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alissowack;7500309 said:FuriousOne;7499503 said:alissowack;7499426 said:Stiff;7498901 said:The Lonious Monk;7498491 said:I'm a believer and all, but believing in God isn't really logical. That's kinda the point. You're supposed to operate based on faith which means you believe even if you don't have a logical reason to do so.
Believing in God isn't logical or believing in the Abrahamic incarnation of God?
This is a very good question to ask. It seems like whenever someone makes the case for the existence of God, those against the notion presuppose this conclusion that it means the God of the Bible or the Quran...or any other monotheistic religions. Then it becomes an attempt to debunk religion instead of looking past the teachings and rituals.
Those religions and books came about their conclusions in the same exact fashion as anyone that believes in a God. If those religions weren't around and didn't present the concept, would you independently imagine a higher being that created us? Maybe you would. Before the Abrahamic religions, people thought trees had spirits, and the Gods were many. Christians have no issue laughing their theories off because they are looked at as unsupported fables. It's not a matter of a particular religion but a particular concept presented, and debunked. There shouldn't even be a word like atheism because it gives more credence to theism as if it has a foundation to stand on. You can't be anti what isn't (as in nothing has been presented factually). To even call these presentations theories is laughable. They haven't even gone past hypothesis stage. Or at least it shouldn't default to mean anti belief in God, rather then anti blind acceptance of unfounded ideas presented by other people.
I don't believe the issue is about whether someone imagines God (those it is an issue in itself). It's concluding, given what we know about the beginning of the universe, that God exist. All religions could just be wrong about who God is, but at the very least God should meet those qualifications that were presented...like being eternal among other things.
...and maybe I should try to explain the use of eternal as being a characteristic. The word is not being used to convey power and might. It suppose to keep us from trying to find an explanation for the explanation...or to avoid an infinite regress. On a finite scale, we know not to cross that line. If someone witnesses me making a paper airplane or playing a guitar...or hurting someone...that person is not going to look down my family tree and my family's family tree (and on...) for the explanation. They are going to credit me directly for the cause.
Trashboat;7501850 said:Technically A God can be logically argued to exist, it's just that the definition needs to be exclude all of the stuff religions typically include
If the assumption that the universe's expansion is a true indication that it has a starting point, and everything else in the universe we have experience with also has a point of origin, then it seems it would make more sense to believe it was created rather than having always existed. So if the definition of "God" is limited to the source of the creation of the universe, and excludes all of the assumptions, like man being made in God's image, God being omniscient and omnipotent, hating the gays, or favoring the Jews, then I would have to agree that God exists.
There is no evidence indicating that it is conscious though. There is no proof that any of this was intentionally made. All that can be supported is that the universe has a point of origin, and that it is not at all the way religion depicts.
Stiff;7496803 said:zombie;7496721 said:in order for the laws of the universe to create the universe they must have an existence apart from the universe.
And that's impossible. The very idea of the Universe coming from "nothingness" violates Newton's(?) law that states that energy is neither created nor destroyed
FuriousOne;7501881 said:Trashboat;7501850 said:Technically A God can be logically argued to exist, it's just that the definition needs to be exclude all of the stuff religions typically include
If the assumption that the universe's expansion is a true indication that it has a starting point, and everything else in the universe we have experience with also has a point of origin, then it seems it would make more sense to believe it was created rather than having always existed. So if the definition of "God" is limited to the source of the creation of the universe, and excludes all of the assumptions, like man being made in God's image, God being omniscient and omnipotent, hating the gays, or favoring the Jews, then I would have to agree that God exists.
There is no evidence indicating that it is conscious though. There is no proof that any of this was intentionally made. All that can be supported is that the universe has a point of origin, and that it is not at all the way religion depicts.
The expanding universe is a theory. There is also a theory that the universe goes through cycles of expansion and compression (The Big Crunch).
Trashboat;7501968 said:FuriousOne;7501881 said:Trashboat;7501850 said:Technically A God can be logically argued to exist, it's just that the definition needs to be exclude all of the stuff religions typically include
If the assumption that the universe's expansion is a true indication that it has a starting point, and everything else in the universe we have experience with also has a point of origin, then it seems it would make more sense to believe it was created rather than having always existed. So if the definition of "God" is limited to the source of the creation of the universe, and excludes all of the assumptions, like man being made in God's image, God being omniscient and omnipotent, hating the gays, or favoring the Jews, then I would have to agree that God exists.
There is no evidence indicating that it is conscious though. There is no proof that any of this was intentionally made. All that can be supported is that the universe has a point of origin, and that it is not at all the way religion depicts.
The expanding universe is a theory. There is also a theory that the universe goes through cycles of expansion and compression (The Big Crunch).
The expansion of space is more than a theory
it's observable
we constantly watch as the distance between objects gets larger
FuriousOne;7501809 said:alissowack;7500309 said:FuriousOne;7499503 said:alissowack;7499426 said:Stiff;7498901 said:The Lonious Monk;7498491 said:I'm a believer and all, but believing in God isn't really logical. That's kinda the point. You're supposed to operate based on faith which means you believe even if you don't have a logical reason to do so.
Believing in God isn't logical or believing in the Abrahamic incarnation of God?
This is a very good question to ask. It seems like whenever someone makes the case for the existence of God, those against the notion presuppose this conclusion that it means the God of the Bible or the Quran...or any other monotheistic religions. Then it becomes an attempt to debunk religion instead of looking past the teachings and rituals.
Those religions and books came about their conclusions in the same exact fashion as anyone that believes in a God. If those religions weren't around and didn't present the concept, would you independently imagine a higher being that created us? Maybe you would. Before the Abrahamic religions, people thought trees had spirits, and the Gods were many. Christians have no issue laughing their theories off because they are looked at as unsupported fables. It's not a matter of a particular religion but a particular concept presented, and debunked. There shouldn't even be a word like atheism because it gives more credence to theism as if it has a foundation to stand on. You can't be anti what isn't (as in nothing has been presented factually). To even call these presentations theories is laughable. They haven't even gone past hypothesis stage. Or at least it shouldn't default to mean anti belief in God, rather then anti blind acceptance of unfounded ideas presented by other people.
I don't believe the issue is about whether someone imagines God (those it is an issue in itself). It's concluding, given what we know about the beginning of the universe, that God exist. All religions could just be wrong about who God is, but at the very least God should meet those qualifications that were presented...like being eternal among other things.
...and maybe I should try to explain the use of eternal as being a characteristic. The word is not being used to convey power and might. It suppose to keep us from trying to find an explanation for the explanation...or to avoid an infinite regress. On a finite scale, we know not to cross that line. If someone witnesses me making a paper airplane or playing a guitar...or hurting someone...that person is not going to look down my family tree and my family's family tree (and on...) for the explanation. They are going to credit me directly for the cause.
Where is the factual proof of this knowledge of God? It's a hypothesis and a grandiose conclusion based on pondering. That's cool, but at the end of the day, no one knows if that a particular guess is accurate at all because they really don't know or honestly seek the true origins or nature of the universe. Scientist don't know either, and only a fool would claim such a thing without showing others that he's accurate beyond cool sounding words of inspiration.
Even when a scientist is honest in their admission that more data is required, instead of finding more data, or admitting that it is impossible to find more data but everything found so far hasn't been dismissed just because of that, religious people dismiss it anyhow as some kind of silly celebration of ignorance. We haven't even gotten that deep down the Rabbit hole. People are offering surface opinions and making claims, and don't point to anything to support those claims that is tangible, independent, and accurate.
If somebody told me someone was getting beat up right in front of me, and i don't see what they are talking about, either they are delusional, or i'm blind, deaf, or crazy. You're basically making shit up at that point. Even when unseen, things can be tested with instruments that can detect data. We make judgments based on past data on the fly to assess our surroundings. The difference is, the mysterious unseen subject talked about is supposedly the creator of all things, yet according to the tenants of religion, we aren't supposed to question whether it exist in the first place. We are only supposed to question our own allegiance or be excluded (from what?).
alissowack;7503914 said:FuriousOne;7501809 said:alissowack;7500309 said:FuriousOne;7499503 said:alissowack;7499426 said:Stiff;7498901 said:The Lonious Monk;7498491 said:I'm a believer and all, but believing in God isn't really logical. That's kinda the point. You're supposed to operate based on faith which means you believe even if you don't have a logical reason to do so.
Believing in God isn't logical or believing in the Abrahamic incarnation of God?
This is a very good question to ask. It seems like whenever someone makes the case for the existence of God, those against the notion presuppose this conclusion that it means the God of the Bible or the Quran...or any other monotheistic religions. Then it becomes an attempt to debunk religion instead of looking past the teachings and rituals.
Those religions and books came about their conclusions in the same exact fashion as anyone that believes in a God. If those religions weren't around and didn't present the concept, would you independently imagine a higher being that created us? Maybe you would. Before the Abrahamic religions, people thought trees had spirits, and the Gods were many. Christians have no issue laughing their theories off because they are looked at as unsupported fables. It's not a matter of a particular religion but a particular concept presented, and debunked. There shouldn't even be a word like atheism because it gives more credence to theism as if it has a foundation to stand on. You can't be anti what isn't (as in nothing has been presented factually). To even call these presentations theories is laughable. They haven't even gone past hypothesis stage. Or at least it shouldn't default to mean anti belief in God, rather then anti blind acceptance of unfounded ideas presented by other people.
I don't believe the issue is about whether someone imagines God (those it is an issue in itself). It's concluding, given what we know about the beginning of the universe, that God exist. All religions could just be wrong about who God is, but at the very least God should meet those qualifications that were presented...like being eternal among other things.
...and maybe I should try to explain the use of eternal as being a characteristic. The word is not being used to convey power and might. It suppose to keep us from trying to find an explanation for the explanation...or to avoid an infinite regress. On a finite scale, we know not to cross that line. If someone witnesses me making a paper airplane or playing a guitar...or hurting someone...that person is not going to look down my family tree and my family's family tree (and on...) for the explanation. They are going to credit me directly for the cause.
Where is the factual proof of this knowledge of God? It's a hypothesis and a grandiose conclusion based on pondering. That's cool, but at the end of the day, no one knows if that a particular guess is accurate at all because they really don't know or honestly seek the true origins or nature of the universe. Scientist don't know either, and only a fool would claim such a thing without showing others that he's accurate beyond cool sounding words of inspiration.
Even when a scientist is honest in their admission that more data is required, instead of finding more data, or admitting that it is impossible to find more data but everything found so far hasn't been dismissed just because of that, religious people dismiss it anyhow as some kind of silly celebration of ignorance. We haven't even gotten that deep down the Rabbit hole. People are offering surface opinions and making claims, and don't point to anything to support those claims that is tangible, independent, and accurate.
If somebody told me someone was getting beat up right in front of me, and i don't see what they are talking about, either they are delusional, or i'm blind, deaf, or crazy. You're basically making shit up at that point. Even when unseen, things can be tested with instruments that can detect data. We make judgments based on past data on the fly to assess our surroundings. The difference is, the mysterious unseen subject talked about is supposedly the creator of all things, yet according to the tenants of religion, we aren't supposed to question whether it exist in the first place. We are only supposed to question our own allegiance or be excluded (from what?).
The point isn't to show you what eternity or infinity "looks like". The point of my illustration is to show that if something has a beginning, it must have a cause...and to avoid an infinite regress, you don't try to explain the explanation. You, in your reply to me, did not get the certain urge to want to find out the explanation, of the explanation, of the explanation, of my explanation. You understood fully that I, alissowack, was the source of the explanation and that there was no need to go any further. If fact, your reply has a source...you. You are not saying to yourself...what is the explanation, of the explanation, of the explanation, of your explanation. You have ideals and perspectives you draw from as what has driven your response. You're going saying where did your ideas get it's ideas from...and so on.
When a person makes God "the source", it isn't necessarily to endorse a religion and yet these arguments assume that it is such 100% of the time. There are people out there that do accept that God exist...but not on the grounds of any religion.
Trashboat;7500198 said:zombie;7500162 said:Trashboat;7500144 said:The dominant theories do not say the universe came from nothing
if the universe did not come from nothing then it had to come from something which means it had to be created and science has disproved the eternal universe
That in no way means that a God is that something
playmaker88;7504396 said:The world is too complicated for their not to be an orchestrator. Thats the way i always felt..
Happenstance and coincidence cant be this perfect.
zombie;7504272 said:Trashboat;7500198 said:zombie;7500162 said:Trashboat;7500144 said:The dominant theories do not say the universe came from nothing
if the universe did not come from nothing then it had to come from something which means it had to be created and science has disproved the eternal universe
That in no way means that a God is that something
what ever that something is it would be God
SneakDZA;7499488 said:Stiff;523075 said:Say you were wandering through the desert. Walking and walking. You see the standard desert things as far as the eyes can: rocks, sand etc. And then out of nowhere you stumble upon a a table, fully set with chairs, plates, and silverware. You look around and there's nobody around at all. No traces of civilization anywhere in your vicinity. No footprints, nothing. And it looked like it had put there relatively recently.
It would be irrational to deduce that the tableset simply must have created and set itself. The salad fork placed itself in the correct spot next to the... (wherever the salad fork goes). It would be illogical to reach the conclusion that the entire table set was generated just randomly and coincidentally naturally. Even though you didn't see it, most reasonable people would reach the conclusion that at some point this table, these chairs, and this silverware was created by someone. And SOMEBODY set this table out in the desert, as odd as it seems. Who knows why, but they did it.
And yet we have a wide spread belief that an entire Universe can be put into existence randomly. We look at the immutable laws of science and reach the conclusion that they must have wrote themselves. We look at the world and see how an ecosystem was set to perpetuate life through a "barter system": the plants need carbon dioxide and create oxygen. Animals and humans need Oxygen and create carbon dioxide.
I consider myself Christian, but if you look at Christian beliefs and be like "ehhh nah" then that's understandable. But to sit up and denounce all form of spirituality and deny that the universe has a creator just comes off as pretty unreasonable. A table can't set itself, but a universe can? Nah that's not adding up.
I'm sorry but that is one of the most illogical and irrational analogies I've ever read. If I was a christian that shit would probably have me rethinking my whole belief system just out of spite.
The oddest part is that what you described has actually happened many times throughout history - and every time no one ever assumes the "table" (or tomb or pyramid or tablet or whatever) randomly created itself - they ask who created it and why and what does it mean. that's the nature of science.
To use your same analogy but in reverse that would be like discovering Tutankhamen's tomb and just assuming that it was created by some random god because you either can't or don't want to bother trying to explain it any other way. To assume the object created itself would be more in line with religion than science.
[color= #87F717]Also, no scientist worth listening to has ever said the universe just spontaneously created itself out of nothing. Ever.[/color][/size=5]
But since you brought it up... does god have a mother? Or did it just create itself out of nothing?
Trashboat;7500144 said:[color= #87F717]The dominant theories do not say the universe came from nothing[/size=5][/color]
zombie;7505944 said:the nothing as defined by scientists is not the common usage that average people use. but even by that definition the universe cannot come from nothing for the reasons I already detailed