andyandy
anthropomorphic ape
- Joined
- Apr 30, 2006
- Messages
- 8,377
Thanks. I'm glad we're not at loggerheads over this after all. Sorry I got snippy.
no problem
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Thanks. I'm glad we're not at loggerheads over this after all. Sorry I got snippy.
Hmmm... I don't think I understand quite what you're saying....A "god" which creates space and matter by positioning itself - a single particle (whatever it is) - in space and time.
I call it "god is the atom". It simply appears in a position (in whatever number of dimensions) at a given time, of which it can choose any time future or past. So, the whole ball of wax is being "updated" almost like frames in a computer game.
Tags for this "god" : tiny, atom (as in single point, perhaps one of no dimension), simple, timeless, dot, algorithm.
Yeah - good enough!
Actually, this is one of the key problems which I'd promised to vox_humana to delve into more. I've given some more thumbnail analyses of it, but haven't gone into much detail yet, actually.I figured it had the advantage of being in the universe.
This is redundancy. And I trust that the scientists on this board will tell you that it also violates validated models of nature, and that evidence will be needed to support such a bizarre claim.Also - since it weaves reality (including all forces, energy and matter) in all dimensions by jumping around in time and space - so very well that reality actually exists, it makes this god so tightly coupled with reality that we can't really tell it apart.
There ya go!I kinda thought that would make it hard to deny. On the other hand it makes it no different to reality itself, which means they are one and the same.
The movie would be hopelessly dull. I think I could make a book interesting. But now that I'm out of the ivory tower, I no longer have summers and sabbaticals to look forward to.Oh, I give up. I support your train of thought anyway. Please write a book! Hell, make a movie.
(wow)It is on this basis that I am able to assert -- absent some actual supported claim to the contrary, not merely some hypothetical claim of potentiality -- that the only options for sub-theories of GOD theory must be either dead, contrary to fact, empty, nonsensical, or redundant.
Hell, you sound like me!No time ... snip ... excuses
There are other books out there, such as "Atheism: The Case Against God", "Atheist Universe", "Like Rolling Uphill", "The God Delusion", "Natural Atheism", and "Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon".Not to harp-on about it, but you should consider your time spent on this forum well-spent but perhaps you are wasting a really good analysis on a noisy medium ... Not to disparage the JREFF, but threads come and go so quickly that it's really hard to use them as reference - even with the search function.
Your stuff is damn good Mr Pig - it's my first exposure to such clarity and such bullheaded logical progress. Perhaps there are already books out there that do the same; I do not know.
Donn; said:1980136...snip...
Not to harp-on about it, but you should consider your time spent on this forum well-spent but perhaps you are wasting a really good analysis on a noisy medium ... Not to disparage the JREFF, but threads come and go so quickly that it's really hard to use them as reference - even with the search function.
...snip...
I vote -- big time. It's sensible, it has a stunning inevitability and it's orangeI would say this thread is a candidate for Forum Spotlight.
I concur, for the simple reason that the claim that "'strong' atheism is irrational because the existence of god(s) cannot be disproven" is a recurring feature on this forum, no matter how many times it's pointed out that those who express this opinion always end up having to resort to redefining the term "god" until it bears zero relation to the way the term is actually understood in everyday discourse. I thoroughly applaud Piggy's efforts to fix the goalposts of the "God-theory" firmly in place once and for all, and would like to see this thread kept in a prominent place for future reference when, inevitably, the "the existence of god cannot be disproven" argument gets trotted out once again.I would say this thread is a candidate for Forum Spotlight.
Seconded. Enthusiastically.I concur, for the simple reason that the claim that "'strong' atheism is irrational because the existence of god(s) cannot be disproven" is a recurring feature on this forum, no matter how many times it's pointed out that those who express this opinion always end up having to resort to redefining the term "god" until it bears zero relation to the way the term is actually understood in everyday discourse. I thoroughly applaud Piggy's efforts to fix the goalposts of the "God-theory" firmly in place once and for all, and would like to see this thread kept in a prominent place for future reference when, inevitably, the "the existence of god cannot be disproven" argument gets trotted out once again.
Your weapon is well-honed, flexible and resilient. Gotta love that prose. Your argument is watertight, which means a lot more than saying your conclusion is obvious.Granted, the "God is possible" meme is more pervasive, and harder to combat, than Loose Change, but hopefully I've contributed what little I can to its unmasking at the moment.
Why bother considering it? The observed world does not throw up any reason for including a god in the understanding of it. The material world is complex, but can be reduced to simpler principles which, by acting, produce complexity. Nowhere in there is any observation that requires the introduction of a god to make it explicable. Any god with an influence would leave a signal, and a god without influence is simply imaginary.Piggy, you've done a good job - great thread
How about considering this - let there be a God. But so what - surely God is just another agent in a complex material world.
Never accept the premise of the question. God never did nuffin' 'cos there ain't no gods.To ask 'why did God do X?' is no different to asking 'why did I do X'?. If God is not material, he dissapears in a puff of logic.
It has its roots in superstition, there's no valid evidence for it, there's no universal agreement on any core set of qualities, every time it's come up against a challenge from rational/naturalistic/scientific inquiry it has lost and as a result it's been so re-rigged over the years that in order to avoid violating known fact it has to be defined as an indefinable entity in no-space and no-time.