Darth Wong wrote:pecker wrote:Dude, I'm not some fundie moron. I'm not saying I believe any of this. And you are reading WAAAAY too far into my example. And you are twisting my words around. You're makign up issues I never brought up.
I don't particularly care whether you claim to be a fundie or not; your argument is totally illogical.
It was stated that because knowledge is good, and Satan gives knowledge, then Satan is good. I pointed out a flaw in that analogy. I just chose murder because it's direct. I could have chosen stealing, insulting someone, punching someone in the face, throwing a water balloon.
If you object to the extreme nature of your own analogy being thrown back at you, then you shouldn't have used it. As for your argument, I have already explained that it was broken, and you ignored that point. The original idea was:
1) Knowledge is good
2) Satan granted knowledge by getting Eve to eat the apple, so this was a
good thing, not a "sin" as all the idiot fundies keep calling it.
Your rebuttal was:
1) Murder is bad
2) Murder can potentially result in knowledge
3) Therefore, knowledge is not necessarily good
4) Therefore, eating the apple was indeed a sin
This rebuttal was blindingly stupid. Murder is bad, but knowledge is
still good. The fact that murder can
result in knowledge does not change that fact. The fact that A can cause B does not mean that every attribute of A also applies to B. Did you even
try to think this idiocy through?
All I'm saying is the whole Satan/Knowledge/Good example was so messed up that I'd simply point out a flaw.
Too bad you fucked up and made yourself look ridiculous in the process.
How did you get that?
I never said
knowleedge was bad. I said the path that gets you knowledge may be a bad one. Within the context of the Biblical story, eating the apple was bad. Althoguh the knowledge gained may have been good, the action was bad.
Now, it doesn't matter whether we think eating the apple was bad or not. According to the story, it was bad. That's the entire POINT of the story. Unless you're willing to simply take that as granted when discussing the story, you shouldn't use it as an example. If you don't want to use that as a guideline, then pick a different story.
This is the premise of the story. It doesn't matter whether you or I agree with it or not.
a) God is good, therefore that which God states is Good.
b) Going against what God asks us to do is Sin.
As far as the story goes, these are fact. Now, you might not agree with it. But these was the author's intentions.
Now, we come into the story with the idea that Knowledge is good. Let's say that is true.
The original argument is this
1) Knowledge is Good
2) Satan gives Knowledge.
3) Therefore, Satan is Good.
However, the fault in this logic is that the action that Satan asked Eve to perform was a sin, within the context of the story. Whether we consider it a sin or not is irrelevent. For all those involved in the story, it is.
So now, Eating apple = Bad. Satan = The guy who says to eat the apple. And the reason that Satan asked Eve to eat the apple was so that she would sin. Satan knew as well that eating the apple was a sin. I'd hardly consider asking/tricking someone into sinning something a Good person would do.
The reason I used the example of murder is that it's something we can all agree on is wrong. In the story, eating the apple was something all involved could agree on was wrong. So while the actual Knowledge gained may be good, the path taken to get it is wrong. And the person who 'hires' you to do it bears some of the blame for the sin involved.
Now, you and I don't think that eating the apple was a sin. That's all fine and dandy in the real world. But if you're going to use a biblical story, you canot deny a 'fact' used in the story. You can disagree with it, but jsut becasue you disagree doesn't make it not true within the context of the story.
Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken --Tyler Durden, Fight Club
"Nothing, in religion or science, or philosophy . . .is more than the proper thing to wear, for a while." -- Charles Fort
"Evolution keeps bumping upward to new levels of creativity and surprise. We're her latest gizmos, her latest toys. Our mission, should we choose to accept it, is to throw ourselves with all our might and mane into what the universe will do with us or without us--creating new forms, new flows, new ways of being, new ways of seeing." -- Howard Bloom