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Psychologist 05-13-2009 09:35 PM

If God created everything, then who created God?
 
Ah, the classic argument against Theism is a classic example of a type of flawed attempt at critical reasoning.

In the first place, God is God. He is omnipotent. If he is not omnipotent, then he is not God.

To be discredit the argument “God created the world and no one/thing created God because he is the starting point” properly means you HAVE to understand one thing first- that God is omnipotent.

If you counter that argument by asking who created God, that shows you do not understand the implications of “omnipotence”, which makes your counter argument as null as a red herring.

It’s like saying,

If John kissed Jane, does Jane exist?

No balls are caught! If you want to discredit an argument, you have to understand the source of the argument (i.e. its implied meaning/premise) and attack that.

This means attacking the concept of omnipotence, not throwing a question that is not applicable back to a question!

What kind of logic is that?

So anyway, if you want to logically think about it, you CANNOT counter that argument that God exists precisely because of the existence of the very-hard-to-disprove point of God’s omnipotence.

How are you going to disprove omnipotence? Asking me to prove omnipotence? I can’t do that.

If you are going to use the argument:

“If God created an unmovable rock, and if God is omnipotent, can he move that rock?”

Then I will say that it is a paradox and an impossibility because you have limited God’s omnipotence (by questioning his capability of doing everything including the impossible).

The reasoning goes this way:

1) If God is omnipotent, he can do anything.
2) If he can do anything, he can create a rock which he cannot lift
3) If he cannot lift that rock which he created, then he cannot do anything and he is not omnipotent
4) If he can lift that rock which he created, then he has not created a rock that he cannot lift
5) If he cannot create a rock that he cannot lift, then he is not omnipotent

The catch in this reasoning is at point #2. This sort of reasoning is aimed to show impossibility by providing impossibility in the existence of rock-which-cannot-be-lifted-by-him itself.

If he is omnipotent, he can do anything, but how can he make something he cannot do?

But essentially, this is a very vague argument because it blurs the line between the real premise that needs to be clarified against the pseudo arguments.

If we have arrived at a logical paradox, we are only left to analyse its soundness.

Consider premise 1: If God is omnipotent, he can do anything.

What is “anything”?

Is this “anything” simply –anything- that consists of everything and nothing or is this “anything” something that can be done or has a slight chance of being done?

If we were to argue from a logical, wordly point of view, then it would be the latter, because if we want to argue the merits of the plausibility of a situation, we have to work with something that can be used, that means to say, something that is a possibility instead of an impossibility.

Agree?

So how can one say that something cannot be omnipotent when that something cannot create that which is not creatable?

I’ll leave you to ponder about that.

BUT ANYWAY, it all boils down to godamned belief (pun unintended)!

The basis of acceptance of God (or, as some would put it- The concept of A God) is the acceptance of the concept of omnipotence.

Which IMO, is beyond the comprehension of us mere mortals BECAUSE our ability of reasoning is only limited by what we can experience and draw conclusion from in this EARTH (our A priori and A posteriori knowledge).

In short, God is beyond our comprehension.

Another argument point from a Theist’s POV:

How can you argue, or, seek to disprove, or, question against something that is beyond your comprehension?

A famous philosophy maxim that comes to mind is this:

We have the known knowns, the unknown knowns, the known unknowns and the unknown unknowns.

God/His power/HIM/Pink apples lies in the lattermost category.

So why bother disproving? It’s really up to you whether you want to believe or not.

For those who WANT to believe, the signs are there, the words are there. If you feel they are not satisfactory, then so be it. Not my problem. It’s *your* prerogative.

So why is it people enjoy arguing about subjective issues?

Plan9 05-13-2009 09:50 PM

What is... Chuck Norris?

...

Turns out TFP is about as religious as Britney Spear's panty-wearing habit.

levite 05-13-2009 10:28 PM

Um...yay?

Plan9 05-13-2009 10:42 PM

Yeah, I was confused as to what to respond to in this thread as well.

Perhaps a mod can drop that useful thread template / advice in here.

Willravel 05-13-2009 10:49 PM

Let me ask you this, Psychologist: if you're trying to scientifically and/or logically verify your own faith, is it still faith?

I think the primary issue is that god or gods aren't about logic, he/she/they are about faith. It's an entirely different set of rules than science and logic. And that's okay. I happen to be an atheist, but I wouldn't begrudge someone his or her faith. For some people, levite for example, it is a wonderful experience and it enriches his life. I'm happy for him.

Plan9 05-13-2009 11:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Willravel (Post 2635771)
...is it still faith?

"Are we talking life after death or anthropomorphic deity?"

Psychologist 05-13-2009 11:08 PM

Hi Crompsin: I wrote this because I do not understand WHY Atheists and Theists enjoy engaging in the battle to prove/disprove each other wrong. It all boils down to FAITH and WHICH path you want to choose. What’s there to argue when it comes to subjectivity?

It’s like saying Chuck Norris owns mudkip. Like hell I care if Norris owns Mudkip. That is your opinion because well, maybe you like muscular blonde men more than blue pokemon. Fine, but that doesn’t make it a fact (or is it useful to argue) that blue pokemon are infinitely, definitely, without a doubt less or more important than muscular blonde men!

Hi Willravel: I am not trying to “scientifically or logically” verify my faith. Or God. Or pink spatulas orbiting Earth. Haha.

Why yes, that’s the point I was trying to make: The primary issue isn’t about logic but FAITH.

I will respect an Atheist the same way I respect a fellow Muslim or a Christian or a Jew or a Pastafarian because I believe everyone deserves a standard amount of respect regardless of their beliefs.

This respect changes the moment they express their views, i.e. are they disrespectful, illogical, or if they can argue appropriately within the boundaries of reasonable reason.

Halanna 05-14-2009 03:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Psychologist (Post 2635756)
So why is it people enjoy arguing about subjective issues?

I think it's because both sides passionately believe they are right, making the other side wrong.

From an athiest point of view, they feel theist are "fooling" themselves into believing in God, an afterlife and everything that goes along with believing. Sometimes they feel more superior or that they are more "enlightened" than a theist.

From a theist point of view, they feel athiest are immoral, without salvation and are dooming their souls to an eternity of a hell like place. They also find the notion that a God doesn't exist simply ridiculous and just can't grasp how someone can't believe.

I don't know why these two groups argue, debate and try and prove their point. The point of an argument or debate is to sway the opposing side to see things your way.

While I'm sure there are exceptions, it's unlikely one on either side will suddenly concede and say, "You know, you're right. I'm going to abandon the belief system I've had since a child/the last 10 years/the last 20 years and start believing the way you do."

roachboy 05-14-2009 03:50 AM

try to open up the discussion more, psychologist--frame some question or questions that you want to pursue.
the op is a bit of a rune--closed in on itself.



my position:

the ontological proof is explicitly a tautology.
you can't say it without using the word: that god is is a tautology. the idea was that if god is understood as containing within himself/his mind all categories including being, then the claim that god is, which involves the last category, is strictly tautological (premise is contained in the conclusion).

so the circularity of thinking isn't exactly a new revelation.

what makes you think that faith is a matter of logic?
much theology is about the idea that faith *can* be grounded logically, but that starts from faith and works to logic, not the other way around.

Cynthetiq 05-14-2009 04:01 AM

why do people climb mountains? why do people dive depths of the sea? why do people like to debate politics? because it's there.

it's not much different, no one is really right, no one is really wrong.

maybe it's not much different than watching TV. It's a matter of passing time in a manner that has some meaning for some.

Willravel 05-14-2009 07:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Psychologist (Post 2635777)
Hi Willravel:

Hola. :)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Psychologist (Post 2635777)
I am not trying to “scientifically or logically” verify my faith. Or God. Or pink spatulas orbiting Earth. Haha.

You are using logic to try and disprove a common argument made by internet atheists and anti-creationists against creationism. Just so we're clear, the argument they make, the argument you cite, is that most creationists argue that everything is so complex that it requires a creator. In order to point out the flaw in this logic, the same axiom is applied to god (the "who created god?" argument). Certainly no one can claim the god individual in the Bible isn't complex, therefore following the same logic, god must have had a creator.

The argument isn't actually intended to disprove god. You can't disprove a negative. The argument is intending to poke a hole in a popular creationist argument. While I absolutely, positively don't have a problem with any religious people, I do have a problem with creationists because their confusion about the nature of faith is leading them to create and spread lies about science.

Still, judging by your post, I'm fairly sure you're not a creationist, simply a believer. That being the case, live long and prosper. :thumbsup:

Zenturian 05-14-2009 07:31 AM

Walter Bishop and William Bell created god.

Zeraph 05-14-2009 08:56 AM

Quote:

If God created everything, then who created God?
Dude...I did. (Sorry)

But seriously, my understanding (not that I'm a theist)...

God was, is, and always will be. God is infinite. Creation is a word we use to describe the existence of things in our world. God is far beyond our world's paradigm. He is everything and alltime. The word creation doesn't apply to his existence. He is a constant, the *only* constant. When he created the universe it was like dividing infinity...something impossible to our understanding and beyond us.

telekinetic 05-14-2009 09:03 AM

How much wood would a wood chuck chuck, if a would chuck could chuck wood?

Actual answer: Men created gods to explain what they did not otherwise yet understand. As science explains more things, filling in the gaps with gods becomes less necessary.

And yes, the 'who created god'? question exists because saying 'god did it' to explain away the complexity of the universe just moves the question.

It always struck me as funny that the same people who are adamant that the universe needed a creator also insist that their omniscient, infinitely complex deity didn't?

levite 05-14-2009 10:16 AM

OK, on a second reading, I believe I more or less agree with where the OP is going.

It is singularly unprofitable for all to attempt to "prove" or "disprove" God using logic. Theistic faith is arational, and it is certainly true that when it comes to such faith, one either has it, and accepts the parameters of the theistic paradigm, or does not, and will rather confine themselves to the skeptical or "scientific" paradigm (I use the quotation marks because I think it's unfair to say that science and religion cannot co-exist. They can, so long as the scientist is open-minded and the religion is not fundamentalist).

A great portion of the Middle Ages were dedicated to people attempting to use complex arguments of logic and reason to prove religious claims to one another. All failed spectacularly.

There's nothing wrong, IMO, with discussing the subject in a respectful, curious, "I am interested in understanding why you believe what you believe" way. Trouble comes when anyone, with either opinion, begins to say, "You should believe what I believe, otherwise you are wrong, and therefore, bad."

Shell 05-14-2009 10:42 AM

The answer is, there is no answer. It's one of those unexplainable things like "eternity" and "infinity"...there is no beginning and there is no end. There was no time before creation and in the end we will return to no time. Try wrapping your head around THAT one. Our minds are too finite to comprehend infinity...........

telekinetic 05-14-2009 11:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by levite (Post 2635994)
I think it's unfair to say that science and religion cannot co-exist. They can, so long as the scientist is open-minded and the religion is not fundamentalist

I do not think open minded means what you want it to in this context--all scientists are BY DEFINITION open minded--if they weren't, no sicentific progress would ever be made!

If you went to any good scientist and said "I can prove that prayers to the Christian God have an effect on the physical world, via repeatedly observable criteria A, B, and C", he would be overjoyed, as, regardless of how small the effect you were able to produce, you would have just won him the Nobel prize, and radically altered our understanding of the physical universe in a more significant way than relativity, quantum mechanics, and string theory combined.

More on this:

http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/found-n...-examined.html

Do you mean tolerant? I could see that being the case if it's two people (a religious person and a scientist). I am tolerant of religious beliefs the same way I am tolerant about people talking about being a Vampire (pyre?), or telling me about the attributes of their Pokemon collection or star wars. I try to understand their position, even so far as being able to provide questions about and input into the internal logically consistent structure they've created, but I don't just yell at them "YOU ARE NOT A VAMPIRE/POKEMON MASTER/JEDI. IT IS JUST A FANTASY/VIDEO GAME/ALTERNATE FUTURE HISTORY"--just because I don't believe in them doesn't mean they can't have interesting things to say about their fantasies.

If you are talking about a scientist with religious beliefs, in my case, I could not internally make my understand of science and the physical world jive with my religion--for a long time I just treated them like they were separate things, setting up a mental barrier around religion to exempt it from logical thinking and arguments, but eventually I realized I couldn't honestly believe that they were compatible, and chose rationality over faith in the supernatural.

filtherton 05-14-2009 11:34 AM

I think that there are fundamental distinctions between how different people conceive of god and that if a theist finds him/herself on the appropriate side of this distinction, certain common criticisms of theism become irrelevant. It's not just they don't appeal to the faithful, it's that they cease to mean anything. Which isn't to say that these common criticisms can't be useful and thought provoking...

The question of whether god created everything is irrelevant if god is everything.

levite 05-14-2009 01:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by twistedmosaic (Post 2636021)
I do not think open minded means what you want it to in this context--all scientists are BY DEFINITION open minded--if they weren't, no sicentific progress would ever be made!

If you went to any good scientist and said "I can prove that prayers to the Christian God have an effect on the physical world, via repeatedly observable criteria A, B, and C", he would be overjoyed, as, regardless of how small the effect you were able to produce, you would have just won him the Nobel prize, and radically altered our understanding of the physical universe in a more significant way than relativity, quantum mechanics, and string theory combined.

...

If you are talking about a scientist with religious beliefs, in my case, I could not internally make my understand of science and the physical world jive with my religion--for a long time I just treated them like they were separate things, setting up a mental barrier around religion to exempt it from logical thinking and arguments, but eventually I realized I couldn't honestly believe that they were compatible, and chose rationality over faith in the supernatural.

No, I kind of mean open-minded, in the sense that a lot of scientists react just as you're describing: I will believe in your paradigm as soon as it is proven within my paradigm by the parameters of my paradigm. The trouble (if I may be forgiven for using the word) with a lot of scientists is that they maintain that there is only one paradigm in which to interact with the universe: the scientific, rational, logical paradigm. They are open-minded to anything expressible or provable within that paradigm.

What I mean is that a scientist has to be open-minded to the notion that there are potentially other paradigms in which to interact with the universe, that work differently, and offer different answers. The questions asked to those paradigms may overlap with those posed in the scientific, but they are not entirely the identical set, and they bring their answers by slightly different rules.

I have known a number of scientists who work that way. They simply understand that they are not trying to do quite the same things in the lab as they are in the synagogue, nor is their Torah a science textbook, or their science textbook a Torah.

But ultimately, with all due respect, to say that science would be delighted if anyone offered laboratory proof of God is just as fundamentalist as the televangelist saying that he will "believe in" evolution as soon as Jesus Christ tells him to.

It is, ultimately, apples and oranges. Science and religion can coexist, they can even overlap from time to time. But they cannot occupy the same paradigmatic space, not any more than we can demand that painting and music operate by each other's rules, or expect to critique cooking for its literary faults, or poetry for its lack of nutrition.

thespian86 05-14-2009 01:16 PM

God is simply an answer to the question "but, what about before (or after - depending on the situation) that?". Our minds are inferior and at no point will we be able to understand everything. We're animals. Animals of language mostly, and our need to articulate discovery and thought created a need for answers (as soon as we discovered we could do such a thing; see: logic). Most things in life are unexplainable but that is illogical in itself (as we realize, hypothetically, that all things have a "reason" or a "cause" as everything is an effect of said cause). As we are unable to accept the void we fill it with guesses, assumptions, indifference, and faith.

I choose not to do any of the four (or as little as possible) as I feel it restricts how I view things.

Willravel 05-14-2009 01:40 PM

Even saying "god is beyond our comprehension" is putting religion in a logical/scientific context, which is a mistake. It assumes that there is eventually a point where god might be comprehended. A better statement would be "god doesn't require comprehension" or "comprehension doesn't enter the equation".

roachboy 05-14-2009 02:49 PM

generally, these discussion end up being fights about which rules are going to obtain for the discussion--whose framework gets to be the evaluative one, which gets to set the questions and determine what is and is not a legitimate response.

i think levite gives a good description of open-mindedness on the relation between the different modes of activity, each with it's own premises and rules, each aimed a different outcomes.

at the same time, the separations are not as strictly maintained as folk would sometimes think--string theory is a pretty good example of a space in which quantum theory and religious speculation got hopelessly tangled up. no mode of activity is entirely separate from all others---the traditional theory of evolution is as it is because the notion of species was assimilated to that of category and by extension to that of object, which required stretching the timeline out very considerably--more recent work in dynamical systems has maybe opened a way to think evolution as continual and the separations between types more fluid than had been thought...

just to say this, i have no particular use for religion in general.
but i also don't think that most forms of logic, particularly not traditional western forms, give anything like access to the complexity of the world.

Willravel 05-14-2009 02:55 PM

I think there should be a steel reinforced brick wall with a security guard and a rottweiler at the wall between religion and science simply because of the abomination known as creationism. Creationism is the perfect argument for ensuring that the camps don't cross paths. I'm fine with there being a religious camp so long as there aren't any museums where there are dinosaurs with saddles on them.

KnifeMissile 05-15-2009 10:42 PM

This thread is so painfully depressing. I don't know if I can address all the ridiculous "issues" brought up here but hopefully I'll cover the major ones, starting with the opening post...

Quote:

Originally Posted by Psychologist (Post 2635756)
Ah, the classic argument against Theism is a classic example of a type of flawed attempt at critical reasoning.

In the first place, God is God. He is omnipotent. If he is not omnipotent, then he is not God.

To be discredit the argument “God created the world and no one/thing created God because he is the starting point” properly means you HAVE to understand one thing first- that God is omnipotent.

If you counter that argument by asking who created God, that shows you do not understand the implications of “omnipotence”, which makes your counter argument as null as a red herring.

Do you understand the implications of omnipotence? There's nothing about it that precludes the notion of origins or even the necessity of one. It looks like you're assuming implications that suit your preconceptions where no such implications exist. Exemplify your point!

Quote:

No balls are caught! If you want to discredit an argument, you have to understand the source of the argument (i.e. its implied meaning/premise) and attack that.

This means attacking the concept of omnipotence, not throwing a question that is not applicable back to a question!

What kind of logic is that?
That's a question you should be asking yourself!

I'm not sure why it is you bring up the subject of omnipotence. The argument you describe is the Cosmological argument and it's based on the notion of causality. The idea is that all things need a cause and you can't have an endless chain of causes so there must have been an initial cause and that cause is God. There are many objections to this argument and omnipotence is not a defense to any of them. "Who created God" questions why it is you think that God is the "uncaused cause." If you're convinced that there had to be an uncaused cause then why couldn't it be the Big Bang? At least we can show evidence that that exists!

Quote:

So anyway, if you want to logically think about it, you CANNOT counter that argument that God exists precisely because of the existence of the very-hard-to-disprove point of God’s omnipotence.

How are you going to disprove omnipotence? Asking me to prove omnipotence? I can’t do that.
Is your argument that you can't prove omnipotence and therefore you shouldn't be expected to? Well, I agree with that but I'd also add that no one should be convinced by your lack of argument as well...

It is not our position to have to disprove every crazy idea that comes our way. If you have a claim then support it!

Quote:

If you are going to use the argument:

“If God created an unmovable rock, and if God is omnipotent, can he move that rock?”

Then I will say that it is a paradox and an impossibility because you have limited God’s omnipotence (by questioning his capability of doing everything including the impossible).

The reasoning goes this way:

1) If God is omnipotent, he can do anything.
2) If he can do anything, he can create a rock which he cannot lift
3) If he cannot lift that rock which he created, then he cannot do anything and he is not omnipotent
4) If he can lift that rock which he created, then he has not created a rock that he cannot lift
5) If he cannot create a rock that he cannot lift, then he is not omnipotent

The catch in this reasoning is at point #2. This sort of reasoning is aimed to show impossibility by providing impossibility in the existence of rock-which-cannot-be-lifted-by-him itself.

If he is omnipotent, he can do anything, but how can he make something he cannot do?

But essentially, this is a very vague argument because it blurs the line between the real premise that needs to be clarified against the pseudo arguments.

If we have arrived at a logical paradox, we are only left to analyse its soundness.

Consider premise 1: If God is omnipotent, he can do anything.

What is “anything”?

Is this “anything” simply –anything- that consists of everything and nothing or is this “anything” something that can be done or has a slight chance of being done?

If we were to argue from a logical, wordly point of view, then it would be the latter, because if we want to argue the merits of the plausibility of a situation, we have to work with something that can be used, that means to say, something that is a possibility instead of an impossibility.

Agree?
The problem is the simplistic notion of omnipotence. That word is typically used in a specific context so that such contradictions don't happen. For instance, when we say that Kim Jong-Il is omnipotent, we mean that he can do anything politically in South Korea. There is no contradiction to be constructed there. However, when theists say that God is omnipotent, they literally mean that he can do anything. When you apply this idea to things that are logically impossible then, not surprisingly, thing make no sense...

Now, it looks like you're willing to limit the powers of God to be something that is very powerful but not so simplistically so that contradictions are trivially created. I think that your insistence on calling it omnipotence is poor semantics but whatever... The problem now is determining what powers God has. This is why theists have always stuck with their simplistic notions of God's omnipotence. Can God see all things at once? Can God predict the future? Can God know my thoughts? Can God even time travel?

A literal reading of the Old Testament would suggest that God's powers are very limited indeed. For instance, He had to question Adam and Eve about what they've done. Doesn't he already know? Was it a rhetorical question? The story made no sense and the book doesn't get any better from there...

Quote:

BUT ANYWAY, it all boils down to godamned belief (pun unintended)!

The basis of acceptance of God (or, as some would put it- The concept of A God) is the acceptance of the concept of omnipotence.

Which IMO, is beyond the comprehension of us mere mortals BECAUSE our ability of reasoning is only limited by what we can experience and draw conclusion from in this EARTH (our A priori and A posteriori knowledge).

In short, God is beyond our comprehension.
The problem with saying that some theory, like the existence or nature of God, is "beyond our comprehension" is that it's identical to an idea that is nonsensical and is thus beyond not just our comprehension but all comprehension. Instead of putting a great deal of effort into practicing something that hurts people and saying that it's beyond our comprehension but you're following it anyway, why not just save yourself and other people the trouble and admit that it's all nonsense and just live your life the best you can...

Quote:

Another argument point from a Theist’s POV:

How can you argue, or, seek to disprove, or, question against something that is beyond your comprehension?

A famous philosophy maxim that comes to mind is this:

We have the known knowns, the unknown knowns, the known unknowns and the unknown unknowns.

God/His power/HIM/Pink apples lies in the lattermost category.

So why bother disproving? It’s really up to you whether you want to believe or not.

For those who WANT to believe, the signs are there, the words are there. If you feel they are not satisfactory, then so be it. Not my problem. It’s *your* prerogative.

So why is it people enjoy arguing about subjective issues?
Why do people like chocolate?

I don't think there's a single answer out there. People's motives are also subjective. Personally, I have many reasons for debating the subject, one of which is that I enjoy the sport of debate. I find the dissection of argument and the composition of cogent sentences fun. There are other reasons too, including the desire to convince you or someone, anyone really, of my point of view and alleviating some of the problems that religion causes on society...

---------- Post added at 02:42 AM ---------- Previous post was at 02:33 AM ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by Halanna (Post 2635821)
I don't know why these two groups argue, debate and try and prove their point. The point of an argument or debate is to sway the opposing side to see things your way.

While I'm sure there are exceptions, it's unlikely one on either side will suddenly concede and say, "You know, you're right. I'm going to abandon the belief system I've had since a child/the last 10 years/the last 20 years and start believing the way you do."

Why does it have to be sudden? Is debate only worth doing if the other person is suddenly convinced? Also, perhaps the few times that it does happen make it worth it? Is it really so hard to imagine why people would debate such topics?

KnifeMissile 05-16-2009 06:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by levite (Post 2636073)
No, I kind of mean open-minded, in the sense that a lot of scientists react just as you're describing: I will believe in your paradigm as soon as it is proven within my paradigm by the parameters of my paradigm. The trouble (if I may be forgiven for using the word) with a lot of scientists is that they maintain that there is only one paradigm in which to interact with the universe: the scientific, rational, logical paradigm. They are open-minded to anything expressible or provable within that paradigm.

What I mean is that a scientist has to be open-minded to the notion that there are potentially other paradigms in which to interact with the universe, that work differently, and offer different answers. The questions asked to those paradigms may overlap with those posed in the scientific, but they are not entirely the identical set, and they bring their answers by slightly different rules.

I have known a number of scientists who work that way. They simply understand that they are not trying to do quite the same things in the lab as they are in the synagogue, nor is their Torah a science textbook, or their science textbook a Torah.

It depends on what you mean by "paradigm." Can you please exemplify this? As far as I can tell, what you are saying is that scientists are only open to ideas that are real. Surely you don't mean this or, at least, can clarify this claim some more?

The paradigm of science is that you can make claims with efficacy. That is to say, you make claims that allow you to do things. The belief is that being able to do things is indicative of reality. The reason behind this is that if everyone can do things with scientific theories then that is something we all share: a definition of reality. This last point is surprisingly incidental since it doesn't really matter if scientific ideas are real or not if they still allow you do to the things you want to do. That's why science is more than just a generic search for "the truth..."

Quote:

But ultimately, with all due respect, to say that science would be delighted if anyone offered laboratory proof of God is just as fundamentalist as the televangelist saying that he will "believe in" evolution as soon as Jesus Christ tells him to.
I don't think this is a good comparison. We know that the televangelist believes things that weren't allegedly told to him by Jesus. Thus his denial of evolution is unjustified by the lack of endorsement by his deity of choice.

On the other hand, scientists use the same reasoning and logic that the televangelists accept except when the results of those things contradict their fundamentalist beliefs.

There is no symmetry here...

Quote:

It is, ultimately, apples and oranges. Science and religion can coexist, they can even overlap from time to time. But they cannot occupy the same paradigmatic space, not any more than we can demand that painting and music operate by each other's rules, or expect to critique cooking for its literary faults, or poetry for its lack of nutrition.
Most people claim that their religion makes accurate claims on reality and thus their religion and science are not so apples and oranges since they are used to describe the same thing. Every time this has happened, science has always proven to be more accurate...

Your analogies aren't apt. Again, perhaps you can clarify what you mean by "paradigms?" Which paradigms are these, specifically?

biznatch 05-16-2009 08:51 PM

Religious people are always telling atheists to be open-minded, but never consider the possibility of, for example, a supergod, who, creates gods, universes, and entire realities, each with their own laws, dimensions, properties, and matches each god to a universe. Maybe "God" isn't even aware of said "superGod" and rules this entire universe, Himself being an "atheist" in his own sphere of existence, in that he doesn't believe a superior being exists.
The bible and faith really worships God, who is to the best of his knowledge "all mighty", but still was "created."

Willravel 05-16-2009 09:22 PM

Who created superGod?

levite 05-16-2009 09:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KnifeMissile (Post 2636822)
It depends on what you mean by "paradigm." Can you please exemplify this? As far as I can tell, what you are saying is that scientists are only open to ideas that are real. Surely you don't mean this or, at least, can clarify this claim some more?

That would seem to depend: you are using the term "real" in a way which seems to make it synonymous with "provable in a laboratory," which is the scientific way. I am suggesting that there are other ways to interact with the universe, which present different criteria for the realness of phenomena.

Let me first of all clarify that when I use the term paradigm in this context, I mean "a framework for understanding and interacting with the universe." The scientific paradigm is that which establishes parameters requiring that nothing is real save that it be proven by certain rules, and nothing is acceptable for use in one's system of reasoning save that it be rational. The alternative paradigm that I am referring to has different parameters for gauging realia, and is founded to one degree or another in systems that combine the rational and the arational.

In other words, science interacts with the universe by gauging all truth in reproducible effects that can be measured and recorded in ways deemed reliable by current technologies. Religion permits truths that are not always reproducible, nor are always measurable by technology, but are able to be experienced nonetheless through spiritual awareness and faith.

I am in no way suggesting that science ought to change or be different, or that it ought to be in any way subservient to religion, or that public schools should teach religion alongside science, or any kind of crap like that. I am only saying that it might benefit scientists to realize that there are other ways out there to approach asking questions of the universe, and some of those ways can lead to truths.

What is important-- and I would never say otherwise-- is for all concerned to be clear that for the most part, science and religion are useful for answering different questions, and they tend not to do well when their areas of inquiry are made to overlap. So for example, if you want to know how to calculate centrifugal force or know what happens when you mix certain chemicals, religion will prove singularly unhelpful, and science will give you answers with no trouble at all. But if you want to know what spiritual or moral meaning there can be in experiences of joy or suffering, science will prove just as unhelpful, and religion will offer you answers (though a wider range of answers than those to chemistry or physics problems).

I have always said, and will say again, religion is not supposed to be science. The bible is not a textbook, and the people who attempt to use it as a textbook-- be it of geology, physics, biology, sociology, or what have you-- are simply misusing it. Religion is supposed to be a spiritual guide to help you deal with living in the universe, and to bring you closer to God. For religion to be successful presumes other education, because the Bible is really mostly concerned with a comparative narrow range of interests: ethics, morals, law, and ritual practice. Not even the last two, if one is a Christian.

But that said, presuming that one is not equating religion with fundamentalism, I do think that there is value in religion, and in systems founded in the arational in general, and the truths that they can help us perceive are, if different than those we come to through science, in many ways no less valuable.

Quote:

I don't think this is a good comparison. We know that the televangelist believes things that weren't allegedly told to him by Jesus. Thus his denial of evolution is unjustified by the lack of endorsement by his deity of choice.

On the other hand, scientists use the same reasoning and logic that the televangelists accept except when the results of those things contradict their fundamentalist beliefs.
OK, maybe it wasn't the ideal analogy. But let me put it this way: the kind of scientist I was referring to in that analogy would, if he had a sudden experience of spiritual awareness and connectedness, dismiss said experience as a momentary hallucination, or the effects of transient hypoxia, or, in the words of Scrooge disdaining Marley's ghost, "a bit of undigested beef," the ill-effects of a bad lunch. Such a scientist, if he heard a silent voice urging him to a more moral life, would instantly diagnose himself as a latent schizophrenic, and submit himself to a psychopharmacologist for a prescription for anti-psychotics. In other words, these individuals are so enmeshed in the idea that their paradigm is the only way to interact with the universe that, faced with phenomena that are clearly not duplicable nor are they rational, they will dismiss them as illusion or illness rather than confront the possibility that, as Hamlet chides, "there are more things...in Heaven and Earth than are dreamt of your philosophies."

Quote:

Most people claim that their religion makes accurate claims on reality and thus their religion and science are not so apples and oranges since they are used to describe the same thing. Every time this has happened, science has always proven to be more accurate...
This is entirely dependent upon what "claims on reality" people are making in the name of their religion. For example, if they are saying that because they choose to read the Bible literally, that must mean the Earth is precisely 5759 years old, then they are wrong. If, however, they are saying (for example) that their religion has taught them greater spiritual awareness, and they have been able to experience God, then perhaps they are right.

Religion is not supposed to be science, and more than science should be religion. God is not a chemical experiment or an electron field effect: the experience of God is not something one can have and duplicate in a laboratory, nor will His existence be proved by a handy set of equations. Not because God is not real or because we don't have adequate technology, but because that is using the wrong paradigm: it is like trying to do algebra by baking brownies, or paint a still life using a microscope instead of a paintbrush. By the same token, those who use the Bible as a geology or physics textbook are behaving just as sensibly as anyone trying to get orange juice by milking a cow, or seeking out a mathematics professor for pastoral counseling about one's bioethics quandary.

What I am saying is that for 90% or more of the time, religion and science are either asking different questions, or they are seeking different answers, and it is not fair to try to make them overlap. The different questions are best addressed in their different paradigms.

A religious person can believe whatever they like, but when they step into a geology classroom and say that the universe is 6000 years old, they are grossly in error, and should expect to be told so. And the religious person should be content with that, since it is not right for them to tell others to believe otherwise, based only on their understanding of their own sacred scriptures.

But by the same token, a skeptical person can believe whatever they like about the existence of God, but when it comes to the beliefs of others, IMO the most one ought to be prepared to say is, "I have not yet experienced anything to make me believe similarly."

biznatch 05-17-2009 12:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Willravel (Post 2636858)
Who created superGod?

Dude, we all know that if you're a superGod, then you effectively don't need to be created. He has super-Omnipotence. Right? (kidding).
I'm just saying that the "God" many people worship could have been created; why stop at God? Why not carry it further than the known universe? If you're going with the idea that there is/are supernatural being(s) with unlimited powers, why not theorize further in the same(but expanded) idea.
How does God "know" he's the most powerful? Maybe nobody ever told him anything different.

Polar 05-17-2009 08:15 PM

Funny thing about God.



If He is God (and I believe He is) then any discussion we have about what he would or wouldn't do, could or couldn't do, should or shouldn't do is like a couple of first graders trying to discuss quantum physics.


Who are we to think we know all the boxes that God should fit into?

Willravel 05-18-2009 08:35 AM

That's an intellectual cop-out, Polar. Something being incomprehended by you doesn't make it incomprehensible. I'll give you an example: I can't even begin to comprehend the tax law, but I know for a fact some people can comprehend it, therefore it's comprehensible.

Poppinjay 05-18-2009 09:39 AM

Quote:

Who created superGod?
I'ma come over there and hit you.

I can't begin to say how many times I've higlighted certain parts of this discussion only to discard it for other parts.

First off, let me state I'm one of those dirty believers. Shame on me.

I'm also educated enough to talk about flagellants and the history of faith with the same acumen as an Ivy league scholar. I don't mean to brag, but this was something important enough to me to study it in-depth. And I have.

That is not to say I have better knowledge than any other internet genius, but I'm pretty comfortable with what I've learned, from kudzu league scholars, at a decent university.

Essentially, my understanding has waved to this, I don't care what you think about what I think and shut up about what you think. Every juvenile concept has been argued on this board and it takes the patience of Bruce Jenner to withstand it. All for some stupid ass Kardashian booty.

I attribute it to the Schrödinger wave. Some say it's because of Disney. I don't give a fuck. Shut up.

Please don't take this a s a close minded response to a genuine inquiry. No question of the existence of God is a genuine inquiry. Everybody comes with superior knowledge. I know best. You know best. He knows best. My bagwan knows best. The flower guy at the airport knows best.

We will always be what we are. Unconviced atheists. Sheeple. When the bridge is gapped, I'll bring the potato salad.

Willravel 05-18-2009 09:48 AM

There's nothing wrong with believing in god or gods so long as you're not hurting others or yourself. You're not a "dirty believer", poppin, you're just a believer, and that's just fine with me and the majority of other atheists out there.

Poppinjay 05-18-2009 09:55 AM

Can I still hit you, you know, just to work out the free radicals in my muscles?

Hitting back is not allowed under my religion.

Turn the other cheek.

Willravel 05-18-2009 09:57 AM

Oh of course. If you really want a workout, I could author a book called "The superGod Delusion" and give lectures.

Skitto 05-18-2009 03:31 PM

Why do people argue the vague objective|subjective ideas of the wide theologies of early scholars/ salesmen? Well, you can strike any words you don't agree with in that sentence, subjective and/or objective, either one, salesman is a loose term too.

So the simple answer directly from my Carlin encyclopedia: It's a dick waving fest, no simpler than a war of words, the one with the bigger and more intimidating argument wins!

My take on this, which is coincidentally a PG expansion of it:
People argue to prove who are more influential, notice that you never see a real good argument for this kind of stuff on TV/radio? It's because the people who are really comfortable with the reality of the answer, don't give a care about the argument and are therefore above or below it, depending on whether their leftover opinions can be categorized as left-over or non-existent.

On the conspiracy side of it, I think it's what the world's governing group has watered down the Indian drinking games into this, a way to retain psychic brawling amongst the "lower people" because if they stopped it, they would have a lot more leftover aggressions than they could deal with. It also, at the same time it strengthens (psychic ability?) hardening opinions and striking aggression, it doesn't really improve true individualism simply because of what could easily be described as a brain chemistry paradox. Strong minds, weak thoughts, easily swayed.

I'm trying to blend mainstream and Carlinesque logic here, so bear with me.

One more thing, my experience in arguing religion. I've got two parents, Mom is from what was a strictly religious family (think Cleaver-Brady's), Dad was from a naturally spiritual family (solid rednecks, another strange point, Jed Clampett meets Morticia Adams... sorta)
So, there I am, between autonomic religion and brainstem spirituality, with a frontal lobe full of both.

Naturally I've become adept at this sort of junk.

I've found that for everyone, you can influence exactly how much their religion effects them just by putting God in unlikely places (or say unorthodox situations if it suits you) and they seem to either respect everything or simply hate me after that. Point is that it all depends on an often dispicable mess of factors. Again, I have two extemes to compare against, Mom usually dislikes me talking about it, and Dad is a good source of inspiration, but he isn't usually conducive to that sort of talking (it's just not his bag).

My residual opinions on this are that everything happens as it does in space (direction and intensity are the simplest laws of existence) and in space, the bigger the thing, the more it asserts its existence, the smaller the thing, the more it is ignored in daily life, and the deciding gradient here is sentient thought. Things are the size we percieve. In the mind, things are interconnected, and to the highly spiritual/religious, God is assumedly interleaved with all of everything (via omnipotence)

Whether God is omnipotent or not is a stipulation that can be left to those in the debate. Away from the debate you can see a little more clearly, you see.

I join in about half the time, just to refresh myself, and in between I am far more in touch with the higher order of things than my subconscience lets me be conscious of.


?
but the POINT IS! ... I keep getting destracted into these little holes as I'm getting to the REAL point!

See how it is? Getting caught in this train of meanings on belief is annoying because in getting to my very simple point I had to go through a lot of spiritually simpler stuff.

The point: As you may have noticed, I referred to things being as big or as small as the human mind percieves them to be. A person should not be deluded into thinking that God is something so simple that it can be explained in terms of existence or omnipotence. The closest that the English language comes to the blindingly easy depth and width of God him/itself is this. Man made God and God made Man.

So believe it if you want to, ignore it if you like, either way, you WILL be right! Within your own terms, you are always correct. Others' opinions should be a study, a muse at best, but the only real factor is your WILL in believing whatever it is.

God said "let there be light" and there was light over the Earth
Man said "let there be napalm" and soon there were brown people on fire.

God made Man, Man made God
Man made God to make Woman
God made Man to show off his creation

you are always wrong, we are always right
we are always wrong, you are always wrong
you are always right, we are always wrong
we are always right you are always right

Remember too that right and fight alliterate, so pick good words.

---------- Post added at 04:31 PM ---------- Previous post was at 04:28 PM ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by Polar (Post 2637109)
Funny thing about God.



If He is God (and I believe He is) then any discussion we have about what he would or wouldn't do, could or couldn't do, should or shouldn't do is like a couple of first graders trying to discuss quantum physics.


Who are we to think we know all the boxes that God should fit into?



Oooh, so right!

They're too young!

:rolleyes:

Young and wrong rhyme, so it's an inconstant, whether the two are mutually exclusive.

biznatch 05-18-2009 09:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Poppinjay (Post 2637303)
I'ma come over there and hit you.

I can't begin to say how many times I've higlighted certain parts of this discussion only to discard it for other parts.

First off, let me state I'm one of those dirty believers. Shame on me.

I'm also educated enough to talk about flagellants and the history of faith with the same acumen as an Ivy league scholar. I don't mean to brag, but this was something important enough to me to study it in-depth. And I have.

That is not to say I have better knowledge than any other internet genius, but I'm pretty comfortable with what I've learned, from kudzu league scholars, at a decent university.

Essentially, my understanding has waved to this, I don't care what you think about what I think and shut up about what you think. Every juvenile concept has been argued on this board and it takes the patience of Bruce Jenner to withstand it. All for some stupid ass Kardashian booty.

I attribute it to the Schrödinger wave. Some say it's because of Disney. I don't give a fuck. Shut up.

Please don't take this a s a close minded response to a genuine inquiry. No question of the existence of God is a genuine inquiry. Everybody comes with superior knowledge. I know best. You know best. He knows best. My bagwan knows best. The flower guy at the airport knows best.

We will always be what we are. Unconviced atheists. Sheeple. When the bridge is gapped, I'll bring the potato salad.

I thought Philosophy was like a hip cafe where people sipped espressos and tossed ideas around in a friendly discussion.
Now it feels more like a boxing ring. Who's winning? God.

Skitto 05-19-2009 12:34 AM

My point exactly. ^L^

KnifeMissile 05-19-2009 01:47 AM

In an attempt to reduce the explosion of paragraph responses, I've chosen to not break my response up into multiple paragraph responses, even though I will be responding to each paragraph, nonetheless. I hope this won't be confusing...

Quote:

Originally Posted by levite (Post 2636865)
That would seem to depend: you are using the term "real" in a way which seems to make it synonymous with "provable in a laboratory," which is the scientific way. I am suggesting that there are other ways to interact with the universe, which present different criteria for the realness of phenomena.

Let me first of all clarify that when I use the term paradigm in this context, I mean "a framework for understanding and interacting with the universe." The scientific paradigm is that which establishes parameters requiring that nothing is real save that it be proven by certain rules, and nothing is acceptable for use in one's system of reasoning save that it be rational. The alternative paradigm that I am referring to has different parameters for gauging realia, and is founded to one degree or another in systems that combine the rational and the arational.

In other words, science interacts with the universe by gauging all truth in reproducible effects that can be measured and recorded in ways deemed reliable by current technologies. Religion permits truths that are not always reproducible, nor are always measurable by technology, but are able to be experienced nonetheless through spiritual awareness and faith.

I think it's important to find some common ground on what constitutes "truth."

I wouldn't characterize my notion of "real" with "provable in a laboratory," since much of science isn't literally done in one, unless you mean it as a metaphor for something that is demonstrable. Have you thought about why science has such a requirement? It's an attempt to distinguish things that are real from shit people make up. How do other "paradigms" distinguish the two aside from arbitrary choice?

Your use of the term "arational" is a curious attempt to avoid using the term "irrational" in fear of it weakening your argument. This should be an obvious sign to you because it indicates the weakness of your position. If something is not rational it is, by definition, irrational and if you mix the irrational with the rational you still get something that's irrational...

I don't know what you mean by "spiritual awareness" but faith is not indicative of truth. By definition, faith is independent of truth so I'm curious to hear how you think the truth can be constructed with it... How would you even know if someone is spiritually aware? How would you distinguish someone's spiritual awareness with shit someone made up?

It sounds like you're setting up a system of belief that disallows anything to be false. If nothing else, this is not a useful approach to truth...

I think it's important to distinguish "truth" with something that one sees value in. Something can be valuable or even useful and not be true. I don't think it's a shortcoming to understand this...

Quote:

I am in no way suggesting that science ought to change or be different, or that it ought to be in any way subservient to religion, or that public schools should teach religion alongside science, or any kind of crap like that. I am only saying that it might benefit scientists to realize that there are other ways out there to approach asking questions of the universe, and some of those ways can lead to truths.

What is important-- and I would never say otherwise-- is for all concerned to be clear that for the most part, science and religion are useful for answering different questions, and they tend not to do well when their areas of inquiry are made to overlap. So for example, if you want to know how to calculate centrifugal force or know what happens when you mix certain chemicals, religion will prove singularly unhelpful, and science will give you answers with no trouble at all. But if you want to know what spiritual or moral meaning there can be in experiences of joy or suffering, science will prove just as unhelpful, and religion will offer you answers (though a wider range of answers than those to chemistry or physics problems).

I have always said, and will say again, religion is not supposed to be science. The bible is not a textbook, and the people who attempt to use it as a textbook-- be it of geology, physics, biology, sociology, or what have you-- are simply misusing it. Religion is supposed to be a spiritual guide to help you deal with living in the universe, and to bring you closer to God. For religion to be successful presumes other education, because the Bible is really mostly concerned with a comparative narrow range of interests: ethics, morals, law, and ritual practice. Not even the last two, if one is a Christian.

But that said, presuming that one is not equating religion with fundamentalism, I do think that there is value in religion, and in systems founded in the arational in general, and the truths that they can help us perceive are, if different than those we come to through science, in many ways no less valuable.
I didn't really think you'd think science should be done differently. Very few people on the TFP would think this although there are many people in the US who do. I wonder why they don't hang around here?

I contend that religion isn't really for answering questions. Science doesn't answer questions of morality because that's a question of desire. How do you want people to behave? Science doesn't dictate to you what you want. It describes what is. Religion makes ludicrous claims and pretends they're true. There's always a deity and He wants things from you, including acts to do and desires to have. I suppose these are answers to some questions but they're not answers to specific questions. When the pious experience joy or suffering, they usually have to shoehorn some bizarre interpretation of their religion to fit some specific scenario to give it "meaning" for themselves. I think this has more to do with them than their religion. That is to say, they could have done this without their religion...

I'm pretty sure Christians follow ritual practice...

Religion is useful for many people. That doesn't make it true...

Quote:

OK, maybe it wasn't the ideal analogy. But let me put it this way: the kind of scientist I was referring to in that analogy would, if he had a sudden experience of spiritual awareness and connectedness, dismiss said experience as a momentary hallucination, or the effects of transient hypoxia, or, in the words of Scrooge disdaining Marley's ghost, "a bit of undigested beef," the ill-effects of a bad lunch. Such a scientist, if he heard a silent voice urging him to a more moral life, would instantly diagnose himself as a latent schizophrenic, and submit himself to a psychopharmacologist for a prescription for anti-psychotics. In other words, these individuals are so enmeshed in the idea that their paradigm is the only way to interact with the universe that, faced with phenomena that are clearly not duplicable nor are they rational, they will dismiss them as illusion or illness rather than confront the possibility that, as Hamlet chides, "there are more things...in Heaven and Earth than are dreamt of your philosophies."
This is not true. While the first line of investigation will be rooted in what is already established, they will (or should) always allow for the possibility that what they experienced was somehow real. Indeed, illusions and illnesses are real and are thus real possibilities but who knows? Maybe there is some "spiritual awareness" and "connectedness?" (whatever you meant by those terms) It's true that they wouldn't immediately jump to this conclusion but is that closed minded? Some would call it skeptical or cautious or even contemplative. Can't one be open minded without being gullible?

I think you might need !

Quote:

This is entirely dependent upon what "claims on reality" people are making in the name of their religion. For example, if they are saying that because they choose to read the Bible literally, that must mean the Earth is precisely 5759 years old, then they are wrong. If, however, they are saying (for example) that their religion has taught them greater spiritual awareness, and they have been able to experience God, then perhaps they are right.

Religion is not supposed to be science, and more than science should be religion. God is not a chemical experiment or an electron field effect: the experience of God is not something one can have and duplicate in a laboratory, nor will His existence be proved by a handy set of equations. Not because God is not real or because we don't have adequate technology, but because that is using the wrong paradigm: it is like trying to do algebra by baking brownies, or paint a still life using a microscope instead of a paintbrush. By the same token, those who use the Bible as a geology or physics textbook are behaving just as sensibly as anyone trying to get orange juice by milking a cow, or seeking out a mathematics professor for pastoral counseling about one's bioethics quandary.

What I am saying is that for 90% or more of the time, religion and science are either asking different questions, or they are seeking different answers, and it is not fair to try to make them overlap. The different questions are best addressed in their different paradigms.

A religious person can believe whatever they like, but when they step into a geology classroom and say that the universe is 6000 years old, they are grossly in error, and should expect to be told so. And the religious person should be content with that, since it is not right for them to tell others to believe otherwise, based only on their understanding of their own sacred scriptures.

But by the same token, a skeptical person can believe whatever they like about the existence of God, but when it comes to the beliefs of others, IMO the most one ought to be prepared to say is, "I have not yet experienced anything to make me believe similarly."
I'm assuming you're referring to a passive believer in this last paragraph. After all, many people say all sorts of demonstrably false things in the name of religion and you agree that they should be told how wrong they are.

However, even if we're talking about someone whose belief is based upon personal experience. You don't think a skeptic can have experiences that allows them to say "I think there's no God?"

Sadly, believers are rarely so passive. Their religious beliefs come with all sorts of bizarre emotional baggage. It's one thing to believe in a vague deity, like Einstein did, but to believe in one that has specific demands on us? For example, even moderate Christians believe that God cares about their sex life... and mine! If you're going to care what I do then I think it's fair for me to question why you care. It's called "discourse" and I think it's valuable, much more so than "I have not yet experienced anything to make me believe similarly..."

---------- Post added at 05:42 AM ---------- Previous post was at 05:31 AM ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by Polar (Post 2637109)
Funny thing about God.



If He is God (and I believe He is) then any discussion we have about what he would or wouldn't do, could or couldn't do, should or shouldn't do is like a couple of first graders trying to discuss quantum physics.


Who are we to think we know all the boxes that God should fit into?

Who are you to think there's anything to fit into boxes?

Your claim is a rationalization. Your concept of God doesn't make any sense so you say "well of course we can't make sense of it. Who can make sense of God?" If you could make sense of God, you'd be using that sense to claim that God existed. It's a "heads I win, tails you lose" scenario. Whatever happens, you can't lose! You're ignoring the obvious (and very likely) possibility that the reason the concept doesn't make any sense is because it's false. You're rationalizing your desire to continue believing something that's ridiculous...

---------- Post added at 05:47 AM ---------- Previous post was at 05:42 AM ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by Poppinjay (Post 2637303)
I'ma come over there and hit you.

I can't begin to say how many times I've higlighted certain parts of this discussion only to discard it for other parts.

First off, let me state I'm one of those dirty believers. Shame on me.

I'm also educated enough to talk about flagellants and the history of faith with the same acumen as an Ivy league scholar. I don't mean to brag, but this was something important enough to me to study it in-depth. And I have.

That is not to say I have better knowledge than any other internet genius, but I'm pretty comfortable with what I've learned, from kudzu league scholars, at a decent university.

Essentially, my understanding has waved to this, I don't care what you think about what I think and shut up about what you think. Every juvenile concept has been argued on this board and it takes the patience of Bruce Jenner to withstand it. All for some stupid ass Kardashian booty.

I attribute it to the Schrödinger wave. Some say it's because of Disney. I don't give a fuck. Shut up.

Please don't take this a s a close minded response to a genuine inquiry. No question of the existence of God is a genuine inquiry. Everybody comes with superior knowledge. I know best. You know best. He knows best. My bagwan knows best. The flower guy at the airport knows best.

We will always be what we are. Unconviced atheists. Sheeple. When the bridge is gapped, I'll bring the potato salad.

If all this talk bothers you so much then... why are you here? Why did you read this thread? Why are you complaining?

Seriously, if you want us to "shut up" you can do that by simply not reading the thread...

Your complaint appears to be based on a false premise. We will not always be what we are. People change...

Poppinjay 05-19-2009 04:30 AM

Having been here for 5 years and having seen every argument under the sun for the existence/non-existence of a deity that controls our universe, I am weighing in on the side of belief.

I wish there was a lexicon to help people understand that belief does not equal ignorance and faith doesn't equal stupidity.

Tell me what threads you would have me participate in. I can start one that says "God is Yay!" and it would soon be populated with folks posting that faith is stupid.

Read my post again, you appear to have missed the point.

Cynosure 05-19-2009 06:21 AM

People ask the question, "If God created everything, then who created God?" because they know that everything in our universe – including the universe itself – has a beginning (and an end, for that matter). However, people who ask such a question about God are thinking in mundane and temporal terms, and they are thinking too small about God, for God is not part of our universe. Thus God is not, nor was He ever, subject to our universe's laws and limitations.

God exists outside of our universe, and it may very well be that everything outside our universe is God, and that our universe is in fact contained (and maintained) within God. Thus, God is not subject to our universe's laws/limitations of time, space, creation, decay, the speed of light, etc.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Psychologist (Post 2635756)
1) If God is omnipotent, he can do anything.
2) If he can do anything, he can create a rock which he cannot lift
3) If he cannot lift that rock which he created, then he cannot do anything and he is not omnipotent
4) If he can lift that rock which he created, then he has not created a rock that he cannot lift
5) If he cannot create a rock that he cannot lift, then he is not omnipotent

This old and trite "line of reasoning" is nonsensical, and not really worth contemplating if you're earnest about knowing God.

MSD 05-20-2009 10:38 AM

2) If he can do anything, he can create a rock which he cannot lift

Assuming God exists he can't, nor can he draw you a square circle or create a brick of solid gold which meets our definition of life. The question is internally inconsistent and therefore logically invalid.

KnifeMissile 05-20-2009 12:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Poppinjay (Post 2637682)
Having been here for 5 years and having seen every argument under the sun for the existence/non-existence of a deity that controls our universe, I am weighing in on the side of belief.

I wish there was a lexicon to help people understand that belief does not equal ignorance and faith doesn't equal stupidity.

Tell me what threads you would have me participate in. I can start one that says "God is Yay!" and it would soon be populated with folks posting that faith is stupid.

Participate in any thread that you enjoy; there's got to be some. Why read and post in a thread that pisses you off?

Quote:

Read my post again, you appear to have missed the point.
Perhaps I have missed your point. You came in here and told people "I don't care what you think" and "shut up about what you think." So what was your point?

If you truly didn't care and you truly want people to "shut up" then why read? ...why participate?

new man 05-20-2009 01:06 PM

Quote:

I wrote this because I do not understand WHY Atheists and Theists enjoy engaging in the battle to prove/disprove each other wrong
I don't enjoy debating religious people. It's a pain in the ass because there is NO LOGIC in faith. You cannot win with idiots who keep insisting the same thing over and over again without any proof that their little god or fetish cross or little book or crazy prophet is the right one so they are right. If folks want to delude themselves I cannot stop them. But when they try to change laws based on their twisted little interpretations of what some crazy camel fucker or heat stroked sheperd boy says, or some guy who sets fire to a bush and claims its god says, then I have to fight them. Stop trying to legislate based on some bullshit story about how little provincial tribes kicked sand in each other's faces and 3,000 years later creationism is passed off as a science, allah supports terrorism, jews have some sacred spit of land, and mormons are baptizing the dead while wearing magical underwear.

KnifeMissile 05-20-2009 01:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cynosure (Post 2637726)
People ask the question, "If God created everything, then who created God?" because they know that everything in our universe – including the universe itself – has a beginning (and an end, for that matter). However, people who ask such a question about God are thinking in mundane and temporal terms, and they are thinking too small about God, for God is not part of our universe. Thus God is not, nor was He ever, subject to our universe's laws and limitations.

No, only you are thinking in mundane terms...

First of all, people ask the question "then who created God?" as a response to the Ontological argument. If everything has a beginning then what was God's beginning? If God doesn't have a beginning then not everything has a beginning...

The idea that everything has a beginning is also simplistic. All the constituent particles that make you up have been around long before you were born and will be around to be many other things long after you're dead. Those other things will even be other people. Hell, that will happen long before you're dead too, so what's all this about everything having a beginning? The entire Universe is a complex and continuous system that is constantly changing. There are small patterns that we find meaningful and so we say that those begin and end but the Universe is one long continuum of moving energy in one form or another and the beginnings and endings we assign in it are arbitrary. Really, there was only one beginning and that is of the Universe itself. One example hardly makes a pattern...

Quote:

God exists outside of our universe, and it may very well be that everything outside our universe is God, and that our universe is in fact contained (and maintained) within God. Thus, God is not subject to our universe's laws/limitations of time, space, creation, decay, the speed of light, etc.

This old and trite "line of reasoning" is nonsensical, and not really worth contemplating if your earnest about knowing God.
By definition, the Universe includes everything, even God. If you're making statements about God, you're making statements about a Universe with a God in it...

This "old and trite" reasoning isn't worth contemplating if you're determined to believe whatever you want. However, if you want to at least pretend that your beliefs are reasonable then you must consider all reasonable questions about them...

Why do you say that there's an entity that is not constrained by reality or logic? Your statement that God is such a being is just bare assertion. It's a claim that doesn't even make any sense. Ironically, in your attempt to support the original poster, you've just denigrated his main point: omnipotence without qualification is meaningless. God can't do simply "anything" because that doesn't make any sense...

Cynosure 05-20-2009 10:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KnifeMissile (Post 2638281)
First of all, people ask the question "then who created God?" as a response to the Ontological argument. If everything has a beginning then what was God's beginning? If God doesn't have a beginning then not everything has a beginning...

Everything within our universe has to have a beginning. However, since God is not contained within our universe, He does not has to have a beginning.

Thus, the question "Who created God?" is wrong-headed from the get go.

Quote:

Originally Posted by KnifeMissile (Post 2638281)
All the constituent particles that make you up have been around long before you were born and will be around to be many other things long after you're dead. Those other things will even be other people. Hell, that will happen long before you're dead too, so what's all this about everything having a beginning?

You're being obtuse. Everything within this universe does indeed have a beginning. My beginning was in my mother's womb. Sure, the particles that I'm made of, existed a long, long time before I was born, and will continue to exist for a long, long time after I die. But, so what? It wasn't until those particles were brought together and formed into me, that I became "me".

The same can be said about you and every other living being on this planet. Why, the same can be said about everything within this universe; every rock, tree, mountain, river, ocean... every planet, moon, and star... and so on.

Quote:

Originally Posted by KnifeMissile (Post 2638281)
The entire Universe is a complex and continuous system that is constantly changing. There are small patterns that we find meaningful and so we say that those begin and end but the Universe is one long continuum of moving energy in one form or another and the beginnings and endings we assign in it are arbitrary. Really, there was only one beginning and that is of the Universe itself.

One example hardly makes a pattern...

:rolleyes:

I've encountered lots of people who focus so much on the little things, they can't see the big picture. Now I'm encountering someone who's so focused on the big picture, he can't see the little things. Either extreme is wrong-headed.

Quote:

Originally Posted by KnifeMissile (Post 2638281)
By definition, the Universe includes everything, even God.

:orly:

Oh, really? You don't even believe God exists, so how can uphold any absolute statement about His existence in the positive?

Quote:

Originally Posted by KnifeMissile (Post 2638281)
By definition, the Universe includes everything, even If you're making statements about God, you're making statements about a Universe with a God in it...

So sorry, that you cannot imagine a God who exists outside the universe.

Quote:

Originally Posted by KnifeMissile (Post 2638281)
Why do you say that there's an entity that is not constrained by reality or logic?

I said that God is not constrained by the laws and limitations of this universe, i.e. space, time, creation, decay, etc.

Quote:

Originally Posted by KnifeMissile (Post 2638281)
Your statement that God is such a being is just bare assertion. It's a claim that doesn't even make any sense.

Well, it makes perfect sense to me. And, according to many of the scientists and Biblical scholars and theologians and philosophers I've read, it makes perfect sense to many, many others.

Quote:

Originally Posted by KnifeMissile (Post 2638281)
Ironically, in your attempt to support the original poster, you've just denigrated his main point: omnipotence without qualification is meaningless.

My purpose here is not to support the original poster, but to share my beliefs regarding the question posed by the original poster.

biznatch 05-21-2009 01:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cynosure (Post 2638486)
:orly:

Oh, really? You don't even believe God exists, so how can uphold any absolute statement about His existence in the positive?


So sorry, that you cannot imagine a God who exists outside the universe.


I said that God is not constrained by the laws and limitations of this universe, i.e. space, time, creation, decay, etc.

I'm sorry, but you're exactly the same way. You're upholding an absolute statement about his location.
You say that god definitely lives outside of the Universe. Well, why should I trust you? What if I think he doesn't, or woudln't ? It's not at all something that is a well known truth, and, just like the existence of God, is highly debatable.
Just because you have faith in something doesn't make you right about it. I could believe that Satan's incarnation is Nancy Pelosi, or some other person, I don't think everyone would accept it as a truth, although some people might feel the same way.

Cynosure 05-21-2009 02:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by biznatch (Post 2638780)
I'm sorry, but you're exactly the same way. You're upholding an absolute statement about his location.

You missed the point of my sentence. Go back and re-read it.

Quote:

Originally Posted by biznatch (Post 2638780)
You say that god definitely lives outside of the Universe. Well, why should I trust you?

Who said you should trust me? :)

Quote:

Originally Posted by biznatch (Post 2638780)
What if I think he doesn't, or woudln't ? It's not at all something that is a well known truth...

That the God of the Bible exists outside of our universe, that He is not contained within it and thus is not subject to its laws and limitations, is a well known truth (or at least, a well known concept) among Christian scholars and believers. If this is the first time you or others here have encountered this concept, then I can only assume you have not studied the Bible very closely, and/or you have not read much in the way of post-20th Century Christian theologians and apologists.

Quote:

Originally Posted by biznatch (Post 2638780)
Just because you have faith in something doesn't make you right about it.

This is a thread about "Who created God?", in a forum about philosophy. So, of course just about everything in here is going to be speculative and based on belief/faith.

Whatever... I'm not right because I have faith in something. I have faith in something because I believe it's right.

Mantus 05-21-2009 09:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Psychologist (Post 2635756)

So why is it people enjoy arguing about subjective issues?

Because we often base our objective actions on them...

Skitto 05-23-2009 09:55 PM

Debate --> de-bait?


Is this a hint?

I think so.



It's this easy.

Belief or the lack of such is, at the level of politics, a simple vague category for the peasant-sorting.

The reason it is such a vague and often touchy topic is that in theologistics, the plane it draws its relevance from, the basic assumption is the protection of the Instinct/Conscience borderline, and borders are just imaginary lines that make people feel self-important. It makes me wanna eat God, God it ticks me off. It's divvying up our psyche's natural inclinations. 'Nuff said.

---------- Post added at 10:55 PM ---------- Previous post was at 10:50 PM ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cynosure (Post 2637726)
People ask the question, "If God created everything, then who created God?" because they know that everything in our universe – including the universe itself – has a beginning (and an end, for that matter). However, people who ask such a question about God are thinking in mundane and temporal terms, and they are thinking too small about God, for God is not part of our universe. Thus God is not, nor was He ever, subject to our universe's laws and limitations.

God exists outside of our universe, and it may very well be that everything outside our universe is God, and that our universe is in fact contained (and maintained) within God. Thus, God is not subject to our universe's laws/limitations of time, space, creation, decay, the speed of light, etc.


This old and trite "line of reasoning" is nonsensical, and not really worth contemplating if you're earnest about knowing God.

Amen, words are based in strict en tempora at best, reality itself bears no words that aren't written, only itself.

As another layer, reality has no words, man is resident in existence, words are made by man. Ideology is at the bottom of the food chain.

levite 05-24-2009 08:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Skitto (Post 2639678)
...It makes me wanna eat God....

So...you're Catholic?




:lol: Sorry, I really couldn't resist. I apologize for that.... :D

thespian86 05-24-2009 08:41 AM

I had a discussion with a staunch christian about the existence of God the other night for a couple of hours. I was told that I was "wrong" and that she "knew God was true".

There are two many philosophical holes for me to understand his existence or this statement.

Skitto 05-24-2009 03:37 PM

Has NO ONE paid attention to what I wrote here?

The whole idea of theology, right or wrong, is irrelevant where it comes to natural tendencies.


It is as irrelevant as it is instinctively obvious, or should be obvious, to any human!

---------- Post added at 04:37 PM ---------- Previous post was at 04:33 PM ----------

I guess I'll leave it to language: debate is debaiting the idea. Then you "cast"

Cynosure 05-24-2009 04:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Skitto (Post 2639937)
Has NO ONE paid attention to what I wrote here?

I read it. But I couldn't fully figure out what the hell you were trying to say.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Skitto (Post 2639678)
Belief or the lack of such is, at the level of politics, a simple vague category for the peasant-sorting.

The reason it is such a vague and often touchy topic is that in theologistics, the plane it draws its relevance from, the basic assumption is the protection of the Instinct/Conscience borderline, and borders are just imaginary lines that make people feel self-important. It makes me wanna eat God, God it ticks me off. It's divvying up our psyche's natural inclinations.

:oogle:

Cripes, man, your wording is more dense – more needlessly complex – than roachboy's. (Hey, but at least you use proper upper/lower case letters.)

Quote:

Originally Posted by Skitto (Post 2639678)
It's this easy...

:orly:

If you say so.

roachboy 05-24-2009 04:03 PM

i have no idea what you're talking about, skitto. when you say "natural tendencies" you seem to imagine that it's obvious what you're talking about. it isn't.
the sentence after that can only make even a little sense if you know what the previous one is about.
you seem fond of this "debate=debait" pun, but you don't do anything with it.

maybe explain your position.

Mantus 05-25-2009 10:47 AM

I’ve missed this forum. It helped me find my beliefs and grow as a person. There are several key ideas central to my belief system that are constantly being illustrated in this thread.

The biggest pitfall is that people tend to use words and concepts that are far beyond their realm of comprehension to illustrate concepts outside the realm of comprehension.

Take Omnipotence for example. The power to do anything! How did we come up with such an idea? Well, we know what lifting a rock is like. We know what it’s like not to be able to lift something. So we infer that being omnipotent is just like being the guy who can lift any rock in our universe. No matter how big or small a rock this dude would walk up and lift it.

What a simplistic load of crap! Our mind is picturing some Joe walking up to a huge boulder and lifting it above his head like Hercules and we think “oh, ok, now I know exactly what omnipotence means”. Bullshit. We throw the word around as we were talking about that familiar toaster on our kitchen counter.

We can’t have a scientific or logical discussion about this subject without comprehending what God’s omnipotence really means. When we try all sorts of amusing scenarios pop up and while entertaining it’s ultimately fruitless in helping us explore our faiths.

To illustrate, I’ll pick on Cynosure. ^^ He claims that:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cynosure (Post 2637726)
God exists outside of our universe, and it may very well be that everything outside our universe is God, and that our universe is in fact contained (and maintained) within God. Thus, God is not subject to our universe's laws/limitations of time, space, creation, decay, the speed of light, etc.

Really?!

Raise your hand if you just painted a mental picture of a bubble full of bright lights with a bearded guy floating beside it. That’s how I visualize Cyno's description of God. Yet I have no clue of what being outside our universe actually means. This concept has absolutely no value to me. I've never been outside Earths atmosphere never mind the universe.

But I can draw parallels with similar experiences. I know what it’s like to be outside of my house. Maybe finding God is like visiting your neighbor. Find a door at the edge of the universe. Walk though it. Stroll along the streets of limbo until you get to God’s crib. There you’ll see God watching the game and he’ll invite you in for a cold one.

You may think I’m being an ass but it’s through these metaphors that most faith based systems are maintained within people’s heads. Using big words doesn’t make us understand the concepts behind them. All Cyno is doing is using terms we cannot comprehend (being outside the universe) to support other terms we cannot understand (God) – leaving us nowhere. It's fun though!

biznatch 05-25-2009 06:40 PM

What I don't get is how believers of supernatural beings argue that they know something, for example, Cynosure's belief that god exists outside the Universe.
We don't know if/where the Universe ends, or "how" it ends, there are a few theories, but none of them have any evidence that is firm.
I just don't understand faith, and I guess it's frustrating for me, is it a "either you get it or you don't?" thing?
You can talk about theologists and scholars like they present overwhelming evidence of God's location, but everyone who believes in this stuff basically get their info from the same source, and it's not really a vast one: the Bible.
On religion, I think whether you're an atheist or not depends mostly on your parents. Most people just believe what their parents tell them. Some change, but on a whole I think that's how it works.
I guess it goes both ways, but wouldn't it make more sense to be skeptical about something you can't see or touch or ever have proof of, instead of just believing it because everyone else does?
I guess there's no real aim to my post, just expressing what I don't "get" about religion. And I'm not trying to be narrow minded either, I really wanna understand how religious people think.

levite 05-25-2009 09:33 PM

The thing is, speculation about where God is or isn't, and what He can or can't do, and what He might or might not like, is all dependent upon two things: that a given person has faith in the existence of God, and that said person is willing to gamble that religious traditions might perpetuated at least in part by other folks who had faith, and who might even have experienced revelation, which might make at least some of their claims about God worthy of consideration as in some way accurate.

But it does come down to faith, and unfortunately, faith is not something rational, it is arational, and cannot be demanded by external proofs. One either acquires faith through experience of something that one defines either as revelatory or miraculous (it is still called faith after such an experience because those experiences, even if real, are still subjective, and may be proof to oneself, but not to others; also such experiences tend not to answer many detailed or abstruse questions), or through a decision to believe until one has more conclusive subjective proof.

The problem is that those who claim to have faith are far too cavalier about demanding it in those who do not, and those who do not have faith are far too cavalier in dismissing it in those who do. Frankly, I think it would be nice if everyone just decided that as long as everyone else acts like a mensch, what everyone else does or does not believe about a Supreme Being and the origin of the universe is of no concern to them....

Cynosure 05-26-2009 05:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by levite (Post 2640409)
The problem is that those who claim to have faith are far too cavalier about demanding it in those who do not, and those who do not have faith are far too cavalier in dismissing it in those who do. Frankly, I think it would be nice if everyone just decided that as long as everyone else acts like a mensch, what everyone else does or does not believe about a Supreme Being and the origin of the universe is of no concern to them....

Well, as Rodney King said, "Why can't we just all get along?"

If we're not fighting over religion, we're fighting over race, or culture, or land, or money, or oil, or (soon to come) water.

So, don't just blame religion for mankind's inability to all get along. Even if we'd somehow totally eradicate religion from mankind (as militant atheists are want to do), we'd still be fighting and destroying ourselves over those other things.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mantus (Post 2640193)
The biggest pitfall is that people tend to use words and concepts that are far beyond their realm of comprehension to illustrate concepts outside the realm of comprehension.

Speak for yourself, and do not assume that all of us are unable to grasp concepts that are beyond the limitations of space and time.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mantus (Post 2640193)
Raise your hand if you just painted a mental picture of a bubble full of bright lights with a bearded guy floating beside it. That’s how I visualize Cyno's description of God.

Yes, raise your hand and show everyone here that your imagination and your ability to think "big" is so limited, you cannot imagine God beyond an image of a bearded guy floating in the aether.

This is the main reason why God forbade the Hebrews to make graven images of Him, so that they would not limit themselves to carnal and temporal views of Him, and so that they could reach out past the earth-bound pictures and idols created by the polytheistic religions to represent their gods.

Furthermore, as wikipedia explains it...

Quote:

In a number of places the Hebrew Bible makes clear that God has no shape or form, and is utterly incomparable; thus no idol, image, idea, or anything comparable to creation could ever capture God's essence. For example, when the Israelites are visited by God in Deut. 4:15, they see no shape or form. Many verses in the Bible use anthropomorphisms to describe God, (e.g. God's mighty hand, God's finger, etc.) but these verses have always been understood as poetic images rather than literal descriptions. This is reflected in Hosea 12:10 which says, “And I have spoken unto the prophets, and I have multiplied visions, and by the hand of the prophets I use similes.”
Quote:

Originally Posted by Mantus (Post 2640193)
But I can draw parallels with similar experiences. I know what it’s like to be outside of my house. Maybe finding God is like visiting your neighbor. Find a door at the edge of the universe. Walk though it. Stroll along the streets of limbo until you get to God’s crib. There you’ll see God watching the game and he’ll invite you in for a cold one.

Whatever, dude.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mantus (Post 2640193)
You may think I’m being an ass but it’s through these metaphors that most faith based systems are maintained within people’s heads. Using big words doesn’t make us understand the concepts behind them.

I think you are smarter, and your imagination and your ability to think "big" is greater, than you're letting on, here.


Quote:

Originally Posted by biznatch (Post 2640366)
What I don't get is how believers of supernatural beings argue that they know something, for example, Cynosure's belief that god exists outside the Universe.

Well, just for starters, God literally interacted with mankind through the Hebrews and conveyed this concept about Himself to them, which they passed on to us.

shakran 05-26-2009 05:59 AM

Keep it civil, people. Let's not have any more "blow your little mind" comments lest this thread get closed.

Mantus 05-26-2009 09:23 AM

Apologies for baiting that kind of response Sharkan.
If it's worth saying: I saw passion, not aggression, on Cynosure's part - which is great.


After writing that post I reviewed all the metaphors that I, and people I know, use to understand subjective parts of reality. There are many! Allot of them involve use of concepts outside our realm of logical or scientific understanding. The most famous ones that came to mind are Einstein's - which are now in the realm of scientific understanding.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cynosure (Post 2640483)
do not assume that all of us are unable to grasp concepts that are beyond the limitations of space and time

Yet we are not beyond the limitations of space and time and thus cannot realistically grasp such concepts. We draw metaphors to understand subjective concepts allowing us to stretch our limitations on experience. These metaphors are built from pieces of our everyday experience leaving us with limitations to our comprehension of subjective concepts.

Take infinity for example. Let discuss it in terms of distances. We know what it’s like to travel long distances. In our experience no mater how far we travel there always seems to be something else on the horizon only to discover when we get there that there is something else still further. Those are the limitations of our actual “distance experience”. We can use our imagination to stretch our distance experience ten fold. Going anywhere beyond that leaves us with a very fuzzy picture. Imagining a thousand fold our distance experience would leaves us with a visual blank but the feeling of comprehension remains leaving us with more of an emotional metaphor than a conceptual one. We feel that we understand what it is to travel for infinity more than we can visualize.

This happens to me when I imagine the above scenario. Would be wonderful if we all do an infinity thought experiment just to see if everyone is on the same page.




Quote:

Originally Posted by Cynosure (Post 2640483)
Yes, raise your hand and show everyone here that your imagination and your ability to think "big" is so limited, you cannot imagine God beyond an image of a bearded guy floating in the aether.

This is the main reason why God forbade the Hebrews to make graven images of Him, so that they would not limit themselves to carnal and temporal views of Him, and so that they could reach out past the earth-bound pictures and idols created by the polytheistic religions to represent their gods.

Whatever, dude.

I agree. A better imagination can help but adding complexity and depth to our mental image of God doesn’t guarantee insight into truth. Using metaphors to explain metaphors leads us down a slippery slope.
Lets describe a God that exists outside of our universe, and it may very well be that everything outside our universe is God, and that our universe is in fact contained (and maintained) within God as:

A (greater consciousness)(outside the realms of reality)(encompassing)(all of reality)(like an awake mind)(looking upon a dream)(permeating everything within)(being a part of it)( yet having the perspective to look from afar.)
Every bracketed term is a subjective concept. This description of God may sound more advanced and smarter than our bearded dude floating in space but does it offer any more value? What kind of value?

The "World is God's dream" metaphor feels allot more real to me but is a nightmare to test logically or scientifically. The floating dude in a void makes me laugh - I have no emotional connection to it but would much easier to introduce to a philosophical or scientific discussion.

Simple metaphors are more effective at helping us understand how the world works while complex multi-level metaphors are easier to relate to emotionally rather than conceptually. The more subjective layers a concept has the more emotional vocabulary it requires to comprehend.

Perhaps this is why faith is so addictive. We are very emotionally driven creatures. It’s only makes sense that the next step is to link emotions we experience in the real world to emotions we experience in our metaphors. Emotion provides the bond between faith and objective reality. :eek: Oh my God…

Cynosure 05-26-2009 02:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mantus (Post 2640584)
Apologies for baiting that kind of response...

My apologies to you, Mantus, if you were truly insulted by my "don't read a book on quantum physics because it will blow your little mind" remark. Really, that remark was meant to be just a tongue-in-cheek put down in response to your flagrantly silly, Bill & Ted-like comments on what I was saying about God. After all, I did say, further down in my post, that I thought you were a lot smarter, and your ability to think "big" was greater, than you were letting on.

hunnychile 05-26-2009 05:31 PM

Simple: God's God.

rahl 05-26-2009 07:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cynosure (Post 2640483)




Well, just for starters, God literally interacted with mankind through the Hebrews and conveyed this concept about Himself to them, which they passed on to us.



The problem I have with religion is that it's totally unprovable. I went to catholic school for 12 years, and to even question the bible, or question our religion teachers was strictly prohibited. It wasn't until my mid twenties that I became agnostic. I'm atleast open to the possiblility of a supreme being out there, but I require substantial proof for me to believe whole heartedly

My problem with your statement is that you take this and pass it on as an absolute fact that God "literallly" interacted with the hebrews. How do you know? Because it's written in a book?

Skitto 05-27-2009 09:43 PM

Sorry, I'm leaving myself raw for now.

Here, I'll rewrite that last thing.


Belief or the lack of such is a nonissue on every level, especially the psychological.

The psychological part is what makes this all possible for the political.
At the level of politics, it's just the first, simple, vague category for, what I call the transgovernmental peasant-sorting.
It could also be called the extraterrestrial human-sorting, interracial intercompany customer-categorization. No matter what your personal conspiracy-belief system is, it's simply people organizing other people. Everyone does it; so far as I know there's no one that makes no distinction whatsoever between peoples' differences. Race, religion, sleeping habits,

Everyone's gotta have their own little drawer and file, Obama goes here, Britney goes there. Steven Hyde, Janice Joplin, Venus and Serena, OJ, the X-Men, all go in the Pop file, and in my family file, there's my brother, the dog goes over there, and that there's the file for Animals, Plants and the nameless people on the street, Streetpeople. Andy McKee, Steve Vai, John Mayer, dingoes, Steve Jordan, Elephant man. Then there's all the cabinets for ideas, concepts, talents, Karate, sleeping, technology and of course, belief. Of course.

The reason religion is such a vague and often touchy topic is that in Theologistics (belief draws its academic relevance from this plane of thought) the basic assumption is the protection of the Instinct/Conscience borderline. This isn't a conscious protection, of course; it is a mental borderline, of course; and a man made one at at that. Of course primal man had no concept of the difference! He had a feeling that there must've been something that allowed him thoughts, and he praised it when he saw things in the sky, or made fire, or got a lucky break when he was out hunting. There was no difference between his instinctive belief and the evidence he thought he saw. It was the later humans that found out that there was a difference, and what I'm saying is that I think we CREATED that difference by discovering it.

The instinct/conscience borderline.

Borders are just imaginary lines that make people feel self-important. It's divvying up our psyche. Natural inclinations put into sterile categories. 'Nuff said.

levite 05-27-2009 11:19 PM

^ ^ ^
| | |

I'm sorry, I really don't mean this in an offensive way, but...am I all alone in not understanding what that meant?

Mantus 05-28-2009 11:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cynosure (Post 2640744)
My apologies to you, Mantus, if you were truly insulted by my "don't read a book on quantum physics because it will blow your little mind" remark. Really, that remark was meant to be just a tongue-in-cheek put down in response to your flagrantly silly, Bill & Ted-like comments on what I was saying about God. After all, I did say, further down in my post, that I thought you were a lot smarter, and your ability to think "big" was greater, than you were letting on.


Not at all Cynosure! That's why I defended you in my post.

So what do you think about my idea that "thinking bigger" doesn't necessarily give us more insight or understanding of our faith based beliefs?


Quote:

Originally Posted by levite (Post 2641557)
^ ^ ^
| | |

I'm sorry, I really don't mean this in an offensive way, but...am I all alone in not understanding what that meant?

Ya man! Skitto, you gota use smaller words and dumb down the concepts for my sake.

Skitto 05-29-2009 12:40 AM

I'm being raw, that's all.

Okay... This God, you know, he's a really cool guy, right?
This dude made everything, or so they say, and they also say that he is somehow inside everything (physically, aurically, idealistically, take your pick)

And if he IS everything, and he MADE everything, and he is IN everything, why do we not get the connection, god is made in EVERYTHING!

He is made IN everything, he is made OF everything, he is made WITHOUT everything, am I right so far? I took a little Beatles logic there, but I assume that God must also exist where existence does not... exist...

Uh, right?



Alright, now here is the basis of the argument: if God is Everything, and God is everywhere and nowhere,
inside and outside of his existence, existing even where he doesn't exist (because presumably in a
balanced-universe there must also be some kind of Void-of-god space)... if this is true, then does God get
tired of this kind of talk too? I mean, he can't sit and contemplate his omnipotence...

so what DOES he do?

None of our business, I say. It's our business to assume that it works beyond our comprehension,
it can also be a fun hobby to expand that comprehension through the argument; but it isn't anything to
REALLY worry about. It's His business.


That's why you said, Mantus, that:
"You may think I’m being an ass but it’s through these metaphors [kudos, btw for those]
that most faith based systems are maintained within people’s heads. Using big words doesn’t make us understand the concepts behind them [I've stayed on the side of the road intentionally, via big words]. All Cyno is doing is using terms we cannot comprehend (being outside the universe) [ding dong, the witch is dead- kill her more!] to support other terms we cannot understand (God) – leaving us nowhere. It's fun though!"

I'd like to repeat that because it sounds vaguely important:

"Leaves us nowhere,
it's fun though!"

I couldn't have said it better -and I didn't. What I said, in my frustration, was "The whole idea of theology, right or wrong, is irrelevant where it comes to natural tendencies. It is as irrelevant as it is instinctively obvious, or should be obvious, to any human!" Okay, I admit that I was insulting everyone's intelligence by calling out humanity for this. Yeesh, I wanna bite the head off a Jesus cookie after this...

So, point well and painfully taken: Mantus, Cynosure, even roachboy.













I'm sick of this.

but I'm gonna keep going because, 'ooh it's soooo fun!'

Skitto 06-02-2009 11:23 PM

Did I, like, end this thread or something? Is everybody done?

Mantus 06-04-2009 12:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Skitto (Post 2645008)
Did I, like, end this thread or something? Is everybody done?

Nah man, it's just the way these forums work. If you want to discuss something make a new thread, I'll be happy to participate.

Skitto 06-09-2009 10:31 AM

Oh!

Naw, I just got suspicious that, I posted a serious post, and then everyone just- stopped...

biznatch 06-23-2009 05:54 AM

I lost interest, I guess, when everyone stopped listening. Should have expected it in a thread that discusses belief.

tisonlyi 06-23-2009 07:11 AM

Some of us happen to be of the opinion that "belief" is very nice way of saying "someone making shit up and having others falling for it". Fairies, trolls, halflings, UFO's, crop circle aliens, chiropractic healing of deafness, autism caused by vaccines and, oh yes, the big one: God(s).

Some of us happen to think that Humanity needs to get past the idea that "making shit up and then believing it's true", sorry, "believing" or "faith" is reasonable, acceptable or even OK.

There'd be a lot less abortion clinic murders, holy wars, children dying through lack of herd immunity to preventable diseases, children being raped as a cure for aids, mass hysteria for witches making men impotent, etc, etc... if we could just get past the whole idea that it's a good thing to believe in things that have zero basis in evidence.

To clarify, with regard to God(s), I'm talking about the variety that might have any passing interest in the observable universe we inhabit, other flavours are still fairy stories, but less damaging aside from encouraging the belief in nonsense.

So yes, there is a reason to have the occasional quarrel with people who "make shit up".

I believe we generally discourage lying... just not about the Zombie Jew who dies for Original Sins that... you get the point.

Reese 06-23-2009 07:25 AM

We're constantly improving our scientific understanding, Do you really think this is the end of our advancement? That is completely ridiculous. What we know about our universe doesn't amount to a speck of dust. 300-500 more years what we know about space/time/physics/universe will be taught in 3rd grade history class. Assuming we don't blow ourselves up.


Maybe science's final destination is God but our whacked out theories are taking us on a little detour. Never know.

tisonlyi 06-23-2009 08:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cybermike (Post 2656692)
We're constantly improving our scientific understanding, Do you really think this is the end of our advancement? That is completely ridiculous. What we know about our universe doesn't amount to a speck of dust. 300-500 more years what we know about space/time/physics/universe will be taught in 3rd grade history class. Assuming we don't blow ourselves up.


Maybe science's final destination is God but our whacked out theories are taking us on a little detour. Never know.

QFT... mostly. Science doesn't have a destination in an emergent universe such as we exist within.

150 years ago, Spontaneous Generation was a respectable point of view.

Literally, it was 'reasonable' to hold the view that mice pop into existence in the presence of cheese.

How crazy would you be thought to be if you had "Faith" in that little pieces of make-believe today?

Skitto 06-25-2009 03:10 PM

Mr. Tisjustme, go back and read the last large postings that Knifemissle, Cynosure, and I made, and catch up with the debate.

...

Ready?

Who can make ANY statement about an idea like "the Universe" equally as vague as that of "God"... SCIENCE even! Science is just as deferrant as religion, being the balance to religion, for most people. Religion forms questions, Science gets the tangible answers; these are separate institutions, mind you: separate cultures are dominated by either of these two on an esoteric level, and a society in a good balance between them is rare at best.


p.s. Amen Cyberjake, you have good sensibilities on this.

cellfactor 09-21-2009 02:28 PM

Self Contradition of purpose (i want to not be able to)
 
Hello, hope all are good, this is my first post :)

Quote:

1) If God is omnipotent, he can do anything.
2) If he can do anything, he can create a rock which he cannot lift
3) If he cannot lift that rock which he created, then he cannot do anything and he is not omnipotent
4) If he can lift that rock which he created, then he has not created a rock that he cannot lift
5) If he cannot create a rock that he cannot lift, then he is not omnipotent
The reasoning is very interesting however it has 1 major flaw that I think makes it invalid. Omnipotent according to Wikipedia means unlimited power. That would be the unlimited power to do something. What you are asking is the Unlimited power to not be able to do something. This doesn't make sense. You want unlimited power to "not" be able to lift a rock. This negation,"not" cannot be used in contest as it contradicts the purpose of the definition. You can ask for unlimited power to be able to do something. You can ask for unlimited power to be able to stop something. You cannot however contradict ask for unlimited power to stop you from doing what you want to do.

In summary what you're saying is: I want the power of not being able to have the power to lift a rock. "Not power" + "power" in the same purpose of the same statement, hence self contradiction.

pan6467 11-25-2009 07:12 AM

Our "universe" is nothing but the atoms/molecules (and we as individuals are micro, micro atomic particles) of some other dimensional beings snot. Who in turn is Just part of another being's snot molecules and so on into eternity, where at the very end, we find we are somehow our own snot molecules............... beware the great sneeze.

Lady Bear Cub 11-25-2009 11:12 AM

I thought that if energy couldn't be created or destroyed then everything was basically around forever in some form. I could be totally wrong. I just thought that beginnings and ends were things our minds made up so we could keep a hold of our sanity when thinking about shit like this.

Willravel 11-25-2009 11:29 AM

Conservation of energy is an incarnation of the first law of thermodynamics if I'm remembering my physics correctly, but doesn't take into account some of the fun things we've stated learning since delving into quantum mechanics. And example would be vacuum fluctuations.

There might have been a beginning of what we now consider space/time in the form of the singularity exploding in the Big Bang process. I'm not sure if you can say "before the big bang", as time started with the cosmic origin along with energy and matter.

I think. I'm a bit of a dolt when it comes to physics.

Lady Bear Cub 11-25-2009 12:44 PM

Sounds like you know a lot more than me.

I did watch a thing on TV that put the universe on a time line since the big bang. It was very interesting and it mentioned the creation of space time. That space/time stuff kind of went over my head though, they did not spend much time explaining it.


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