Piggy
Unlicensed street skeptic
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2006
- Messages
- 15,905
I understand that. What I'm saying is that if gods exist, our entire view of the universe--EVERYTHING--requires a fundamental shift. Whether the universe will expand forever or not doesn't have any impact on whether or not the universe is rational and comprehendable; the existence of gods does.
I'm going to take further issue with this.
First of all, it seems you'd need to explain exactly why the existence of a god would necessarily make the universe somehow irrational and incomprehensible.
But then, actually, you don't, because it will end up making no difference, and here's why.
When you say that something "exists" or is "real", you're not making a statement about any quality of that thing, but rather you're making a statement about the universe we live in.
For example, I can describe the qualities of unicorns, orcs, bigfoot, and all sorts of other things. But describing their qualities doesn't tell me if they're real or not.
To decide if they're real, I need to look at the world around me and decide whether or not it makes sense to claim that they're part of that world.
Now, it's unavoidable that if something is real, the universe must in some way be different if I compare the universe to what it would be like if that thing were not real... no matter how big or small that thing may be.
If my cat were not real, the universe would, in an extremely small way, be different from the way it actually is now.
If gravity were not real, the universe would be profoundly different from the way it actually is now.
But the scale of the difference is irrelevant. There must be some sort of difference.
Because if there is no difference, if the world looks identical whether the thing is real or not, then for that thing real = not real, and exist = doesn't exist... the two conditions are indistinguishable. And this is nonsense because it deprives the words "real" and "exist" of all meaning, and therefore it makes the claims of reality and existence empty, absurd, and self-contradictory.
The necessary conclusion to be drawn here is that no matter what you're talking about, if you claim it's "real", if you claim it "exists", then you're saying that it must be in some way detectable. That is, the universe must be different with it, compared to how the universe is without it.
That puts everything which you can possibly claim to be "real" or to "exist" on an equal footing in that regard, no matter what it is, no matter what the difference its existence implies.
This is why the question of God's reality, of God's existence, is not fundamentally different from the question of the existence of bigfoot, the Grand Canyon, unicorns, Buckingham Palace, alien abductions, gravity, Britney Spears' virginity, or anything else you care to name.
None of them are metaphysical questions.
Last edited: