Board Thread:Fun and Games/@comment-28826152-20161221223809/@comment-27388204-20170104043229

Okay, here are my responses in this debate (and that is all I hope it is - a friendly debate. We seem to be mature people here. I don't intend to offend your religion if you don't intend to convert me to yours).

@Grievous - How can we really determine if a prime athlete is indeed superior to a frail man? You could only ascertain that fact if you judged them by their physical abilities, which would be biased towards the athletic man. But what if you judged the superior of the two by intelligence, mental strength, or in general being a good person? In all three of those criteria, the frail man could very well be the superior of the two. The same goes for human "superiority" over animals. We're judging by intelligence, which is pretty much the only game we win. What if the criteria was the ability to change colour? Or perhaps physical strength? How about the ability to withstand extremes of temperature? Not even on overall success have we a clear superiority. Even though we barely see them, the invertebrates, plants, fungi, as well as suburbian animals such as pigeons and rats, beat us on success.

@Eli

I personally think christians care more about spreading their beliefs that helping the world. Most of their funding goes towards churches and such - that brings me to the conclusion that it is "religion first, life second". http://www.patheos.com/blogs/friendlyatheist/2013/11/28/are-religious-people-really-more-generous-than-atheists-a-new-study-puts-that-myth-to-rest/

Atheists act upon their own morals, without threat of hell or reward of heaven. Btw, still the question of the poor suffering humans (I could mention animals as well, but they don't seem to matter much in your religion) remains unanswered. Is god too busy punishing children who stole too much candy, or helping football players score to notice the multitudes starving to death, many of which believe in the same god?

@Greyhound

Some of the worst things (cancer, deformities etc.) happen before birth. I fail to see how an embryo can commit sin, if that is indeed the reason for it. As for the thing about stealing a candy bar being equal to committing murder, then, no offense, but if I were ever to become religious, I think I'd go for the Greek gods or something along those lines, as opposed to the christian god. There is no argument to maintain that those two acts are equal.