07-22-2003, 03:47 PM | #1 (permalink) |
Kiss of Death
Location: Perpetual wind and sorrow
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Why are so many people opposed...?
Why are so many people opposed to the idea of a God? Does the notion scare you guys or something? The fact that you would put more faith in humans (who are flawed) is baffling.
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To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. |
07-22-2003, 03:53 PM | #2 (permalink) |
Sky Piercer
Location: Ireland
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WHAT!? I'm not scared of the notion of God. I just don't believe he exists. Hell, life would be fine and dandy if God existed...everlasting happiness sounds pretty jovial to me!
I don't have any "faith" in humans...but I can certainly see that they are real. This is one of the most ridiculous accusations that I have ever heard. What is baffling to me is that "you guys" would put faith in to something that you cannot even prove exists or not.
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07-22-2003, 04:05 PM | #5 (permalink) |
Kiss of Death
Location: Perpetual wind and sorrow
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Well actually I can... You see Saint Nick, the man himself died some 1500 years ago. But that still leaves the problem of the Easter Bunny...
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To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. |
07-22-2003, 04:09 PM | #7 (permalink) | |
Sky Piercer
Location: Ireland
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Perhaps you would like to take part in one of the many debates that are already going on in this board? This question has already been discussed. Most people accepeted that the onus is on the theists to prove the existence of God. Not vice-versa. As I explained in other threads, I cannot prove that there is living under my bed an invisible purple llama. I also cannot prove it is not there. But just because I can't prove it doesn't exist, does not IN ANY WAY WHAT-SO-EVER make me likely to believe in it. Do YOU believe that there is an invisible purple llama living under my bed? No? Why not? You can't PROVE that its not there.
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07-22-2003, 04:18 PM | #8 (permalink) |
Kiss of Death
Location: Perpetual wind and sorrow
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Well If there was said Invisible purple llama under your bed you could physically touch it, no? I mean unless the laws of physics don't apply to this magical invisible llama.
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To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. Last edited by Mojo_PeiPei; 07-22-2003 at 04:21 PM.. |
07-22-2003, 04:24 PM | #10 (permalink) | |
Sky Piercer
Location: Ireland
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Last edited by CSflim; 07-22-2003 at 04:28 PM.. |
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07-22-2003, 04:29 PM | #11 (permalink) |
Kiss of Death
Location: Perpetual wind and sorrow
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in·vis·i·ble ( P ) Pronunciation Key (n-vz-bl)
adj. 1.Impossible to see; not visible: Air is invisible. 2.Not accessible to view; hidden: mountain peaks invisible in the fog. 3.Not easily noticed or detected; inconspicuous: “The poor are politically invisible” (Michael Harrington). 4.Not published in financial statements: an invisible asset. Invisible refers to what you can or can not see, not the fact that you can or cannot physcally touch something.
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To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. |
07-22-2003, 04:42 PM | #12 (permalink) | |
Sky Piercer
Location: Ireland
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07-22-2003, 04:52 PM | #16 (permalink) |
My future is coming on
Moderator Emeritus
Location: east of the sun and west of the moon
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I think a lot of people are "opposed" to the idea of god (which is a strange way of putting it - lack of belief does not necessarily equate to opposition) because it's a little weird to think about basing your entire life around something that may or may not exist, and the worship of which has caused much pain and suffering in human history. For me, there's no real reason to believe in god, just as there's no real reason not to.
And I'm not sure why you're baffled why we'd put more faith in humans - I can see other humans, I can observe their behavior and its effects, speculate as to its causes, predict future behavior. Why should I put faith in some, to me, mythological being who may or may not exist, and for whose existence there is no evidence? And don't give me that Pascal's wager bullshit.
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"If ten million people believe a foolish thing, it is still a foolish thing." - Anatole France |
07-22-2003, 05:03 PM | #17 (permalink) | ||
Sky Piercer
Location: Ireland
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07-22-2003, 05:21 PM | #18 (permalink) |
don't ignore this-->
Location: CA
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I have little faith in humans, and less faith in beings fabricated by humans. The idea of a god doesn't scare me, there are plenty of beings out there more powerful than I. I don't believe everything I'm told.
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07-22-2003, 10:06 PM | #20 (permalink) |
lascivious
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In the beginning when man was still a tribal half animal there was no concept of God. There was only ritual. We belived that we had the power over everything. We believed that it is because we danced every morning that the sun come up. We believed that throwing a rock in the river made it rain. We believed that we controlled the world though their actions, for we had no science, and questions about how the world worked had to be answered. Then one day we overslept and so missed the morning dance…yet the sun still came up!
So after much thought with the primitive logic we had we came to a conclusion. If we didn’t make the sun come up. Then some guy that was bigger then us did it! |
07-23-2003, 12:25 AM | #22 (permalink) |
Cute and Cuddly
Location: Teegeeack.
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Well, the notion of a god doesn't scare me.
It's just that after reading the Bible, I kind of decided that I don't like him/her very much. Now it's up to him/her to prove me wrong.
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The above was written by a true prophet. Trust me. "What doesn't kill you, makes you bitter and paranoid". - SB2000 |
07-23-2003, 03:05 AM | #23 (permalink) | |
Upright
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Re: Why are so many people opposed...?
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I guess I draw inspiration from abstract concepts that I <B>don't</B> call "God", and also from people, who aren't all bad all the time One problem I have with the idea of a God is that some people use it as an excuse ("we can't change it for the better, it's God's will", and that sort of thing). |
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07-23-2003, 07:48 AM | #24 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: RI
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I view religion as I view life. If I see it, I'll believe it. So far, I haven't seen anything that will make me believe anything. That, I believe, is where most people stand on the issue. The idea of a god or some supreme being doesn't scare me, nor does it inspire me. It doesn't do anything for me. In my day-to-day life religion has shown me other people ridculing those that shout out their beliefs and those that believe that can't keep their mouth shut without every single thing they say is some shape or form religiously formed with a few people placed in between.
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07-23-2003, 07:08 PM | #28 (permalink) |
Know Where!
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please consider the following:
I believe in God, call it blind faith or whatever you want but nothing is EVER going to change my mind.
"IF a perfect being is possible THEN it exists" linky --- this is not a good argument how ever you look at it: Last edited by MacGnG; 07-23-2003 at 07:12 PM.. |
07-23-2003, 07:22 PM | #29 (permalink) |
Insane
Location: Houston
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I believe in God. I think of it as a scientific theory that is widely accepted. It is able to be proven with evidence, however no one has had the ability to experience it and tell about it. For example the Big Bang. It is widely accpeted by scientists that the Big Bang was the creation of the Universe. However, no one was there to see it. Yet all evidence points to it. The fact that the Universe is expanding,the fact that not all light has reached us nor has the universe reached thermal equilibrium therefore it has not exsisted for an infinite amount of time but rather had a beginning, and so on and so on.
Same way with God. The Bible is filled with stories of how God has affected people. The fact that every civilization in the world has or had a religion believing in a higher power. This shows me that somewhere along the line God has directly been involved in the lives of people showing that he exists. The story has changed but God is still there. The fact that scientists and archaelogists are finding evidence to prove stories in the Bible. The fact that the Universe was created and that it was created outside the laws of science. |
07-24-2003, 06:16 AM | #30 (permalink) | |||||
My future is coming on
Moderator Emeritus
Location: east of the sun and west of the moon
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"If ten million people believe a foolish thing, it is still a foolish thing." - Anatole France |
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07-24-2003, 08:09 AM | #31 (permalink) |
Insane
Location: Houston
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No, the law of general relativity breaks down at the singularity know as the big bang. This is because there was a single point of infinite mass that some how exploded with energy. However, the problem is the infinite amount of energy required by general relativity to cause that point to expand. That infinte energy had to come from somewhere.
It is also very clear scientifically that the Universe and time itself has a beginning. This beginning was 15 billion years ago and it has been called the big bang. Something had to create the universe. Why is it so hard to believe that we were created by something bigger than we are. Look at all we create. We can genetically alter simple organisms. If they were capable of intelligent thought I'm sure they would not readily be able to understand how they were created. Yet we know they were created because we made them. Same way with God. He created us, yet because we are lesser creatures we are unable to fully understand how and why we are here. So we develop our own theories. Some can be proven by are methods some cannot. Our entire universe can be the size of a grain of sand in something much larger. We are limited in our ability to think and therefore we can never know the entire picture. |
07-24-2003, 08:49 AM | #32 (permalink) |
Sir, I have a plan...
Location: 38S NC20943324
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The above statement is false, the Big Bang did not involve infinite mass.
But if it had: Mass is energy. If you have infinite mass, you have the infinite energy needed to move it.
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07-24-2003, 09:39 AM | #34 (permalink) |
Upright
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Science talk doesn't make this true.
I am a graduate student in mathematical physics, and though I don't study big bang theories myself, I know enough about them from osmosis to say that your presentation here is specious pseudoscience.
First: >No, the law of general relativity breaks down at the singularity >know as the big bang. This is because there was a single point >of infinite mass that some how exploded with energy. However, >the problem is the infinite amount of energy required by general >relativity to cause that point to expand. That infinte energy had >to come from somewhere. General relativity is a model of reality, not reality. It is a system of mathematical rules and relationships studied by physicists because it makes meaningful predictions about the observed universe. You are right in saying those laws break down near the big bang. But that doesn't mean the universe didn't have governing principles then. It only means that our scientific model no longer applies there. Scientists are still actively researching the first moments after the big bang, and no existing theory applies all the way back to the singularity. Incidentally, some of these theories suggest that the singularity was "created" by the collapse of another universe. The universe may have been snapping open and closed into the infinite past. And I put "created" in quotes because causality as humans understand it doesn't really exist at a space-time singularity, and thus the concept of "creating" doesn't make much sense. This, by the way is fundamental flaw in your argument. >It is also very clear scientifically that the Universe and time itself >has a beginning. ... Something had to create the universe. The ideas of "a beginning" and of "creating" are human inventions, born from the structure of the human brain and from human experiences. The human experience and the structure of the human brain are predicated on the laws of physics as they exist today. Common sense like "something had to create the universe" is absurd nonsense in the moments after the big bang unless a scientific theory gives it a rigorous meaning. Now, >Why is it so hard to believe that we were created by something >bigger than we are. Look at all we create. We can genetically >alter simple organisms. If they were capable of intelligent >thought I'm sure they would not readily be able to understand >how they were created. Yet we know they were created >because we made them. Fine. I can't prove God doesn't exist. Science is merely a description of the observed physical world. It is not reality itself. To the extent that we observe things inconsistent with our science, we can change our theories to better mirror reality as we observe it. Since God is outside observed reality, science will never reach him. This is basically what you said. So I don't find it hard to accept the possibility of a creator. I do question his relevance to my life as I experience it. >Same way with God. He created us, yet because we are lesser >creatures we are unable to fully understand how and why we >are here. This is an analogy, not an argument. Why do you attempt to woo nonbelievers with rhetorical devices that only appeal to believers? Finally >We are limited in our ability to think and therefore we can never >know the entire picture. I agree wholeheartedly. Science doesn't claim to have the whole picture. Only organized religion does. Do you see now why agnostics are so uncomfortable? We are supposed to have faith in a religious vision because of the insufficiency of our reason. But if you don't already have faith, you look around and see about 75 ready-made faiths to choose from. Am I really supposed to choose one at random and adhere to it? Sorry for the aggressive tone of this message, but I get testy when people appeal to science to make arguments that science isn't intended for. You steal the authoritative tone that science has in our culture without submitting to the rigorous constraints imposed by the scientific method. But almost everyone does this from time to time. I'm guilty of it myself, I'm sure. So please don't view this message as a personal attack. I really did appreciate reading and thinking about your views. |
07-24-2003, 10:46 AM | #35 (permalink) |
Sarge of Blood Gulch Red Outpost Number One
Location: On the front lines against our very enemy
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Well the First Law of Thermodynamics proves there is at least a Divine Creator. It tells us that matter can neither be created nor destroyed by natural causes. I believe that design is a very valid statement, because there can be no creation without a designer. Buildings didn't just appear out of nowhere without someone first thinking them up. Something HAD to be there to create the Universe, and our Earth. Since God is not natural, He is beyond being natural, he can create matter or destroy it. And by destroying it, I mean completely, no trace, nothing left of it, and no natural cause can do that, because matter will always continue to exist (unless God wishes it so). Burn a match, it's destroyed isn't it, unusable by our standards, yet it is still matter, just in a different form. Thereby with a quick use of just ONE law of physics, proves the existence of a Divine Creator at least, and at most proves the existence of The Holy Trinity (God the Father, the Holy Spirit, and the Son). It's just logical. Another point, the brain can compute twenty thousand, trillion calculations per second ! This three pound package can do more calculations than any computer on this Earth can. Because the creation cannot be greater than the creator, amoebas are not greater than humans, they're on the lowest scale of life, they only perform few functions at best, we could not have evolved from amoebas. Granted, I will concede the point that there probably was a more primitive man (and by primitive I mean less intelligent, because in the past man has always been less intelligent than it's posterity) and that we adapted and became acclimated to our climates and environments, but we did not evolve from a different species (that's my opinion and theory, that's not proven fact, but then again, neither is the THEORY of Evolution). That's my reasoning of it.
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07-24-2003, 12:43 PM | #37 (permalink) |
Upright
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Problems with God eh? Well have you ever considered the posibilites that GOD does not LIKE you?! Maybe we are his unwanted children, everything is a drag. And you live your life hoping for a chance, of what? Stop living for death, love god, hate god, the only solid thing is your mind and your existance, and sure argue that you don't exist, fine then. I'll live my life to the fullest and you can contemplate this stuff. ENjoy
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07-24-2003, 12:52 PM | #38 (permalink) |
Upright
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I think the idea of God is the inate fear of man, the fear of death. If you fabricate a "god" that can promise you that your death was not just you decomposing into organic matter, but isn't it? tear open those coffins and what do see, a rotting corpse. The idea of a soul is also I believe a crutch, for those who have no will to well, get a will to run off of. The idea of God is a good one, its gotten more than half the world hooked into this idea. Thats what you call good endorsement and propoganda. Good business management
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07-24-2003, 01:00 PM | #39 (permalink) | |
Guest
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So I guess I am God. And I sure as hell believe in me. |
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07-24-2003, 01:41 PM | #40 (permalink) | |
Sarge of Blood Gulch Red Outpost Number One
Location: On the front lines against our very enemy
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"This ain't no Ice Cream Social!" "Hey Grif, Chupathingy...how bout that? I like it...got a ring to it." "I have no earthly idea what it is I just saw, or what this place is, or where in the hell O'Malley is! My only choice is to blame Grif for coming up with such a flawed plan. Stupid, stupid Grif." |
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