Golan, on 26 Apr 2009, 17:39, said:
Why do you need to live in the first place?
According to the theory under discussion here, because God wanted company.
Golan, on 26 Apr 2009, 17:39, said:
Why do you need to know how things work?
I don't, and nor did I say that I did.
Golan, on 26 Apr 2009, 17:39, said:
Why do you need to have fun?
I don't, and nor did I say that I did.
Golan, on 26 Apr 2009, 17:39, said:
Why do you need to have the urge to nail that girl you were in love with at the age of 22?
I'm seventeen, so the point is irrelevant, but according to the theory under discussion here it's because we are made to love one another and find life-long solace with a partner of the opposite sex, and have children who we can also teach love and respect so that God can have more friends without needing to go through that whole messy business with dust and ribs all over again. According to a rather more practical theory it's because the urge to mate is necessary for the survival of the species, which is what a strange concoction of chemicals has decided through considerable trial and error is best for whatever reason.
Golan, on 26 Apr 2009, 17:39, said:
Where's the difference in this being God's ineffable plan or The Universe's ineffable plan?
Because we're discussing god's plan? (Also, a personal request, could you use a lighter coloured text in future? It is somewhat difficult to read on a dark background.)
Golan, on 26 Apr 2009, 17:39, said:
It's the human nature to try to experience our existence to its fullest extent and to learn from it. All the losses I had to take in my life, all the pain I had to endure did, in retrospect, enrich my life. If you don't feel like this I truly pity you, as you endured all the losses and pain in your life for naught then.
Whatever your personal view, the theory under discussion is that we were made to suffer by a god who could have prevented by forgiving Eve her munch of an apple and showing her why it would have been bad with a bit of a telling off, and then provided a way to attain 'salvation' several billion or perhaps trillion lives later to a small bunch of the population which involved a poor guy being nailed to a cross. I don't feel that I must inflict pain on myself in order to live a good life; I have been incredibly fortunate in the circumstances I have enjoyed in my time so far, but that doesn't stop me from rejoicing every day at being alive. Neither, if god truly loved his children, would he take the view that they had to suffer evil and countless of them would know eternal torment in order for a select few to truly appreciate him. If god's love was all that is claimed in the Bible, do you truly think that there would be anyone who would not rejoice in it, whether or not they have known evil in their short mortal span?