Piscivore
Smelling fishy
No, seriously. Not iron acted on by other forces, but floating iron.
No, seriously. Why are you imposing this arbitrary limitation?
No, seriously. Not iron acted on by other forces, but floating iron.
In that case may I suggest a couple of books for you to read?
A History of God: The 4,000-Year Quest of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam
The Great Transformation: The Beginning of Our Religious Traditions
The Hero with a Thousand Faces
History of Mysticism: The Unchanging Testament
And Piggy if you would watch this 60 minute video it may give you a little food for thought, as you ponder this question.
/shrug
Your marriage is not your husband, it is your relationship. Calling your boyfriend your husband describes your relationship with your husband. And whether you have relationship [A] with a boyfriend, or relationship with a husband, you are still talking about an entity, the man. So it follows then that Ichne is calling the natural Universe, God. But that doesn't make it any more a god than calling a telephone pole God. Nor does defining the Universe as God have any meaning.
So Ichne is essentially saying what he said, the word describes a thing, the Universe, which the person with that belief has a relationship with. The relationship is only relevant if it means something. What does it mean other than believing the Universe is [X]. What does that mean? Nothing as far as I can see.
Could a two dimensional being see the 'third dimension' in flatland? They could see two dimensional 'cuts' of three dimensional objects passing through -- something that would look 'magical'.
And no, I am not making this as a specific claim, only that it is one possibility that discounts the idea that God is impossible. Especially if God encomapsses the entire third dimension that we experience so that we could not see any change in Him.
If you've read and processed all that, surely you can distill a succinct expression of god that blows Piggy's position away.
Especially if God encomapsses the entire third dimension that we experience so that we could not see any change in Him.
But there is no evidence "something powerful" was a god. There is evidence it wasn't.....I never suggested otherwise. But none of these great works are something done out of boredom, mere idleness, are they? Something powerful made people who had to eke out a rough living do these things, yes? No mere whim or fairy tale. Whether this "god" has any of the properties we might think it ought to have- and as has been said, these qualities are capricious, subjective, and highly varied, such that it seems foolish to insist that "god" have any of them to be "god"- it at the very least is a powerful motivator, yes?
No, the evidence is some morality is hardwired. Empathy has something to do with it. The evidence is that morality is the product of biology and culture combined. Kids have a sense some things are bad without being taught. It emerges around the age of 4....Since the first mother taught their child that's why we don't.
You could go for the 25 words or less version.You make it sound so easy. That would be a long and difficult post. It would take me days to compose. And then there's no guarantee Piggy would even read and respond to it. No, this thread isn't the place for something like that. It's better that he read the books and watch the video, IMO.

You make it sound so easy. That would be a long and difficult post. It would take me days to compose. And then there's no guarantee Piggy would even read and respond to it. No, this thread isn't the place for something like that. It's better that he read the books and watch the video, IMO.
You indicated "it makes no difference [to Piggy] if god is defined as... a leprechaun..." It was to that I was responding.
"My arguments do not depend on any single definition of God" /= "no definition of God would satisfy".
It means he knows no single definition of god that invalidates his argument. That does not mean that no definition will invalidate his argument, it means if one does, he does not know it. He explicitly asked for any. It is not his failure that you cannot provide anything more concrete than "there might be".
This is (still) a generalisation error on your part.
I don't know, it is your hypothetical.

Okay, but we are not talking about what we know about the universe, except that you offered dark matter as a something that science was investigating that had not any qualities. Yet, as far as science is concerned, it does have at least one. Whatever some future world view that is not scientific might say about the matter is really irrelevant, isn't it? We are talking about science.
Do you agree that science has nothing to say about things that have no qualities?
Do you understand that as far as science in concerned, dark matter is not one of those things that has no qualities?
It is a simple question, Claus. Do you know of any such qualities a god must have to warrant scientific investigation? Yes or No.
I think it's time to make one point perfectly clear.
Several posts earlier, one poster pointed out that I'm not interested in abstract philosophical musings, but only in empirical reality.
Another poster commented that this "explains a lot".
Indeed it does.
I take this issue very seriously. Whether God does or does not exist is of utmost importance. The answer to that question has enormous impact on what this world is, and what we are as humans.
I am not fooling around here.
This is not some parlor game for me, or some abstract intellectual exercise.
I'm not talking about placeholders in some abstract philosophical space. I'm talking about the real world that all of us wake up in every morning.
So if anyone wants to propose that God may be real, they'd better be talking about a God that is God, not some empty collection of words, or something that no believer actually believes in, or something that can only be real if "real" is the same as "not real" or if "God" is the same as "not God".
I've spent many hours of my life pondering this question. I take it seriously. I ask that others here do so as well.
Pardon my French, but are you really this ignorant, or are you just pretending?
Dark matter -- whether it proves to be actual or not -- is an anchored concept.
No one would say of dark matter "it is utterly beyond man's understanding, and I cannot tell you any of its qualities".
You're trying my patience.
Excuse me, but human beings left every one of these artifacts.
Uh... yeah. Would you accept one that wasn't?
Are you any different? Do you believe things that don't make sense to you? I doubt it.
No, I have not.
If anyone can produce one that doesn't fall into error, then I'm wrong, plain and simple.
Now you're back into your post-modernist claptrap.
People believe all kinds of nonsense. The fact that a notion is meaningful to someone... that holds no weight. Therefore, I'm not concerned with what other people find meaningful in their hearts. I'm concerned only with what holds up to objective scrutiny.
So far, you haven't even attempted to produce anything of the sort.
I haven't described prejudices here. I've explained precisely why I believe all potential definitions must fail.
You should either address what I'm saying, or put a cork in it.
Well, I wasn't claiming dogs made up god. (That, as I recall, was Claus' assertion).
Y'know, I never understood the whole "Clapton is God" thing.
I mean, if I want to listen to a white boy play the blues, I'm gonna listen to Stevie Ray, or Lowell George, or JJ Cale.
Don't get me wrong, Eric knows his way around a fretboard like nobody's business. But his real strengths are psychedelic jamming, on the one hand, and pop tunes like "Wonderful Tonight" on the other.
He's an excellent guitarist, but I don't feel a whole lotta soul in him. When he got together with Winwood for "Dear Mr. Fantasy", Steve blew him off the stage.
And if I were Clapton, I'd shake in my boots before matching my axe with Duane Allman or Dickey Betts.
And there you have it, my friends.
If that does not speak to the utter absurdity of the "God may exist" position, then I don't know what does.
If I were CFLarsen, I'd be ashamed to show my avatar on this forum after that remark.
I consider magic to be completely debunked.
We now understand the fundamentals of action and reaction on the macro level. Magic bypasses those. It is therefore without any theory of potential action.
In addition, every single test of magic has been a bust for magic.
If validated models of our world disallow magic, and it fails testing at every turn, and the worldview which supported it has been replaced by a validated on which does not allow it, then it's bogus, plain and simple.
No evidence? The Egyptian pyramids and temples were built by volunteers to glorify their god, same with Chartres. They carved the names of the gods on them, put images in stained glass in the windows. The Mahabharata, the Bible, the Egyptian books of the Dead were all written to explicate and preserve the gods they describe. What evidence exists that any of these things I mentioned was motivated by any reason apart from a god?But there is no evidence "something powerful" was a god. There is evidence it wasn't.
"Some". Not all. Some people do not murder, do not steal, because they fear god.No, the evidence is some morality is hardwired.
And for a signifigant percentage, God is the manifestation of that culture. You're not disagreeing with me.Empathy has something to do with it. The evidence is that morality is the product of biology and culture combined.
"Some things". Not all. Some kids are taught some things are bad because god disapproves.Kids have a sense some things are bad without being taught. It emerges around the age of 4.
There is no "cannot" in either "My arguments do not depend on any single definition of God" or "no definition of God would satisfyYou still ignore his "cannot".
Dude, you brought it up.
No, you are, because you are trying to change the subject. If this is something you want to discuss start your own thread about it.Yes, we are,
Why? You presented "dark matter" as one and it was incorrect. There's no further point to be made.Give me an example of something without qualities.
So "Huh?" is an answer, to you? Is that Danish for something? I don't speak in incoherent grunts, can you put that in English?I already answered it.
Oh, right. Your claim was you could read a dog's mind.Do try to keep up, please. It was skeptigirl, not me.
What scientific evidence do you have that suggests that there is no god? There's no evidence that I know of that there is one, but is there evidence that there isn't? And why believe in either case if there is no evidence in either case?
No, seriously. Why are you imposing this arbitrary limitation?
Him? So this god has a gender?
Well, the problem there is that there are distinct phenomena (the cuts). Even if you don't understand that there is something more, there is at least 'something' to observe.
Well, it is in this case. Invoking pseudo-scientific, or mathematical-sounding lingo is begging to have a definition picked apart. Using a mathematical definition to try to describe God is very problematic, because dimensionality is well-understood, but this definition is not. This is part of the challenge that Piggy is laying down. By the time you've fought through any definition, you've usually left a gaping hole.
I agree with you that the word 'cannot,' is not tenable, simply because Piggy has failed to demonstrate that imaginary things like magic, and spooks and groxaplox 'cannot' exist. I buy Skeptigirl's contention that a universe with this garbage is not a stable (in so far as physical phenomena go) universe, but there's no proof that the other is not the truth! We have never seen evidence of a Great Deceiver, and I'm likely to grow into my toilet seat if I spend my time in the bathroom afraid of one, but there is no proof.
Why do I care, and why am I continuing to make patently absurd points? I want very much to know what we know and to a lesser extent, what we are able to know.
It's knowledge which is the best tool in the fight against superstition, not statements which appear to people (like a couple in this thread), as if their arguments are being simply dismissed.
To say, the observable universe is as observationally consistent with the non-existence of a meaningful God, as one with, is much more damning and problematic to the theist position than assertions that God cannot exist. It's why there's a perceived conflict between science and religion, in the first place! Some are only too aware of where physical evidence could potentially lead...
But in Flatland, there is evidence which is not explicable given the limited viewing capability. We have that issue with 11 dimensional leaky gravity string theories. And despite the claims there is no evidence, there are things we observe and need an explanation for.
With god beliefs, there is no evidence. We have invisible pink unicorns. There is no evidence upon which to hypothesize god. Why should we entertain the idea invisible pink unicorns could exist? Remember also, the evidence we do have supports the conclusion god beliefs are inventions of human imagination. And that evidence is overwhelming.