Difference between revisions of "Arguments Against the Belief in God"
From Smiting Shepherds
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*[[There_is_no_Afterlife|There is no afterlife]]. | *[[There_is_no_Afterlife|There is no afterlife]]. | ||
**...and more specifically, [[Hell_does_not_Exist|Hell does not exist]]. | **...and more specifically, [[Hell_does_not_Exist|Hell does not exist]]. | ||
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*[[Creationism is False|The lack of evidence for creationism]]. | *[[Creationism is False|The lack of evidence for creationism]]. | ||
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*"Cruel World" argument. | *"Cruel World" argument. | ||
*The problems posed by [[Religious_pluralism|religious pluralism]]. | *The problems posed by [[Religious_pluralism|religious pluralism]]. |
Revision as of 10:45, 16 May 2017
- The Problem of Evil.
- Omnipotence and Omniscience Arguments.
- The arguments for the belief in God are weak and unconvincing, since they tend to rely on ambiguous terms, false premises, and/or logical fallacies.
- God as an unnecessary hypothesis/Unfalsifiability/The God of the Gaps.
- There is no afterlife.
- ...and more specifically, Hell does not exist.
- The lack of evidence for creationism.
- "Cruel World" argument.
- The problems posed by religious pluralism.
- The religious are not moral exemplars.
- Neglecting life and the world.
- Maxwell’s Demon.
- There are other ways to overcome the fear of death (sense of purpose).