Gold_Certificate
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By that reasoning, perhaps our definitions for all words are in fact wrong. Because by removing the "supernatural" aspect from the concept of "God"; it becomes objectively disprovable, observable, and measurable. At which point the burden proof falls squarely upon those claiming the concept exists.kai_valya;5374128 said:Gold_Certificate;5374109 said:He said "God"; which is a supernatural concept:kai_valya;5374053 said:Gold_Certificate;5373875 said:His argument fails because the claim of the "supernatural" is an unscientific one. So by the very nature of the claim, evidence can't be compiled for or against it.kai_valya;5373770 said:i think carl sagan said it the best i've ever heard
"An atheist is someone who is certain that God does not exist, someone who has compelling evidence against the existence of God. I know of no such compelling evidence..."
Such claims don't automatically get a status quo of "true" or "valid" simply because someone comes up with them.
he didn't say anything about supernatural, if the laws of the universe are "god", the universe is not supernatural. my whole point is, faith is doubt (i know that sounds like one of the phrases from animal farm) and what you choose to make it, at least that's how it is for me. i don't think this is an issue you come to a conclusion on and move on, for me it's a lifelong kind of thing, that is riddled with doubt and questions
i'm not even sold on the realness of ours or anythings existence to be honest. and i find the more i learn the more i realize how much i don't know.
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If he was referring to the laws of the Universe, there was no need to use the word "God" in the first place.
That's no better than saying "If this oxygen atom is "the internet", than "the internet" is not technological.".
Defeats the purpose of words having meanings.
perhaps our definition that "god" is in fact supernatural is wrong
Perhaps "pigs" aren't mammals because our definition for "pig" is also wrong; it's a slippery slope b.