Ichneumonwasp
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- Joined
- Feb 2, 2006
- Messages
- 6,240
Colour me unconvinced. It might be a nice way to explain stuff to a theist, but same thing? I'm not so sure about that.
Well that's fine, but then you're not disagreeing with Piggy(by virtue of your statement being vacant). If we remove the word God from both your statements we have:
Piggy)There is no supreme being.
Hypothetical you, communicating) I worship the universe.
There's no contradiction here. You're not making the argument that god exists at all, in fact you rely on there not being a supreme being in order to say, "The universe is God." without confusing everyone.
Of course I'm not disagreeing with him about a theistic god. My only disagreement is with the statement that all god views are impossible.
Theistic god views depend on magic and magic is silly -- that is Piggy's main point (or my simplisitc way of re-stating it). With that I fully agree. Skeptigirl's post was essentially a brief history of humanity's discovery that magic is daft.
But, there are 'naturalistic' views of 'god' -- god as the universe, god as multidimensional being (which is really just re-defining universe into multiverse and calling that god) that are still possible. We just can't treat those definitions of 'god' as impossible, in large part because we don't really know what we mean when we use words like 'universe' anyway. Sure, we have a vague idea of what that means, but when you start to really analyze it, do we really know? Planck lengths and quantum foam? 'God' is one way of denoting our ignorance and our relation to that ignorance. Now, how's that for a god of the gaps?