stuartcr wrote:Your picture is neither a good circle nor an evil circle. It is a connecting line with a relatively circular shape. You cannot assign goodness or a lack of goodness to it, unless you are discussing this with someone that agrees with you. I'm afraid I don't.
What are you talking about? Are you
really suggesting there is no such thing as a "good circle" or a "bad circle," a "good job" or a "bad job"? When someone takes a blurry picture, it's not a "bad picture"? Are you so obtuse that you won't even acknowledge such
basic observations?
This isn't a matter of someone "agree[ing] with me." My five year old daughter knows the difference in a good circle and a bad circle. I know because she's pointed out to me that I don't know how to draw a good one (I'm not terribly good at art, but she is!). So honestly, are you really going to put yourself below the intellectual capacity of a five year old? If so, that says
way more about you than it does the reasonableness of God's existence or the proposition that God is good. I'm sorry to be so direct here, but you need to see how absurd your suggestion is. This isn't one of those issues that reasonable people can disagree on. And there are plenty of things reasonable people can disagree on with respect to God and His attributes! This is just simple conversation about simple reality, and if you won't even grant that there are good circles (well drawn circles) and bad circles (poorly drawn circles), then you meet every conceivable standard of Prov 26:4. I'd like to think that's not you . . . say it ain't so, stewy.
Your beliefs are relative to what you have learned from the bible, correct?
On this matter, not at all. If you really want to know (and, franky, I don't think you do), the particular point I'm making here is relative to one I learned from Aristotle, who never read the Bible. But nice veiled genetic fallacy there . . . again, it suggests quite a few things about you (none of them complimentary) that you feel like that's at all relevant or worth raising at this juncture.
Now, would you like to try again?