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Defending Atheism/Metaphysical Naturalism & debunking supernatural claims
Upcoming series:
- Against the Desirability of religion
(7 parts)
- Why Anyone should reject Paranormal claims
(8 parts)
- Case against the Afterlife
(4 parts at least but probably more)
- Debating World Views Chapter 4: emotions and belief
(not yet sure how many parts this chapter will have)
I expect the series in progress "the assumptions of design proponents" to have 5 more parts.
Upcoming series:
- Against the Desirability of religion
(7 parts)
- Why Anyone should reject Paranormal claims
(8 parts)
- Case against the Afterlife
(4 parts at least but probably more)
- Debating World Views Chapter 4: emotions and belief
(not yet sure how many parts this chapter will have)
I expect the series in progress "the assumptions of design proponents" to have 5 more parts.
Country:
Netherlands
Subscribers
(884)
Channel Comments

![Why Religious Apologists Cannot Possibly Win - part 2: The Occam's Razor Objection [audio redone] Thumbnail](http://i3.ytimg.com/vi/RT6T_RzBF3w/default.jpg)
![Why Religious Apologists Cannot Possibly Win - part 1 [audio redone] Thumbnail](http://i2.ytimg.com/vi/IDhmngyAzeA/default.jpg)










you know there is one question that has been bugging me last couple of months.
P1) the second premise of the moral argument suggests deontological rules. even bible reinforces that perception and divine command theory is deontological as well.
P2) god exists and he always acts according to his moral nature.
P3) gods ethics utilitarianistic (goal driven), as evidenced by the bible and WLC arguments (lol).
not really a conclusion) in light of P3, how can P1 be true, if moral values are supposed to be objective?
i have a niggling thought that im missing something obvious here.
Yet despite death being the goal of the religion, Christians are distraught over death. This should be considered demonstrable evidence that Christians lack true belief in their religion, which is a disproof of the experience of the holy spirit.