Heisenberg
Well-Known Member
Being that perfection is subjective, I don't see anything wrong with Pad disagreeing. Pad is simply arguing that perfection does not apply, and if it does then your standards for perfection are questionable. Being a subjective term does not give someone the license to ascribe any quality they want to perfection. It's not a neutral word; it implies no room for improvement. What I see is pad acknowledging perfection can mean different things, and then making a case for imperfection. Why shouldn't pad insert his take on god's perfection? I don't see it as ignoring the true point, but countering the point.
It is also not valid in a debate to use something someone said in another debate against them. If you see a pattern in his behavior, wait for it to emerge within this thread or address it in the other thread. When beardo says something like "all is as god wants so all is perfect' he not leaving much room for subjectivity. He is not saying this rug is perfect for the den, although the rug itself could use improvements. He is implying all is perfect because all is a result of god's will, we never choose god chooses for us. Pad is simply pointing out that god's perfect plan often includes failure, mistakes and flaws, all good reasons to question the use of the term perfection.
It is also not valid in a debate to use something someone said in another debate against them. If you see a pattern in his behavior, wait for it to emerge within this thread or address it in the other thread. When beardo says something like "all is as god wants so all is perfect' he not leaving much room for subjectivity. He is not saying this rug is perfect for the den, although the rug itself could use improvements. He is implying all is perfect because all is a result of god's will, we never choose god chooses for us. Pad is simply pointing out that god's perfect plan often includes failure, mistakes and flaws, all good reasons to question the use of the term perfection.