Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Fluffy The One Navel Of Goodness
Robin said:
What if there is a God but early theologians got the parameters wrong, and those (including atheists) who blindly follow that single definition also have it wrong?
I'm saying that I think there is a common human spiritual experience which I assign the name "God". I see no evidence to connect that to an all-powerful classical "God" of the type who speaks to Noah and gets all pissy and jealous. Even if there was such a God walking around chatting to prophets 3000 years ago, there's no reason to think it's the same "God" people experience now. I see no reason why when exploring the nature of this experience one must first start with 3000 year old definitions of "God". If there's a god, it is whatever it is, not whatever ancient philosophers thought it is.
I have actually proposed a number of experiments in this thread under which a God, if he were to participate, could provide evidence of his existence.
If "he" is a separate being with separate desires. I don't necessary believe that. But I don't necessarily disbelieve it either.
Of course you have plenty of ancient accounts (and some more modern) of miracles, which believers will submit to you as proof. And of course plenty of "true" ghost stories also have a point where somebody says "prove you're real" and there is an unexplaned knocking over or throwing of an object.
Not proof certainly, but science does not require proof.
Scientific hypotheses require falsifiability, and scientific experiments result either in disproof of, or evidence for a hypothesis. God hypotheses are unfalsifiable.
I'll look for your experiment descriptions (this is a godawful long thread), but I suspect that I'll find they are experiments designed to test the existence a god with fairly narrowly defined parameters, such as...
A God with all power in the universe could certainly create some circumstance that would lead me to accept the numinous hypothesis.
Yes, that's a true statement.
You could justifiably accuse me of being vague in my definition of "God". Without a definition, how can one argue for or against existence? Sorry. I'm Unitarian, I'm comfortable with that (no this does not contradict my earlier statement that I'm a self-labelled Christian). I've often said that I would have been burned at the stake in most periods of Christian history for my "Christian" beliefs.