But for all extents and purposes non-conscious things have to obey these laws whether they know they are obeying them or not. That was my point a long while back about the "necessities" or "needs" of god.
Logic and reasoning aren't "laws". They are tools we use for understanding the laws. I still disagree that this could be called "needs" of god.
No "over the rainbow" for you Tricky. Awww.

So where is hope derived?
My hope is derived from the observation that humans are getting better every day at understanding how things work, so that one day, maybe soon, we will stop buggering up the machinery. Also, I get great hope from seeing how we have come to learn and share. Less than two hundred years ago, most humans couldn't even read. Now I routinely write and share ideas with people in other countries. I regard that as a very hopeful sign. A lot more so than pinning my hopes on a place "where troubles melt like lemon drops."
I get your point, but I disagree.
In what way do you disagree? How do you suggest that God might allocate His attention to various things?
You're right of course, but it there is no reason not to assume anything. And I enjoy tinkering.
My only assumption is that what we can objectively observe reflects the actual nature of reality. And I assume that only because any other assumption than that is even more unreasonable.
Well, not entirely true. First of all, if they were, we probably wouldn't understand the whys and hows of it. The event horizons of black holes are about as close as we can come to theorizing about it. However, it seems fairly accepted that the internal structure of the black hole is a place in which the laws of physics and logic do not apply with regards to time and space.
No, I don't think that is true at all. I think that we agree that we don't yet understand how the laws of physics operate in black holes, but not that they don't apply. It is similar to saying that the laws of general relativity are accurate enough for most cases, but in extreme cases (such as approaching the speed of light) the laws of special relativity describe differences that were once subtle and are no longer subtle. And I expect that as we learn more about black holes, we'll see a similar expansion of our knowledge. Logically.
Other areas are also theorized by modern cosmologists, but I'd have to go digging for them.
No need to do that. I understand your point, I just disagree. Besides, I don't want to have to re-learn calculus (whimper whimper).
Ahh don't fret Tricky. As soon as you did know what one was, it would be altered again so that you couldn't know that you know, or knew, or ummm.
LOL. Okay. But I do know what it means to imagine time as altered. Ten minutes in my bosses office is like an hour, while ten minutes talking to a beautiful woman is like a second. But my watch shows that objectively, ten minutes have passed in both cases. Sigh.
Look it really is simple-- if there are deep anomalies in time, we can't know them nor could we at this point measure them.
LOL. Well isn't that convenient. For some reason, I am reminded of "Only the true Messiah denies his divinity."
Stephen Hawking once theorized that the reason we remember the past and not the future may be due to the temperature of mental processes.
I'd be very surprised if he said that in the same context as you are saying it.
I don't pretend to understand any of it, but I'm not going to be writing-off a deity given how little we know. But that's just me and I respect the other side of the ballpark.
I'm not "writing off" any, but considering how many deities are described and how many more are probably undescribed, I just have to give a blanket statement that "I could be wrong". But given a detailed description of several deities, I can see why they don't make any sense to me.
As for "respect", I think we had a thread on that recently. My position was, you respect the person, not the idea. Politeness is required if you respect a person. Ideas stand on their merit alone. For example, you and I seem to be able to discuss and disagree (disrespect?) about ideas without losing any respect for each other.
Like mushroom clouds? I'm just not sure the species is mature enough to drop theological ideologies right now.
No, probably not. Maybe never. It is possible that a significant segment of the population has a hard-wired need to believe in magic. But I don't think that lessens the possibility of mushroom clouds. Quite the reverse.
I also recognize that these ideologies are a great source of conflict. But if we weren't bombing each other over religious differences, we'd find another reason to bomb each other.
Very likely we would. But religion sure does make a whole lot of people certain that they are right.
For me, religion is like a scalpel that is fully capable of killing a patient, but in the right hands it could be the most beneficial tool we have for our species.
As a tool for teaching morality, it can be quite beneficial. As a tool for
enforcing morality, it is more like a lawnmower than a scalpel.
Unfortunately, in this age, we have a bunch of morons with it in their hands flashing gang symbols with them. I just wanted it changed and I'm working inside-out to do it.
I salute you for your dedication to this. Do you have to go undercover and take on a false persona?