Oh, yes, Plato, as well as certain ancients in China, India, Japan.... There's a long history of it.
On the other hand, there's the god people pray to for deliverance.
No one ever said an absentee god saved a kid from a car crash.
And when you go back far enough in any culture, you find that all the gods do things in this world.
So you have this continuum from the gods that people petition to do things for them and the deistic "god" (I have to use the QMs b/c this is an undefined god) which comes later as the more primitive gods are recognized as absurd.
The movement along that continuum of attenuation is from false to undefined (which is to say, nonsensical).
Unless you intend to propose one that's neither.
So far we've got a grad student in a universe where beings don't die. (I know, you never proposed that; nevertheless, it's what you have described.)
If we find out that this thing is responsible for the universe, no one's going to shout "The believers were right!", least of all the believers themselves.
First, thank you for taking the time to respond.
I neither proposed nor have I described your grad student god. I proposed two different types of gods -- one that is spirit/mind and whose actions we see in the universe as the laws of physics (and which suffers from all of the problems inherent to the mind body problem) and a pantheistic god. In neither scenario is there a being within the universe that doesn't die.
I also mentioned a deist god, which is the grad student god, but again, not within the universe (where universe is defined as our experience of space-time).
You seem to be arguing my ultimate point -- that if such a god were found it would be inconsequential. That is why I suggested that you amend your statement slightly.
We look out and observe the world. We make instruments to magnify things for us, or change them into things we can see or hear.
It sure is a strange world out there. Or so it seems whenever we hit something new. Eventually, though, we come to terms with it as best we can. Although I suppose we will have to hit our limits someday.
And in all that exploration what we've seen is the theists have been wrong about everything... or at least about everything that actually tested what they were saying... right down the line.
And none of the potential answers to the current questions about our world have anything to do with notions of god.
But you want to tell me that the state of the science of physics is supposed to provide me some reason not to understand that gods are all myths?
I beg to differ.
I think you must have missed the several times where I stated that we could disprove mythical gods. Now if you want me to say that no gods are possible, I don't know if I'm willing to sign on the dotted line there. There are old god ideas that we can't explore with physics.
Actually, you can't go that far.
Thoughts are not airy nothings. They are the activity of a brain. If you want to propose that this universe is a brain, well, it sure doesn't look like one... maybe you have a mechanism to propose? If not, then perhaps I can also propose that it's a 1957 Ford Fairlane.
If you do propose that it's a brain of some sort, then obviously it can't be conscious of all of its own activity, so what is it conscious of?
If it's conscious of us, why don't we notice any mechanism?
If you want to propose a mind without a brain, how does that work? If you don't know how that works, then let me propose that the universe was created by a crystal that has no atoms in it.
Or maybe by "mind" you mean something different from what the word actually means, something that no one has ever imagined it could mean. In that case, the universe might also have been caused by Gary Coleman.
You may have noticed there's a pattern here.
All of the retreats go to nonsense, off to a Wonderland where the rules can produce any absurd idea you care to rattle off.
The condition becomes "as long as you accept that black can mean white...."
Just like I don't need to travel the entire universe, I don't need to know "what it is" in order to understand that god theory has failed. It persists, yes, no doubt about that, both the contrary-to-fact flavor and the de-defined flavor. But one is false, and the other isn't even a claim, so my only way to believe it is to stop being rational, and there be dragons.
So, I assume that you can now prove idealism wrong? I've heard several people claim it; I've never seen anyone do it. Because you're going to have to do so in order to make this argument work.
You assume that mind can only occur through the action of neuron activity. That is simply not something that we know because we can't prove that materialism is correct. We certainly observe thought occurring through brain action, no question about it.
What we know, with certainty, is that thought occurs. We have experiences that tell us where thought occurs -- in our brains, through their function -- but we do not know that is an accurate accounting of the world. It could also be that everything we see, including the type of thinking we seem to do with our brains, is created in the mind of god. Idealism provides one type of pantheist god.
And, yes, you can propose any number of outlandish claims, but there are a very limited number of claims that can pass muster if we apply parsimony and examine fundamentals. We have two basic types of possible fundamental substance -- mind and matter -- with neutral thrown in and then promptly away. We can't tell which is responsible for what we see because we can't get down to determining fundamental levels like that. Consequently, the options for types of gods are extremely limited. They amount to the god of idealism (pantheism, in essence) or a god of Mind while the universe is made of matter. That's pretty much it as far as I can see. The latter, whether viewed as the deist god or a caretaker god, has a big problem, though, and it is the same problem that plagued Plato and many other philosophers. There just doesn't seem to be any way for such a god to interact with the universe.
You can't worship a thing you never heard of.
This is the error I've been trying to point out to you.
Now, the human brain is really good at accepting inconsistencies. Many Xians, for instance, believe absolutely that there is one God, and that Jesus is God and God the Father is God, and that Jesus is not God the Father, and that Jesus was a man. This is fine.
Go to the political threads and you'll see contradictions successfully ignored right and left, and read Drew Westen's "The Political Brain" and you'll find studies demonstrating how our brains pull off this trick.
So it's not surprising that people would worship and revere a god which, upon investigation, they also insist is beyond our understanding and undetectable by science. But their belief doesn't remove the contradiction.
If they are able to worship it, and it's not nothing, then it is something and it does something in our world, otherwise they could not know it, could never have guessed at it, could have no experience of it.
You can't simply cite these folks' beliefs and ignore that.
In fact, their thoughts and actions are perfectly explainable by our scientific understanding of the brain, within a matrix of broader understanding about the world that does not include gods and which has supplanted the earlier mythological understanding of the world which we now know to be false.
I'm sorry, but that doesn't answer the theist. Anyone with one of these conceptions didn't come to their belief in god by direct observation -- not this type of god. So, it isn't as though they would have heard of it. Plato arrived at his conception through his own thought process concerning being. Same with Aristotle (though its somewhat arguable what conclusion he came to, aside from maybe a deist god, maybe no god). Same with many others. No need for interaction here -- the thought process of trying to understand why there is something instead of nothing led them to these beliefs. For Plato, the thought process of trying to reconcile Heraclitus and Parminides lead him to his concepts.
Of course the thought processes are explainable through our understanding of the brain. That does not make them wrong. The thought processes for understanding money is perfectly understandable but that doesn't stop it from being a shared delusion.
But see, we don't even have to worry about this, because there is no "extraneous entity" being proposed.
As it turns out over and over, what's being proposed is a string of letters that has nothing to serve as a label for. So we can save ourselves the worry.
It is impossible to find a thing which has no definition. Which means the thing will never be found, because it can never be found.
As soon as you clarify the definition so that you do get to something that really does distinguish a god from a not-god, the game goes to not-god. That's where it stands.
First of all, this is just old, dead logical positivism. Secondly, you have simply stated outright that we go to not-god with any attempt at definition. Yet I've provided you with more than one definition. Idealism/Mind is something we simply cannot disprove (that is not just an empty string of letters; there is an entire philosophical movement behind it). A mind separate from the universe that created and shapes the course of the universe is another that cannot logically be disproved but I don't take seriously because it depends on magic. It could still exist, however.
Yeah, I probably misspoke there.
What I meant was that we've seen a regular progression, at different times in different cultures, of gods simply being part of the world-as-is (even if there's some sort of crossover point between their territory and ours) to being removed to unknowable spaces.
OK, I think that's fine. But that's now just a sociological/cultural observation.
Now to the issue of worship. Once again, initially you said worthy of worship wasn't necessary; now you seem again to imply that it is. We know that people worship deist and pantheist and other versions of god. It doesn't matter if we don't think such gods exist as to the issue of whether or not people worship them because they do.
So, I will ask again, shouldn't worthy of worship be a part of the definition of god?
And my other point still stands. I do not think that you can make the strong statement that no gods exist. I still think you need to qualify it to not exist, evil, or inconsequential.