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Tower of Babble's avatar

This post is tracking a general intuition I’m coming towards which is that there are serious higher order worries about theism that aren’t *exactly* the hiddenness worry, but either spill out from hiddenness considerations, or cluster around the same concept. Great post.

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Joe James's avatar

Shooting from the hip: One thing I've noticed is that people assume God (of religion x) making himself known with sufficient evidence somehow means everyone would necessarily believe in him or follow religion x. I don't think this is necessarily true! There are many truths that are pretty obvious for anyone sufficiently open to evidence, thinking logically, etc (say: the world being round), but some people don't accept that truth.

One of the implications of your post here (and I'll admit I'm not taking shots at your conclusion because I honestly don't follow your reasoning - that's probably my fault and not yours, but it's okay because I'm not criticizing it!) is that God's divine hiddenness is for the moral/personal growth of believers, but this implies people react to reality/known facts uniformly. I don't think that's true.

I'm also trying to figure out my position on divine hiddenness because (assuming God exists - which I don't believe, but nevertheless suspend doubt for the sake of exploring the question) I think the question of the benefit of hiddenness is interesting. But to make that case that hiddenness is superior to non-hiddenness, people have to make the case that people can or would react to non-hiddenness the same.

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