MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 02, 2025 12:56 am
You’re right that ‘God’ and ‘afterlife’ are logically separable concepts
in the abstract, but once ‘God’ is specified as a good, personal creator of moral agents, the hypothesis of an afterlife becomes a natural and arguably expected consequence of that God’s character and purposes,
rather than a disconnected add‑on.
You emphasize "in the abstract." Of course we're arguing about things that are, as you shout out,
in the abstract. Please tell me what's more abstract than the concept of an afterlife? Or the idea of a God? We can't make a discussion about life after death into anything but an abstraction. Why are you pretending otherwise?
It only "becomes a natural and arguably expected consequence of that God’s character and purposes" if you take Perpexity AI's word for it. Absent knowing what your prompt was, it's unfair for you to ask me to engage her.
To be fair, even without your girl Perplexity's help, I'm not sure I'd accept your assessment of God's character and purposes. Defining the character of God seems to be one of those
abstractions! that people have a difficult time agreeing on. Is God a deity who drowns his kids in the bathtub when he gets angry (see, for example, Noah's ark) or is he the water-to-wine God of wedding parties?
MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 02, 2025 12:56 am
I was just talking to someone today in my neighborhood who is an atheist. Has been for forty years or so. I mentioned that I went through a period of time 'in the same boat' as he. I said that that to me it doesn't logically follow that a 'good God', a perfectly moral God, the creator of agents with moral judgement, would simply annihilate us at death.
It just doesn't make any sense to me.
We already know what makes sense to you. However, you only told half of the story. What did your forty-year-atheist buddy say in reply? What makes sense to him?
MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 02, 2025 12:56 am
If there is a God it seems reasonable to believe that this God has a purpose in mind for His creations which includes moral agency to choose/grow/progress.
Sure. But that you personally find something reasonable has little to do with either reality or what others find reasonable.
MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 02, 2025 12:56 am
I suppose you could believe in an afterlife without believing in a personal/loving God but the most coherent and morally fitting outcome, to me, seems to be a situation in which God is working along with us in concert towards some greater goal. Some kind of eternal goal. Otherwise, it all comes down to annihilation again.
Of course one could believe in an afterlife without believing in a personal God. Many years ago, I studied meditation under a mentor who taught about the transmigration of souls--or reincarnation, which is a kind of afterlife--without subscribing to any kind of belief in a personal God. You could never know a better man than he.
MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 02, 2025 12:56 am
That seems to be at cross purposes with a perfectly moral/superior Creator.
You keep referring to a God who is 'perfectly moral.' Is this the perfectly moral Hebrew God who promoted slavery in the Old Testament? Or is it the morally superior Mormon God who commanded his prophet to screw the babysitter behind his wife's back?
You also keep referring to annihilation. To one who has lived a full and rich life, the idea of death--that step into the unknown--might not feel like annihilation. For a person who has lived long, deep, and well, I would imagine death might feel like a well-earned rest.