Yet it isn't. Strange that.Except that it would have been the exact opposite of what I posted.
Yet it isn't. Strange that.Except that it would have been the exact opposite of what I posted.
Not to me but since this subject is evidently way too complicated for you I understand why you might think this way.Yet it isn't. Strange that.
You keep saying **** like this when you fail to present a logical argument or convince anyone of your position. No one's buying it. Especially on this forum where such tactics are well known.... since this subject is evidently way too complicated for you ....
No your posts are very simplistic so it's not those I can't follow.Not to me but since this subject is evidently way too complicated for you I understand why you might think this way.
It is only necessary to examine the underpinning assumptions and whether some of his conclusions are the only way to interpret the data he used.
Do you see why an interest in Hawking's conclusions being misrepresented as a lack of interest in Hawking's conclusions might lead me to question your sincerity?It would have been quicker to have just said you have no interest in his scientific conclusions you know.
But "everything that exists" is the prevailing definition of "universe" and always has been.
When you suggest a god might live "outside the universe," what variant definition of "universe" are you using? You want to make that definition clear, in order to make your suggestion meaningful, don't you? A god might exist outside of what, exactly?
I think calling the Advaitic Brahman "God" is just a quirk of translation combined with a different conception of reality in the eastern vs western mind.
"God" is a deity in the West. "Theists" in the west actively hold beliefs in one or more deities.
Not just the West its most places.
But "everything that exists" is the prevailing definition of "universe" and always has been.
When you suggest a god might live "outside the universe," what variant definition of "universe" are you using? You want to make that definition clear, in order to make your suggestion meaningful, don't you? A god might exist outside of what, exactly?
But where do we go from here, with this understanding of ours, as far as our discussion about soft and hard atheism, and the different types of Gods?
Do we say, “We only recognize deities as God, and so limit our discussion of theism and atheism only to belief in deities, and simply leave out these non-deity God-ideas entirely out of our discussion?” Absolutely, that is one way to go. Nor is this POV necessarily inconsistent with the historical definition of the word “God”. If this is how you choose to define the discussion on theism, hard atheism is a perfectly reasonable position, and I am happy to call myself a hard atheist.
Or do we say, “Here are some further rather abstract God-like ideas, that do not involve any deities at all, and that some/many of us had not been familiar with. Let us expand our discussion of theism and atheism to include these ideas also.” If this latter is how you choose to define the discussion on theism, then I would say that hard atheism is reasonable only in some instances, while soft atheism is always reasonable; and so I am, in general, not a hard atheist but a soft atheist.
Or to sum it up, no I'm not particularly interested in playing a rousing game of finding the minimum allowable amount of "God"
In a room with no chair, what's the minimum amount of chair you'll still agree is in the room? There's your answer.
I think something exists beyond the cosmic horizon. In fact I think that for at least tens of billions of light years beyond the cosmic horizon, perhaps infinitely far, there are galaxies filled with stars that look very much like the ones that we can see here.
Yet if they exist they are literally undetectable. There is absolutely no way that those things can influence us, even in principle. There is also no way to test the idea that they exist.
Yet I still think that they are out there.
Do you see why an interest in Hawking's conclusions being misrepresented as a lack of interest in Hawking's conclusions might lead me to question your sincerity?
That makes sense.
That would explain the rendering into the word “God” of their own venerated ideals by people like Advaitists and (some) Theravadins, as well as (some) Sufis, et cetera. And that would also explain the inability of those who haven’t been exposed to these ideas, to conceive of a “God idea” that isn’t deity-based.
But where do we go from here, with this understanding of ours, as far as our discussion about soft and hard atheism, and the different types of Gods?
Do we say, “We only recognize deities as God, and so limit our discussion of theism and atheism only to belief in deities, and simply leave out these non-deity God-ideas entirely out of our discussion?” Absolutely, that is one way to go. Nor is this POV necessarily inconsistent with the historical definition of the word “God”. If this is how you choose to define the discussion on theism, hard atheism is a perfectly reasonable position, and I am happy to call myself a hard atheist.
Or do we say, “Here are some further rather abstract God-like ideas, that do not involve any deities at all, and that some/many of us had not been familiar with. Let us expand our discussion of theism and atheism to include these ideas also.” If this latter is how you choose to define the discussion on theism, then I would say that hard atheism is reasonable only in some instances, while soft atheism is always reasonable; and so I am, in general, not a hard atheist but a soft atheist.
What about you, kellyb, and Darat? I realize this is open to subjective interpretation, there can be no set-in-stone guidelines that either you or I can lay down: but what would your personal interpretation be? How would you define the terms of discussion, given what I’ve said here, and how would you state your views on soft and hard atheism in light of this?
The underlying is the maths.
I keep it simple. If your answer to “which god do you believe in?” Is “none” then you are an atheist. Atheism isn’t a position of knowledge but one of belief. If you don’t actually believe in a god then you are an atheist.
The silliness of hard and soft and so on atheism arises from a misunderstanding of what atheism is.
But if you want to insist on "right" and "wrong" I am game.
But where do we go from here, with this understanding of ours, as far as our discussion about soft and hard adragonism, and the different types of Invisible Garage Dragons?
Do we say, “We only recognize deities as the Invisible Garage Dragon, and so limit our discussion of dragonism and adragonism only to belief in deities, and simply leave out these non-deity Dragon-ideas entirely out of our discussion?” Absolutely, that is one way to go. Nor is this POV necessarily inconsistent with the historical definition of the word “Dragon”. If this is how you choose to define the discussion on theism, hard adragonism is a perfectly reasonable position, and I am happy to call myself a hard adragonist.
Or do we say, “Here are some further rather abstract Dragon-like ideas, that do not involve any reptiles at all, and that some/many of us had not been familiar with. Let us expand our discussion of dragonism and adragonism to include these ideas also.” If this latter is how you choose to define the discussion on theism, then I would say that hard adragonism is reasonable only in some instances, while soft atheism is always reasonable; and so I am, in general, not a hard adragonist but a soft adragonist.
Or to sum it up, no I'm not particularly interested in playing a rousing game of finding the minimum allowable amount of "God"
In a room with no chair, what's the minimum amount of chair you'll still agree is in the room? There's your answer.