Themis wrote:Seriously. You think inconsistency has nothing to do with anything? I suppose this is also done to protect belief.
I think that the requirement that God be consistent is a poorly thought out and extremely naïve litmus test designed to show that God doesn't exist. We don't require that we ourselves be consistent; why should we require that God be consistent?
Everything in mathematics is completely consistent; either one number equals another number or it does not; either nine is a prime number or it is not; either a three-sided polygon is a triangle or it is not. If you ask a question in mathematics that question has either a yes or no answer. To ask a question in mathematics and get a, "Yes and no," answer is ridiculous. Things in mathematics are so rigorously defined that there are no, "Yes and no," answers.
But in everyday usage you hear people answer, "Yes and no." Not all the time, not even most of the time, but you do hear it, occasionally. Such an answer makes no sense in mathematics; it would be inconsistent in mathematics; but in natural language it might be completely true; it would simply mean that the terms are not rigorously defined; in one sense the answer is yes, and in another sense the answer is no.
Themis wrote:I am basing it on your descriptions in this thread on what you think a good God would do and not do. Since he is not doing some of those things he therefore does not exist.
I put no limit on the time it must take God to do the things I've said He'd do. I've said if one asks God a question, fully ready to base the rest of one's life on whatever answer God provides, then God will give that one an answer. It'd be nice if God gave that one an immediate answer, like God gave me, but I certainly don't require God to do that. God can take as long as S/He wants. If one asks God a question and goes a reasonable amount of time without getting an answer, then that one would be wise to go about her/his ordinary life, living the best that s/he knows how to, but keeping in the back of that one's mind the realization that s/he has asked God a question, and is open at any time for God to respond. What else can this person do?