Complexity
Philosopher
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2005
- Messages
- 9,242
The condition of the laws of physics existing without god already assumes the function of god, which is creation.
And you pulled this out of where?
No, no, and no.
The condition of the laws of physics existing without god already assumes the function of god, which is creation.
And you pulled this out of where?
No, no, and no.
OK...
Fail. You just asserted that anything any human ever imagined existed or exists... That's just plain stupid.
Again, (a) contains a lot of stuff that's not real. So the growth of (a) does not necessarily fill a new bit of (b). Fail again.
Conclusion: you don't know what you're talking about. Stop it.
Depends entirely on how one defines god. As a fabulator, and as you have laid out, Shakespeare did not necessarily think of god in the same way that we have been discussing in this thread.
Discussing god from a story perspective makes much more sense than the way that we generally do it here.
Piggy,
I've been thinking about this, and what I've concluded is that the Venn diagram argument is wrong.
The reason it is wrong, I think, points to why we continue having discussions between theists and atheists and also why they never get anywhere.
You assume your conclusion with this argument. And before I move any further, this issue of assuming one's conclusion is symmetrical with the argument on both sides. I had a sense of this throughout but couldn't see it because I'm not a theist and don't think the way they do.
The condition of the laws of physics existing without god already assumes the function of god, which is creation. One stance posits that the laws of physics look like they do with no need for a god. That's fine if we assume from the outset that intention is not part of the fabric of the cosmos. But that is one game; and that game has no room for god. If thought through there is simply no possibility for a god in that scenario.
Contrast this with idealism which begins with a god, or Mind. Idealism assumes Mind (a traditional philosophical conception of god) and everything follows. The laws of physics exist only as thoughts in the mind of god, so no god means no laws of physics. Substance dualism simply moves the issue back a step and separates Mind from matter, but the thinking is the same -- no Mind and no matter, no laws of physics.
There are two separate games, and they are not symmetrical -- in one we see the laws of physics without god but there is no room for god. In the other we see the laws of physics only with god and there is no room for the laws of physics without god. You cannot subtract one from the other because they begin with entirely different assumptions.
I think there are plenty of arguments against theism, but I'm afraid that I don't think the Venn diagram helps.
What makes it more than mere story are the verifiable psychic experiences that can be granted by the well lets call them god-images.
Sorry, but there's a huge assumption in there -- that the psychic experiences refer to something other than the same story making tendencies of our brains, that there is another reality, a world behind this world. I don't make that assumption. I do not believe that this it is true.
That would be the entire history of religious discussion. Are you suggesting that theists do not consider god as the creator? I think you need to take a step back and look at what I wrote without preconceptions about what you think I mean.
How many times do I have to tell you guys that I am not arguing for the existence of god. I am arguing with Piggy's statement.
That's cool. I can totally understand that. I decided to go one step further and I tested it myself. I chose a path of meditation, and thanks to Divine Grace I got verifiable results. For example vivid visions of the future that come true minutes later. Dreams that come true. That sort of thing. After years of it, you just sort of get used to it.
Fair enough..we can drop this. Just keep in mind that the decision that there is no god is always tentative to new evidence just like every other claim. Even the strongest atheist admits this but when dealing with theists it's best to not make this distinction because it just confuses the matter.
That is fine, but remember that X can be X and it's exact logical opposite ~X.
That can't be. It's like proving that 2+2=4 and 2+2= ~4. It is an error and that is what makes the argument fail. That is why I say that when you prove anything you prove nothing. You are attempting to prove anything. It doesn't work. You need another form of argument. That argument will take the form of a formal scientific proof with logic and evidence but at that point our bubble would have touched X and included it.
Are you just saying that there are things we don't know? If so then it has been admitted. Are you saying that God/X is hiding there? If so then again it has been admitted as a possibility but a useless one and not meeting the definition of god as is commonly accepted by most believers.
So what exactly are we still talking about?
That's cool. I can totally understand that. I decided to go one step further and I tested it myself. I chose a path of meditation, and thanks to Divine Grace I got verifiable results. For example vivid visions of the future that come true minutes later. Dreams that come true. That sort of thing. After years of it, you just sort of get used to it.
Remember those two definitions I listed. He is firmly on number 2. His tone hasn't mellowed he has clarified. If God is anything and something did create the universe then God created the universe. Again the term god is being used so generically that you can place it everywhere. He is arguing that is stupid and a de-definition of God.We were, or I was at least, talking about Piggy's statement. It seems now that Piggy has mellowed his tone, indeed he says now that there must be a creator of some sort.
Going back to X and notX, I don't think we can presume to define or limit what is outside the knowledge bubble even by exercising logic. As it may not be limited in the way we are limited. This is why I say X could be anything atall, including something which defies logic, which is inconceivable, or something else entirely.
That's cool. I can totally understand that. I decided to go one step further and I tested it myself. I chose a path of meditation, and thanks to Divine Grace I got verifiable results. For example vivid visions of the future that come true minutes later. Dreams that come true. That sort of thing. After years of it, you just sort of get used to it.
That's cool. I can totally understand that. I decided to go one step further and I tested it myself. I chose a path of meditation, and thanks to Divine Grace I got verifiable results. For example vivid visions of the future that come true minutes later. Dreams that come true. That sort of thing. After years of it, you just sort of get used to it.
I suggest you have another think about that, are you saying that the contents of thoughts don't exist?
For example does the Mona Lisa exist or not?
All you have to do to change the world is demonstrate this ability.
Do you want to change the world?
Is it possible to test those visions somehow?
No, you're just assuming that I'm equating knowing with believing. You don't know what I may or may not know.
I'm a Christian mystic. I've been having mystical experiences all my life. I'm also familiar with comparative mysticism, comparative religion, Jungian psychology and parapsychology. All these combine to give me a pretty good idea of what I know and what I've experienced and how these experiences are described in other mystical traditions and mythologies. There is nothing abnormal about my experiences. Most people living or dead have had mystical experiences of one kind or another, and to some degree or another. It's part of being human, and pursuing our mystical potential is our birthright.
Shakespeare would probably disagree.![]()
I suggest you have another think about that, are you saying that the contents of thoughts don't exist?