deaf, thus, could not fully comprehend what you are. Would you sentence this child, your child, to a life of punishment for not believing you exist?
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I may not be as excited about Avatar as I use to be. But, I will never forget that it changed my life. As our bodies die, all the stars reply, "Now you see the lie" ![]() "Bide your time and hold out hope" |
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#2
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No.
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Stay thirsty my friends... C V M N |
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#3
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The child could still feel you. Why wouldn't he/she believe you exist?
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#4
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Okay, so the child can feel things. Assuming the child is aware of the idea of having a parent, how would the child decide which object is its parent? Furthermore, if you want the child to understand that you are indeed its parent, you would be present and nurture the child, show it love and care in ways the child could sense and understand.
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I may not be as excited about Avatar as I use to be. But, I will never forget that it changed my life. As our bodies die, all the stars reply, "Now you see the lie" ![]() "Bide your time and hold out hope" |
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#5
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You should probably just say what you're trying to get at.
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#6
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It was a personal choice to put it that way. I didn't believe I could properly communicate the idea while being completely straight forward. Surely that doesn't bother you?
__________________
I may not be as excited about Avatar as I use to be. But, I will never forget that it changed my life. As our bodies die, all the stars reply, "Now you see the lie" ![]() "Bide your time and hold out hope" |
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#7
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I don't think the intent could be more plain anyway.One might similarly ask: If obedience is the goal, would one be better off with a human servant or a robot? Or, put another way, if the answer is human, was obedience the goal? Hmmm... |
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#8
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Quote:
Oops, double post
__________________
I may not be as excited about Avatar as I use to be. But, I will never forget that it changed my life. As our bodies die, all the stars reply, "Now you see the lie" ![]() "Bide your time and hold out hope" |
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#9
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No. First thing that comes to my mind is if that child is aware of its own existence to make such conclusions. One generally experiences the existential crisis in the adolescence period (in which we are no longer children).
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#10
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Children (animals included) normally perceive the one who cares for them and nurtures them constantly as a parental figure. Therefore, it would have a sense of who you are.
I would allow it to live. Because no matter if it recognizes you or not, it has a right to life. It's there for a reason.
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#11
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Quote:
Not sure where you are getting the 'for not believing in me' just from being blind and deaf, and no, I'd wouldn't PUNISH them for something that wasn't their fault.
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#12
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Translation
Quote:
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:psyduck: |
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#13
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On an afterthought, I think there wouldn't be such a situation for the hypothetical child. The world the child knows is more "real" than the world we know. The interaction the child has with the world is entirely empirical. One can be tricked with an image or sound but it is very difficult to fool our other senses.
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#14
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One thing to think about also in addition to the above mentioned is that within our lifetimes, science will probably find a way to make the blind see and the deaf hear. To keep this child alive with your time and effort so that you can hopefully give him or her the gift of sight or hearing (and life) would be one of the greatest things.
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#15
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I don't think this thread necessarily challenges the existence of a god. The conversations end before they can get interesting if you always immediately bail out on the "existence" question, IMO.
![]() Mostly, I think this thread questions whether we have any idea what a god--if one exists--wants. Unfortunately, the deaf/blind analogy is not ideal because deafness and blindness are uncommon whereas--and here's a contentious assertion, I suppose--most among even the religious would not claim to hear/see a god. After all, if they did, the terms "faithful" and "religious" would not be as interchangeable as they are. There was a great Twilight Zone episode many years ago that went something like this: Aliens suddenly appear in the UN General Assembly, express concern over all the miserable little quarrels between nations, the nuclear weapons, etc., and make it clear that they're ready to take drastic measures to "fix" things. Motivated by fear of the unknown consequences, the leaders negotiate unilateral disarmament in less than 24 hours. The next day, the aliens return. Unfortunately, it turns out that they were misunderstood. Rather than being disappointed in the existence of conflict, they were disappointed with how *little* conflict there was; they had long ago intended the human race to be a race of bloodthirsty warriors who would fight on their behalf. The episode ends as millions of spaceships descend on Earth to kill everybody and restart the breeding process. Such a great episode. Now where were we? ![]() Even if one is not religious, it is often easy to use "god" as a placeholder for an answer to the question, "What put us here?" On the other hand, unless you happen to be one of those privileged few "children" who are not "deaf/blind", knowing what that a god might want of you is harder. But... would a being capable of creating the universe leave to chance that the human mind should choose to perform the task for which it was intended? Seems a terribly unnecessary risk to me! I feel incapable of offending god. That's not a proud statement, but rather a humble acknowledgement of insignificance. If indeed I have a divinely-given task, then I suspect I'm carrying it out without my knowledge. Admittedly, that does make the life I know remarkably like to a waste product in the grand scheme of things, but I haven't found a better gig yet, soo...
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