Theory? What theory? Oh, is it because the evidence doesn't support "your" theory that you won't acknowledge it, let alone the theory?Beleth said:Thus Spake Our Other Buzzword Philosopher.
Yes, we do have evidence to support the theory.
Theory? What theory? Oh, is it because the evidence doesn't support "your" theory that you won't acknowledge it, let alone the theory?Beleth said:Thus Spake Our Other Buzzword Philosopher.
Iacchus said:Yes, we do have evidence to support the theory.
Great observation ... And do you know why? Because I don't belong to either extreme.El Greco said:
I don't understand how can you be so thick that even after all these discussions you fail to understand that what you call "evidence" is pure nonsense for everybody else except you. And I am not talking about atheists only, even believers think the same about your "evidence".
Iacchus said:I don't belong to either extreme.![]()
No, the difference between me and you (and the Creationists) is that I can see the forest from the trees. You guys are still hashing it out in the woods.El Greco said:
Correct, because in order to belong to an extreme you would have to belong to the line itself. And as far as I can see, you have not only missed the line but the whole level.
Iacchus said:No, the difference between me and you (and the Creationists) is that I can see the forest from the trees. You guys are still hashing it out in the woods.
Beleth said:But Lifegazer's God, being the whole of the Universe as He is, does not transcend those laws. He can't. He is those laws.
triadboy said:
Can God create something that is NOT open to corruption? If not, we never had a chance, did we? So we wouldn't need Jesus, because we are as we were created.
Upchurch said:Well, that certainly is not true. "God" has many and varied definitions not all of which include the term "omnipotent". "Omnipotent", on the other hand, has a very concrete definiton based on its etymology.
omni- meaning all or universally
-potent meaning force, authority, or influence.
By its very definition, "omnipotence" is, at worst, a logical paradox, and, at best, a practical impossibility. Those who use omnipotent to describe something never really mean omnipotent. They redefine it to mean the most powerful rather than the all powerful, just like lifegazer did in his post above.
This is a joke, right?elliotfc said:
God can not create things that are not open to corruption.
Of course we had/have a chance though. I don't see how you have one follow from the other. Pick your nose. Do it. Did you? See, people have chances, continually, and all the time.
Jesus is necessary for human redemption/reconciliation. We are created, but the "as we are" is up to us, and the choices we make.
-Elliot
Zero said:This is a joke, right?
No, I meant the Jesus nonsense...you were just kidding, right?elliotfc said:
No, the point is that people can make choices freely. You responded to my message, and you didn't have to.
-Elliot
7. Every-thing perceived to exist within a singularity, must do so as an illusion, since two separate points do not exist within a singularity. Therefore, the universe resides within a Mind (as an illusionary perception) of the primal-cause.
8. Boundless singular existence, omnipotent, omnipresent, and possessing will, where all effects are created by and perceived within its mind.
Zero said:No, I meant the Jesus nonsense...you were just kidding, right?
Tricky said:A god who cannot override a single free-will decision made by any of the billions of humans on the Earth does not sound particularly omnipotent by any definition you could choose.
Zero said:Actually, the concept of an omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent being is incoherent, contradictory, and precludes the existance of anything else. Lifegazer claims that makes us all part of "God"...I claim that it makes the concept illogical.
Huh? What can we agree on, when you believe in magical sky fairies?elliotfc said:
I agree, I think we are all distinct from God. That doesn't mean there isn't some sort of connection though.
-Elliot