Showing posts with label cognition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cognition. Show all posts

Monday, March 10, 2014

Could God be a Sadist?




Recently, an atheist asked me, “How do you know that God isn’t a sadist and that his bible is not just one big deception.” Here’s my response:


There are reasons that I believe that God is love. I too, even after coming to Christ, began to wonder if I had been tricked by an evil God. I had struggled with decades of depression and panic attacks that had left me devastated. Consequently, I was having a hard time reconciling my faith in a loving God with my painful experiences.

During these long dark hours I would sometimes envision God having created us for His selfish entertainment. However, one evening, He opened my mind to see that this was not a game or entertainment. Instead, He proved His love by impressing upon me that He had actually suffered and died for my sins. After that, I was never able to regard Him as a detached and uncaring spectator. Instead, I was left with the very vivid impression that He loved me so much that He died for me.

Years later, I studied the historical evidence supporting the resurrection and wrote a little paper on it (http://mannsword.blogspot.com/2010/04/jesus-resurrection-is-historical-fact.html). However, during those years, He did other things to confirm His love for me. Even at church I had felt that I didn’t fit in. People would get up to the microphone and report on the wonderful things that God had been doing for them. During these times, I felt further tormented. My suffering informed me, “God doesn’t love you. If He did, He would have delivered you from your misery.”

Consequently, I was about to flee the church, but then heard an inaudible voice - the only time ever - saying, “just wait a minute.” After several minutes, someone came from behind and embraced with the warmest embrace. I turned around to see who it was and found, to my surprise, that there was no one there. Instantaneously, I knew it was my reassuring Savior.

God revealed Himself in many other ways during those dark years. Eventually, He delivered me from those decades of panic and intense depression, now expecting me to proceed in faith – something I delight in doing.

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Cognition and Thomas Nagel




Can thought and cognition be reduced to a matter of mere chemical-electrical materials? NYU Professor of Philosophy and atheist, Thomas Nagel, reasons that there must be more to thought than just the materials:

·        It is not merely the subjectivity of thought [the experience of thought] but its capacity to transcend subjectivity and to discover what is objectively the case that presents a problem. Thought and reasoning are correct or incorrect in virtue of something independent of the thinker’s beliefs, and even independent of the community of thinkers to which he belongs…There are norms [laws] of thought which, if we follow them, will tend to lead us toward the correct answers to those questions…Mathematics, science, and ethics are built on such norms. It is difficult to make sense of all this in traditional naturalistic terms. (Mind and Cosmos, 72)

It is one thing to accurately perceive the world; it’s another to put the data together into a reasonable, logical, useable and comprehensive package. Somehow, our minds must be amenable to the world around us and they both must be amenable to a set of common logical laws that can enable us to convert the external, material world into accurate ideas about it.

Our minds are more than mirrors or cameras that provide exact reflections of our slice of reality. They are synthesizers. However, in order to function in this way, there must be an “operating system” or set of transcendent rules in place that instructs our mental circuitry about how to organize the data. Besides, the real world data has to also be conformable to these rules.

Without this set of rules, we are no more than firing circuitry leading nowhere. Instead, this glorious package we call “mind” gives every appearance of a grand and intelligent design – the kind alluded to in the Bible:

·        Then God said, "Let us make man in our image, in our likeness, and let them rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air, over the livestock, over all the earth, and over all the creatures that move along the ground. So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them. (Genesis 1:26-27)