Cylon wrote:Look, I'm willing to discuss things with you regardless of our disagreement, but as soon as you start speculating on what I really think deep down, you're not operating on good faith. Who the hell are you to tell me what my conscience says?
Sorry about that, Cylon; I worded that badly. I don't see myself so much as one who declares to others what their consciences say and don't say. Rather, I should just ask you questions about your conscience, and maybe point out some things that I think are odd in the answer you give me.
Cylon wrote:Trust me, as far as dealing with the implications of the possibility that there is no God and no afterlife, the thought that I might not build something that will outlast the probable lifespan of the universe is not even on my radar.
Why isn't it on your radar?
Cylon wrote:Now, I'm not in any way saying that our current understanding of the universe is comprehensive and can't be wrong, but until there is evidence to say it is, I'm going to go with the best evidence we have.
Even when the "best evidence we have" indicates to you that preserving some good things forever is impossible? That doesn't seem like a very optimistic approach.
Cylon wrote:All of your arguments here have been based on a set of axioms (God exists and his intent for us is to build things that will last eternally) that you haven't even tried to prove.
You've mistaken me. God existing is not an axiom I'm asking
anybody to believe in. But our need "to build things that will last eternally" very much
is. I don't think we should
obsess about it. We can build many things that will only last for finite periods of time before we ever get around to
beginning to build the things we want to last forever.
But if your conscience doesn't require you to at least
think about what it would take to build some things that will last forever, then how long a space of time
does your conscience require that the things will last that you build for future generations of humanity? Does it just require you to build things that will last until all your grandchildren are dead (assuming you have grandchildren)? Or your great-grandchildren? How long does your commitment to the welfare of humanity require you to build things that will provide benefit to humanity?