Instigator / Con
7
1760
rating
92
debates
77.17%
won
Topic
#3019

The Biblical God acts fairly

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
3
0
Better sources
2
2
Better legibility
1
1
Better conduct
1
1

After 1 vote and with 3 points ahead, the winner is...

Benjamin
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
4
Time for argument
One week
Max argument characters
10,000
Voting period
One month
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Contender / Pro
4
1702
rating
77
debates
70.13%
won
Description

Literally playing the devil's advocate.

BoP is shared.

Criterion
Con
Tie
Pro
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

I'm still not quite sure I get most of this debate, at least when it gets down into what the actual scriptures say, so I will try to keep this decision to the one discussion that I think ends up being most important, but doesn't get a lot of attention in this debate: burdens. Especially in later rounds, this does get some attention, but it seems to largely vanish from Pro's responses by the final round and doesn't get as much attention as it should from Con, though the latter does produce quite a bit about what fairness is and the issues that get in the way of being truly fair.

That being said, the response from Pro that garners most of my attention throughout the debate is the issue of whether humans can judge whether God is truly fair. The larger point from Pro appears to be that God has to actually judge in order to be assessed for whether or not God is fair, which is an intriguing argument and one I had hoped Con would hit harder (it's kind of like arguing that keeping someone in jail for way too long isn't a problem so long as justice is done in the end - the various harms visited on someone before they are subject to a trial can themselves be unfair punishments that cannot be undone nor fully reversed. Con kind of talks about this with Job, but it's never as clear as it should be nor is it applied more broadly). However, it also introduces a problem, one Con mentions: if we cannot judge God, then how can we determine that God is fair? If I buy that God's judgments are too far in the future to assess and that humans are fallible enough that we can never provide such an assessment without our own bias and, thus, unfair assessments of those actions, then it's functionally impossible to prove the resolution true. The only other means Pro provides reference the Bible stating that God is (by way of near synonyms) fair, but like Con, I find this lacking. It doesn't state that specific actions are fair, just that God is fair, which might apply to those actions, but we are not in a position to assess how well that applies. It's also unclear that those individuals who stated that God is fair are, themselves, not tainted by the fallibility of humanity. Just because it exists in the Bible doesn't mean it is absolute and all-encompassing.

On the other hand, if I allow that humans can judge God's fairness by the actions described in the Bible, then it's mainly a factor of interpretation, as while Con does challenge Con's examples, he does not challenge that, within the known span of time where individuals were harmed, there was a lack of fairness at play, whether that resulted from bias or collateral (in some case intended) damage to family or whole nations. If I buy that what I interpret from the Bible is solidly accurate, then at minimum, these outcomes clash with the claims of perfect fairness that exist elsewhere, leading to some dissonance that makes it difficult to accept Pro's claims of fairness at face value.

In an effort to defeat Con's arguments, Pro removed too many tools to prove the resolution true. So, I do end up giving the debate to Con, though I will point out that this bit of burdens analysis from Con in the final round made me second guess that decision:

"PRO: Prove that the resolution is true.
CON: Prove that the resolution is false."

This suggests an equal burden. If I had seen something like it in the opening round, this debate would most likely have ended in a tie. Hell, Con basically tells me as much in the final round, saying that Pro's reasoning "is at best a reason not to vote at all", which I seriously considered doing. If anything could have shot you in the foot for this debate, Con, it was this. I might still have voted for you on the basis that there are clear examples of unfairness within a given span of time (that, again, Pro claims would be eventually remedied in some way, shape or form), but I'm honestly not sure. I'd have to go through a lot of the scripture analysis by Con with a much finer comb than I'm qualified to handle here, and it would have been a very frustrating decision to make. Recognize that Con doesn't have a stated burden in the debate and use that to your advantage. Don't give your opponent a way to end this in a null decision by virtue of being unnecessarily fair yourself.