Ichneumonwasp
Unregistered
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2006
- Messages
- 6,240
Well, we could prove it if we could come up with an agreeable definition of God. Whatever you want to call the fundamental substance it doesn't work for me as God.
Does the substance have intelligence? intent? Is it an entity or is it just some magical 'other'. It just seems like an exercise in semantics to me and I see no reason to give it any thought unless someone can propose something that we can look into.
Rocks exist even if we aren't around to think about them. If we are seriously at the level where we need to accept that rocks might not really exist so that we can shoehorn in a not-really-God-at-all-god then I'm out.
I think that the easiest way to speak about this is limit it to the things we know. We know mind and matter. Yes, this god as it was defined, has intelligence and intent. It is a mind that created the universe and holds it together; its functions are the laws of physics. So, it decides how the world unfolds.
Well there are strong arguments against God concepts too. But when you can simply change the definition of what a God is to overcome them and shoehorn in an 'unprovably false God-concept' then I can do the same with my time-travelling toe-nail.
Yes, I think I mentioned that earlier. We have very strong arguments against all the mythological gods. They are all human stories and are not easy to support. I agree that it is not fair for the goalposts to shift; but we are stuck with a variety of different god concepts and have to take them on one at a time. I haven't shifted the goalposts with this god as far as I know, aside from stating it more clearly since I hadn't really decided on a form to argue initially.