so much for freedom of speach hey.
since when was not being able to say "God Damn" a infringement of freedom of speach? it doesnt say anything A) constructive B) relevent to the context it is regularly used in.
so much for freedom of speach hey.
Can I blink glass into my eyes instead?
well not imo, because you probly dont swear around people becasue they find it offensive/rude etc... but then you would around others. But if your posting on a supposed family public forum, then people will find blasphemy offensive. Despite this forum largely being populated by athiests/agnostics.
But how are we supposed to know what is and what isn't offensive? The fact is most people, religious or not, won't find blasphemy offensive. When it's in the form of "god damn" or something similar anyway. Something that seems completely innocent to most people might be offensive to a small amount of people. If we say blasphemy isn't ok because it might offend a few people, where do we stop?
Only to a small minority of people. The majority of people wouldn't consider it offensive at all.thing is, "God damn" is more offensive than most swear words.
Only to a small minority of people. The majority of people wouldn't consider it offensive at all.
Didn't god supposedly create everything....even damnation?
Only to a small minority of people. The majority of people wouldn't consider it offensive at all.
Yes but most of the time they don't purposefully use blasphemy to insult people. They do it because it's become a part of every day language that most people don't find offensive.that's beside the point - purposefully insulting people without justification is a bit of a knobbish thing to do.
Well you've explained to me what it means and I still don't find it offensive. I doubt many people are going to suddenly find it offensive when they know what it means.only becasue the "vast majority" don't really know what they are saying.
There's a lot of things that a lot of people might find offensive but the vast majority don't. What makes blasphemy special?maybe not the vast majority but a lot of people don't.
It's level of offensiveness is completely a personal thing. It would be stupid to deny that you, and perhaps quite a few religious people, do find it very offensive. But that doesn't change the fact that most people don't find it offensive. There is no absolute measure of how offensive something is, only relative to each individual.and it's level of offensiveness is your word against mine, it's a bit childish to keep debating that.
if you want a religious debate IM me.
although i think you'd have difficulty doing what you say you would.
I need to upload a debate between Richard Dorkins and John Lennox, and post it on these forums, because Lennox makes some excellent points.
I'd really love to read that, can you email me it?
no.
the Bible clearly says God made the woreld perfect, and by giving Human's free will, humans brought sin into the world and ruined it.
it's over 3 audio files, I can email them to you yes.
there .mov files, so you'd need quicktime to play them too btw.
what is your email?
Yes but most of the time they don't purposefully use blasphemy to insult people. They do it because it's become a part of every day language that most people don't find offensive.
Oh in that case it must be true
Do you religious folk not ever feel that you're being had on? That someone's having a laugh with you by getting you to read a very old collection of stories and telling you its the 'truth' ?
I mean, come on, do you all really believe Noah lived for 950 years?
Or isn't the christian way to pick and chose what they want to believe to server their own purpose?
I've got a few Christian friends, and I've been known to accidentally 'oh God!' or 'Jesus Christ!' in their presence - they've been ok with it because I apologised for any offence, and said that I meant nothing by it.
its ofensive because it is ofensive to God, and obviously different people find different things more ofensive than others. that's a bit of a non-point really.
it's specifically about points that Richard Dawkins, makes in his book "The God Delusion".