Originally posted by Jason
That particular instance, I actual interpret as being rather ironic, since it was by eating of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil that they gained the knowledge that they had just become evil.
Heh, agreed.
It is for this reason, that we "see now through a glass darkly." So though, the concept of good is not foreign to humans, it is also not complete.

The free-will explanation is that God was so loving that He gave us a choice, letting us be human, even if it meant He might lose some of use because of it.
There is also a somewhat less thorough response that suggests that the afterlife makes up for whatever harms suffered on earth, and the child dying is not the end.
It can be said that, the question presumes a positive/negative scale, when there is really only good and the lack of good, which interprets suffering as a reminder of what life is like when God isn't constantly blessing it, meant to draw people towards the ultimate source of good--God.

That aside, this raises the ever-evident question, "Why would God force us to endure even the possibility of suffering, and not simply bring us to Heaven in the first place?" If there must be suffering to remind us of the pain of the absence of God, will there be suffering in Heaven, or will our respective memories be better there? If that's the case, couldn't we just have a few moments of pain and sadness from His absence, then forever remember them with Him in Heaven, happily ever after? Again, the entire concept seems fundamentally flawed. Answering that you "don't understand either, but that's not important" really isn't a proper response, though I'm always delighted to see another angle on the subject if it logically approaches the question, or at least raises more questions that may later aid in our quest.
Finally, another response is that God uses evil for good, and though we can't always see it, or it may not be apparent on an individual basis, the suffering that is a result of sin is being used by God for good.
Hopefully I've managed to at least show what some answer may be.
I used no analogy, I simply interpreted his analogy according to its own assumptions. Either there is or isn't reality outside of perceptions, and either way the analogy doesn't work.
Firstly, the analogy is not logically consistent with the question of whether God is the cause of a physical phenomenon. To make this analogy is to say God is to man (gardener) as a physical phenomenon is to a physical phenomenon (garden). Since the second pair are in the same category, and the first to are not, the analogy does not apply.
If there is a reality outside of the senses, the difference between an existent imperceptible gardener and a non-existent gardener is nonsensical.

[...]since it is obvious that there are many portions of our lives that others cannot experience (our thoughts for example)
Neither one is proved or disproved. Logically, either one may be correct or incorrect until one proves their case or disproves the other.
As for your status as a Weak Atheist, I actually find that position much more agreeable, since I have never understood how someone can essentially close the question of something as complex as God.

I had a decent weekend, mostly consisting of languishing about and nursing my lack of sleep and proper nutrition (note that I am still a nearly perfect specimen of athletic health...I just have bags under my eyes, and am very hungry from simply forgetting to eat when I should). I hope you had a good weekend as well.
Dick: Your last post on page 19 does not really apply here, as I believe the concept of using logic to prove God's existence is two-pronged, neither of them pointing to what GB is alluding to: 1 - To debunk anti-Christian logic, so that people are not "misled" into leaving the flock, and 2 - To resolve whatever "problems" atheists have, and allow them to bring themselves back to God in a sense by repairing their apparently broken logic, or inapplicable desires for truths that cannot be known completely. While I wholly (ack, I hate the spelling of that word) disagree with the opposition, or at least the definitive "absolute" stance of the opposition, I don't think your quote is productive. But that's just my take; I meant no affront, and still agree with you on a grand scale

Of course, anyone with half a brain and an ounce of decency would know not to do these things and not need any god to command them as such,
This is why I don't preach to theists as they would preach to me, and I no longer entertain their silly arguments.

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