RandFan
Mormon Atheist
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2001
- Messages
- 60,135
Creationists already know about poisonous spiders, snakes, crocodiles, etc.WinAce said:My article points out that those particular creatures are more in line with an intelligent designer testing biological weaponry, creating stuff to defeat the intelligently-designed defenses someone else made, or just overall being an *******, than the benevolent gods of most religions. When you think about it, given how red in tooth and claw nature is, all of these seem more probable than a monotheistic view and an additional, tacked-on, attempted explanation for why God--entirely counterintuitively--made such horrors as the eye worm. As I write on the webpage, if we're going to go by analogies to human-designed things, God's surprisingly creative at designing implements of torture, and I'm not sure if ID-ists would want the baby-killing liberals to teach that in schools.
"He who made kittens put snakes in the grass" --Jethro Tull
While I think that this takes it to a different level I don't think that it would be that significant to those who are pro ID. JMO.
Again, Christians believe as a matter of course that God ordered the execution of children in the OT, he created predators who eat children. He created bacteria that kill children. How many infants have died of colds? Your article makes the point in a disturbing way but it is a point that has already been dealt with. This is just a commentary about Christians and not a critique of your page which I think is great and does make a valid point.Ultimately, yes, I believe such creatures prove beyond a reasonable doubt there's no god as the major religions describe one. One could still exist that was uncaring toward humanity, limited in power and forced to use a process--such as evolution--that auto-creates such Frankensteinian beasties despite a desire not to, or simply a sociopath who did it on purpose to harrass us.
Understood, your AE argument simply takes the argument to extremes to make its point, correct? Argument from Evil is not a great argument. Though I think it quite appropriate. My point is not to rebut your argument just to point out that I don't think it all that problematic for believers, but then what IS?This argument of mine is the bastard love child of Epicurus' ancient Argument from Evil, and William Paley's Watchmaker argument.
The Evidential Argument from Evil
Undaunted by the difficulties posed by AE, theists have devised literally dozens of theodicies that attempt to explain why God chose to create a world with evils in it. For example, it has been suggested that suffering is a warning for humans to reform their sinful ways; suffering helps humans to accept God; suffering is essential for humans to learn the difference between good and evil; suffering is necessary for humans to exercise compassion.
Nature is cool no mater how gross.But I just loved collecting all that cool parasite-related information, as well as getting all those horribly gross and disturbing pics, so I'm glad you all enjoyed it, too.