What if Christians are Wrong?

[quote]kamui wrote:

[quote]JoabSonOfZeruiah wrote:
I will say that if the person hood and will of God is denied for its explanatory scope and power in dealing with contingent beings existing and there being a basis for objective morals and duties. I find it untenable if God is not personal/have a will how contingent beings exist when it would seem that everything would be a necessary effect from substance/event causation since he couldn’t refrain otherwise unlike agent causation.

Since effects are necessary in their nature there is no distinction between is and ought and an axiology derived from scarcity to structure moral epistemology given the moral ontology one has seems to make no sense.

Edit: If we deny his person hood what does it do to our person hood.[/quote]

for the record : i do not really derive my axiology from scarcity.
It’s only an argument aimed at the proponents of utilitarianism, to show them that even with a strictly economical definition of value, you would have to acknowledge the existence of infinite values each and everytime you have to deal with absolute scarcity.
It’s a way to demonstrate the need for moral absolutism “from the outside”, so to speak.
Philosophically, it’s obviously not enough.

Regarding the rest of your post :
my solution to the problem of determinism vs free will is parallelism.
At the very least, it requires that Will exists as a virtuality of Being. And as such, as a virtuality of “God”.
So in a way, yes, God has a will. Or we would not have one.
But it has nothing to do with the religious concept of “God’s will”.

Maybe “God’s will has no definite object” would be a better, clearer formulation than “God has no will”.
In the same way, i suppose we could say that God has personhood, but no personnality.

(Funnily enough, i find it easier to express this in english than in french, for once)

[/quote]

You’re use of English has dramatically improved since I remember you popping up in the atheism-o-phobia thread.

There’s plenty of people for whom English is a first language that your doing better than… like most people…

Even with the errors I always pretty much know what he means.

[quote]pat wrote:

[quote]bigflamer wrote:

[quote]pat wrote:

[quote]bigflamer wrote:

[quote]pat wrote:

[quote]bigflamer wrote:

[quote]Brother Chris wrote:

[quote]bigflamer wrote:

[quote]Brother Chris wrote:

[quote]bigflamer wrote:
Ahhhh yes, traditional marriage, as defined by the “good book”.[/quote]

Great, reductionism. It’s like I’m talking to a fundamentalist now. http://www.patheos.com/blogs/standingonmyhead/2012/06/ridicule-reductionism-ridicule-and-red-herrings.html [/quote]

Hey, I’m just quoting for you what your holy book says. Not my fault that it says the awful shit that it says.

Words mean things, and it says what it says. Christians seem to spend ALOT of time trying to justify and argue away what’s written in the bible.

[/quote]

Great point, “Words mean things.” Then you turn around and get upset that Christians try and make distinctions and put things into context. Strange fellow you are. I think that’s called hypocrisy when you have a double standard. [/quote]

No, what most christians are guilty of, is spin, not contextual explanation. This is why your bible has “evolved” over the years with new interpretations and such. What version of the bible do you subscribe to? Isn’t there like 26 versions of it?

And when a christian comes along saying that the bible says what it says, then you’ll denounce them as “fundamentalist”.

LOL…Trying to apologize and spin away the shit in the bible must be what it’s like as a PR person in charge of handling Joe Biden. “No no, what Biden really meant was…”
[/quote]

What most atheists are guilty of is tortured reasoning and an utter lack of reason and logic…The sad part is they think they have it, but they cannot reason anything to it’s logical end, because their logic fails. It’s all ego in the end.[/quote]

Yea, that’s it, the ATHEISTS just aren’t big fans of reason and logic. Tell me again about the talking snake…
[/quote]
Sure, when you tell me how nothing makes something.

Why are you interested in it if you think it’s so stupid… Things I think are stupid I don’t waste my time with. Is there a ‘love for stupidity’ gene in the atheist brain? Must be.[/quote]

C’mon man, don’t cop out on me NOW! I think with a little more effort, perhaps you can come up with the answer. Think about it, why would atheists interest themselves in the religions of the world? Why would that be important?
[/quote]

So they can make sorry excuses for themselves? I don’t know it’s just a guess. [/quote]

No…a very poor guess, keep trying.

[quote]Pat wrote:
I’d say you do believe in quite bit of magic. Because when you eliminate all other variables, you have only two choices, either something came from something, or something came from nothing. To avoid the question is a cop out.[/quote]

You really are a very simple man, are you not? So there can only be two choices? LOL…how very convenient for you and your god. Fact is, we still don’t really know alot about what REALLY took place at the beginning of our universe. We just don’t know, and you know that. From what I’ve read, scientists suggest it was a singularity; a first tiny pinpoint of incipient mass and energy. Whatever came first, if time HAD a beginning, did not have to be a god. If god came first then you are defining god as simply an entity that did not require a beginning. Or, your “god” could’ve been something quite natural at the beginning of the universe, a something that was certainly not intelligent, not omnipotent, (in fact has no power), not omniscient and cares about nothing.

The “can’t get something from nothing” argument fails to prove that a god exists, especially YOUR god above all the others.

[quote]Pat wrote:
That’s what is required for atheism to be true, maybe you don’t know or don’t care to know whether that is true or not, but if you don’t know that, you don’t know much about atheism. The answer to that question is the core of one of the other thought processes.[/quote]

For atheism to be true, it must set out to prove something; it does not, and you’re still failing to understand atheism. Atheism is the absence of belief, due to an OVERWHELMING lack of credible evidence for a deity. There is no proof for any deity, atheists therefore do not believe in any deities, or supernatural happenings, or sky wizard magic stuff.

So no, you’re still wrong.

[quote]Pat wrote:
You have the humility to say “I don’t know” but that’s not what you’re rally saying.[/quote]

Yes, that’s exactly what I’m saying.

[quote]Pat wrote:
What your saying is extraordinarily arrogant.[/quote]

So, you claim to have a personal relationship with the all powerful creator of the universe, and you call ME arrogant. LOL…you do have a sense of humor.

[quote]Pat wrote:
What your saying is “I don’t know, but I know for damn sure it wasn’t God.” But you don’t know, you simply try to avoid the question by elevating yourself and calling names. Well, you can spray all the ad hominems you want, it ain’t going to make you suddenly right.

The fact is this: There is existence, and either something is responsible for it, or nothing is.
Being eternal doesn’t matter, this universe doesn’t matter, physical matter itself, doesn’t matter.
When you boil it down, all you have is wishful thinking. You don’t know why and really, really hope there’s no God.[/quote]

No, the fact of this matter is that I don’t know, and you don’t know; nobody knows for sure. AND we know that there is ZEEEERO evidence for any sort of deity. Atheism truly is acknowledging that fact, coming to the humble conclusion that there is no reason to believe in any of the gods, and moving on with life.

Have the humility to accept that there’s so reason to believe in god, and the good sense to not believe in archaic mythological stories of god magic as a means to fill in that big “I don’t know” gap.

LOL…you believe in a god of which you have no proof of, and yet you label ME as a wishful thinker. There’s that sense of humor again.

[quote]Pat wrote:
Atheism / Theism is basic. There’s nothing complicated about it. It’s the simplest thing in the world. Trying to make it sould elegant, doesn’t make it so. It just means you avoid the crux of the issue, which is nothing to be proud of, but you are.[/quote]

You’re the one trying to church shit up and shove that proverbial pig in the damn dress. I’ll say it again, since repetition is key to learning: Atheism is the absence of belief in any deity, due to the overwhelming lack of evidence for any deity. You’re right, it’s that simple.

And yet, you cannot wrap your head around it…

[quote]pat wrote:
I didn’t say it didn’t happen, I said you can’t know it for certain, and that’s a big difference.
If you were told all your life it didn’t happen, you wouldn’t know the difference. It’s hearsay.
Hearsay doesn’t mean, not true. It means you don’t have primary sources. A hole in the wall in France could have been a bullet from WW2, or it can be something else. You don’t know unless someone tells you.
You would know there was a Civil War in the U.S. unless someone tells you. That’s hearsay, hoss. DUUUUUR…[/quote]

And yet, we have MOUNTAINS of evidence for said factual occurrences. Pictures, video, eyewitness account; we literally swim in factual evidence for said occurrences. Seriously, are saying that we rely on hearsay alone to know that these things happened? Wow.

Sorry to break this to you, but there’s quite a bit of factual evidence for WWII and the civil war. LOL

Good grief.

Something to think about…

[quote]bigflamer wrote:
Something to think about…[/quote]Fascinating Sparky. Try volume 2. Come on sing it with me. It’s the Dawkins anthem =]

[quote]bigflamer wrote:
Something to think about…[/quote]

Don’t worry, according to Pat Robertson it’s okay to ignore parts of the Bible

[quote]bigflamer wrote:
Something to think about…[/quote]

[quote]therajraj wrote:

[quote]bigflamer wrote:
Something to think about…[/quote]

Don’t worry, according to Pat Robertson it’s okay to ignore parts of the Bible[/quote]

The parts of his choosing, for sure. Wasn’t he also the d’bag who was saying that 9-11 was god punishing us?

Ahhh, the beautiful message of jeebus…

[quote]bigflamer wrote:

[quote]Pat wrote:
I’d say you do believe in quite bit of magic. Because when you eliminate all other variables, you have only two choices, either something came from something, or something came from nothing. To avoid the question is a cop out.[/quote]

You really are a very simple man, are you not? So there can only be two choices? LOL…how very convenient for you and your god. Fact is, we still don’t really know alot about what REALLY took place at the beginning of our universe. We just don’t know, and you know that. From what I’ve read, scientists suggest it was a singularity; a first tiny pinpoint of incipient mass and energy. Whatever came first, if time HAD a beginning, did not have to be a god. If god came first then you are defining god as simply an entity that did not require a beginning. Or, your “god” could’ve been something quite natural at the beginning of the universe, a something that was certainly not intelligent, not omnipotent, (in fact has no power), not omniscient and cares about nothing.

The “can’t get something from nothing” argument fails to prove that a god exists, especially YOUR god above all the others.
[/quote]
I am simple, yes, the reason is that things just aren’t that complicated.
What failed was your sad little “scientists say…” attempt at a counter argument is sad at best. Why do you assume that existence, is always just this universe that we are familiar with? There is much more to existence than the physical universe, first. The singularity claim, if true, just simply kicks the can down the road a little further, it solves nothing. Okay, what caused the ‘singularity’? What is a ‘singularity’? Nobody knows. What is responsible for the laws and behavior physical objects obey? What you fail to get is that it’s the metaphysics that controls what the physical does. Physical objects don’t violate their own rules, why?

There are only to choices, and I am not talking about “the universe” per se, it could be anything. We know there is existence either there is a reason for existence, or there is no reason for existence.
You can whine, hem and haw all you want to, there is nothing you can do about it. If you say ‘nothing’ you have to explain how something can come from absolutely nothing. Something from nothing is logically impossible, so you really have your hands full.

There is evidence for something with ‘God-like’ qualities to exist, it’s called existence. It’s completely illogical to say that nothing can cause, or be responsible for anything. So your ‘absence of belief’ has to be able to explain things and it does not. You are claiming to not have made a choice, but that’s a lie. You have chosen to believe there is no way a god of any kind can exist, therefore, existence came from nothing. What you fail to understand, and I have little hope you ever will, is that that is the stance you are taking. No amount of ad hominems or arrogance will help you with that. I can only assume that you have to insult me or mock me because you really don’t have an argument and you know it. Otherwise you could simply present your argument and let that speak for you.

So, no, you are still wrong. Nothing can’t do anything, therefore, something, not nothing is responsible for existence, whether this universe or beyond.

What you do get, is that some sort of provable scientific evidence for the existence of God would actually hurt the argument. It moves it from a priori to a posteriori which is a weaker position.It take it from absolute to probable. Probable is less certain than absolute.
Atheists simply haven’t considered all the variables or the impacts of removing them, that doesn’t help, that hurts.

Yes, I call you arrogant, because you claim not to know, but then claim to know what it isn’t with out any basal logic to back it up, just wishful thinking.

No atheism, is a conclusion. You drew a conclusion that God and no other dieties exist. That’s not a humble position. The position you described above is agnosticism which is not what you are claiming. You are claiming not to know for certain, you are claiming for certain, there is no God. So you aren’t sure about how it all got here, but you know for certain one thing, God couldn’t have been responsible for any of it because he does not exist.

I have an a priori argument based on causation that leads to a conclusion you cannot refute the premises or the conclusion. In a basic sense, your screwed. You cannot refute it, any part of it. You’re the one that has nothing, literally nothing.

Let’s examine what you have to support your conclusion:

  • No physical evidence, which if you know anything about the reality of physical objects, you know actually isn’t true.
  • Just don’t believe it.
  • Something from nothing.
  • Oh and let’s not forget “I don’t know”

Basically, you got shit. Actually, shit would be an improvement over what you have currently.

I cannot wrap my head around fallacious bullshit. The pig in a dress is that nothing can do something. You’re failure to consider everything does not constitute a lack of evidence, just a lack of effort.

[quote]bigflamer wrote:
Something to think about…[/quote]

To be fair, it’s not a book for atheists. It’s not surprising he didn’t get it.

[quote]bigflamer wrote:

[quote]pat wrote:
I didn’t say it didn’t happen, I said you can’t know it for certain, and that’s a big difference.
If you were told all your life it didn’t happen, you wouldn’t know the difference. It’s hearsay.
Hearsay doesn’t mean, not true. It means you don’t have primary sources. A hole in the wall in France could have been a bullet from WW2, or it can be something else. You don’t know unless someone tells you.
You would know there was a Civil War in the U.S. unless someone tells you. That’s hearsay, hoss. DUUUUUR…[/quote]

And yet, we have MOUNTAINS of evidence for said factual occurrences. Pictures, video, eyewitness account; we literally swim in factual evidence for said occurrences. Seriously, are saying that we rely on hearsay alone to know that these things happened? Wow.

Sorry to break this to you, but there’s quite a bit of factual evidence for WWII and the civil war. LOL

Good grief.

[/quote]

I am sorry to break it to you, it’s still hearsay. The evidence means nothing with out the hearsay to tie it together. And the further in history you go back, the more reliant on hearsay you become. Seriously, they discuss this stuff on the first day of history class in college…

Contrary to popular belief, most hearsay tends toward being true, but isn’t always.

[quote]florelius wrote:
@Pat.

What was before God/prime mover? didnt it come to existence from nothing?
[/quote]
By definition, a ‘Prive mover/ Uncaused-cause/ God’ could have no beginning. by necessity, it cannot. It couldn’t have come into existence. You have to change the way you think to understand this. That’s why I said, look at what properties an ‘Uncaused-cause’ must have to be what it is. Another way to look at a deductive argument is to look at it a like a math equation, where the “therefore” in the statement is an equal sign. Much like a math equation, everthing on the right side of the equal sign is the reverse of what is on the left. The argument is actually solid in both directions.

Nope.

Let’s clarify terminology first, there is no such thing as a “Christian God”, there is just God. Religion is a means, not an end. The Christian experience with God is technically rooted in deism. In other words, God has to exist for any of it to be potentially true.
So how do we know Christianity is right? Well, it claims God has the same properties as the ‘Uncaused-cause’ or ‘Prime-Mover’. So the relation it’s claiming is rooted in that which cannot be caused but was at least the initial cause. So it’s not making a claim for rain, or sun, or any division of existence, but existence itself.
Now, is Christianity right about God? I would say mostly, but not exclusively, I cannot prove exclusivity. From there the relation with God is rooted in personal experience, and that is impossible to prove to somebody else.

The analogy of religion and LSD is actually quite uncanny in one respect. For either, you cannot know what it’s really like until you experience it for yourself. Since I have done both, I know what I am talking about, but I cannot make you get it just from telling you about it…You have to take the plunge yourself and then you know.

I took the Christianity ‘plunge’. It never made sense to me. But I did learn to have the utmost respect for those few Christians who actually do their best to live by its ideals.

[quote]squating_bear wrote:

[quote]kamui wrote:

[quote]Tiribulus wrote:

[quote]Fletch1986 wrote:<<< At minimum, an infinite intellect. Omnipotent and omniscient and eternal. Not necessarily a personal God. [/quote]Or even if a personal God, why the triune one of Christianity?
[/quote]

Oh, actually this one could be argued from a strictly philosophical perspective.
One could say that epistemology and/or ontology requires the triunity of God, as an alternative to dualism and monism.
[/quote]
How difficult would this be to construct in simple English?

If you could - I’d appreciate it[/quote]

Well in his defense, he’s French and I think he does a damn good job in English.

[quote]pat wrote:

[quote]squating_bear wrote:

[quote]kamui wrote:

[quote]Tiribulus wrote:

[quote]Fletch1986 wrote:<<< At minimum, an infinite intellect. Omnipotent and omniscient and eternal. Not necessarily a personal God. [/quote]Or even if a personal God, why the triune one of Christianity?
[/quote]

Oh, actually this one could be argued from a strictly philosophical perspective.
One could say that epistemology and/or ontology requires the triunity of God, as an alternative to dualism and monism.
[/quote]
How difficult would this be to construct in simple English?

If you could - I’d appreciate it[/quote]

Well in his defense, he’s French and I think he does a damn good job in English.[/quote]

I think he meant in the sense that he’s not familiar with the vocabulary of philosophy and theology and wanted it said in simpler terms.

[quote]kamui wrote:<<< Oh, actually this one could be argued from a strictly philosophical perspective.
One could say that epistemology and/or ontology requires the triunity of God, as an alternative to dualism and monism. >>>[/quote]oh I do argue that as you know. My opint was what Fletch was saying. An uncaused first cause or prime mover says NOTHING about a personal God nevermind the triune God of Christianity.[quote]kamui wrote:<<< That being said, such a philosophical triunity would not be a christian trinity.
No amount of philosophy will ever reveal the identity of God.
At best, you’ll end up with a partial identity. [/quote]To know the God of the bible IS to be a Christian. To be born again. Raised in His life. NO person can know the living God without KNOWING him. No, philosophical argumentation is a tool, but can never in itself reveal the God of Christianity to heart dead in sin. Only His very Spirit can do that.

[quote]Fletch1986 wrote:

[quote]pat wrote:

[quote]squating_bear wrote:

[quote]kamui wrote:

[quote]Tiribulus wrote:

[quote]Fletch1986 wrote:<<< At minimum, an infinite intellect. Omnipotent and omniscient and eternal. Not necessarily a personal God. [/quote]Or even if a personal God, why the triune one of Christianity?
[/quote]

Oh, actually this one could be argued from a strictly philosophical perspective.
One could say that epistemology and/or ontology requires the triunity of God, as an alternative to dualism and monism.
[/quote]
How difficult would this be to construct in simple English?

If you could - I’d appreciate it[/quote]

Well in his defense, he’s French and I think he does a damn good job in English.[/quote]

I think he meant in the sense that he’s not familiar with the vocabulary of philosophy and theology and wanted it said in simpler terms.[/quote]
Exactly.

And kamui seems to be very good at breaking things down btw. Didn’t mean to offend (if I did)

Sorry about my absence, patty cakes, I trust that you missed me? LOL

[quote]Pat wrote:
I’d say you do believe in quite bit of magic. Because when you eliminate all other variables, you have only two choices, either something came from something, or something came from nothing. To avoid the question is a cop out.[/quote]

Does true nothing really exist? Has it ever really existed? Don’t be a cop out, and answer the question. Do you know, for a fact, that true nothing has ever really existed?

Your religion; rife with burning talking bushes, virgin births, talking snakes, and Jewish carpenter zombies, is the real bastion of belief in magic I’d say. Atheism can’t hold a candle to your religious beliefs w/r/t magic, nice try though.

[quote]Pat wrote:

[quote]bigflamer wrote:
You really are a very simple man, are you not? So there can only be two choices? LOL…how very convenient for you and your god. Fact is, we still don’t really know alot about what REALLY took place at the beginning of our universe. We just don’t know, and you know that. From what I’ve read, scientists suggest it was a singularity; a first tiny pinpoint of incipient mass and energy. Whatever came first, if time HAD a beginning, did not have to be a god. If god came first then you are defining god as simply an entity that did not require a beginning. Or, your “god” could’ve been something quite natural at the beginning of the universe, a something that was certainly not intelligent, not omnipotent, (in fact has no power), not omniscient and cares about nothing.

The “can’t get something from nothing” argument fails to prove that a god exists, especially YOUR god above all the others. [/quote]

I am simple, yes, the reason is that things just aren’t that complicated.

What failed was your sad little “scientists say…” attempt at a counter argument is sad at best. Why do you assume that existence, is always just this universe that we are familiar with? There is much more to existence than the physical universe, first. The singularity claim, if true, just simply kicks the can down the road a little further, it solves nothing. Okay, what caused the ‘singularity’? What is a ‘singularity’? Nobody knows. What is responsible for the laws and behavior physical objects obey? What you fail to get is that it’s the metaphysics that controls what the physical does. Physical objects don’t violate their own rules, why?

There are only to choices, and I am not talking about “the universe” per se, it could be anything. We know there is existence either there is a reason for existence, or there is no reason for existence.
You can whine, hem and haw all you want to, there is nothing you can do about it. If you say ‘nothing’ you have to explain how something can come from absolutely nothing. Something from nothing is logically impossible, so you really have your hands full.[/quote]

sigh

Since we cannot rule out the possibility that true nothingness may have never existed, then we have to make room for the possibility that some form of matter and energy have always existed. Yes, it seems as though it’s possible that matter (and energy) have always existed.

[quote]Pat wrote:

[quote]bigflamer wrote:

[quote]Pat wrote:
That’s what is required for atheism to be true, maybe you don’t know or don’t care to know whether that is true or not, but if you don’t know that, you don’t know much about atheism. The answer to that question is the core of one of the other thought processes.[/quote]

For atheism to be true, it must set out to prove something; it does not, and you’re still failing to understand atheism. Atheism is the absence of belief, due to an OVERWHELMING lack of credible evidence for a deity. There is no proof for any deity, atheists therefore do not believe in any deities, or supernatural happenings, or sky wizard magic stuff.

So no, you’re still wrong. [/quote]

There is evidence for something with ‘God-like’ qualities to exist, it’s called existence. It’s completely illogical to say that nothing can cause, or be responsible for anything. So your ‘absence of belief’ has to be able to explain things and it does not. You are claiming to not have made a choice, but that’s a lie. You have chosen to believe there is no way a god of any kind can exist, therefore, existence came from nothing. What you fail to understand, and I have little hope you ever will, is that that is the stance you are taking. No amount of ad hominems or arrogance will help you with that. I can only assume that you have to insult me or mock me because you really don’t have an argument and you know it. Otherwise you could simply present your argument and let that speak for you. [/quote]

BAH!..LOL

So now you’ve arrived at “god like qualities”!? What the fuck does that mean?

Why don’t you sack up and knock it off with the whole deistic/catholic charade for crying out loud. Do you believe in the very personal, interactive, christian god or not? Do you believe in Jesus Christ as your personal savior, or not? You always backpedal with crafty footwork that would make even a good boxer jealous, into this cosmological argument, and now we’ve arrived at “god like qualities”. At least Tirib stands by his beliefs for the christian god, and doesn’t feel the need to constantly move the goal post as you do.

Good grief, “god like qualities”? LOL…at one time, it was believed that the sun itself was a god, with god like qualities. But hey, as Carlin said, at least you could fucking SEE the sun.

Yes, I have absolutely made a conscious choice to not believe in things that are not real. And yes, atheism is an absence of belief based on the overwhelming lack of evidence. I say “there is no god”, because there is no proof of said god. How many times must I repeat myself? Show me some real proof for god, and I will convert to a full on believer again, and get my ass back to mass. Until then, prove it…

[quote]Pat wrote:

[quote]bigflamer wrote:
No, the fact of this matter is that I don’t know, and you don’t know; nobody knows for sure. AND we know that there is ZEEEERO evidence for any sort of deity. Atheism truly is acknowledging that fact, coming to the humble conclusion that there is no reason to believe in any of the gods, and moving on with life. [/quote]

No atheism, is a conclusion. You drew a conclusion that God and no other dieties exist. That’s not a humble position. The position you described above is agnosticism which is not what you are claiming. You are claiming not to know for certain, you are claiming for certain, there is no God. So you aren’t sure about how it all got here, but you know for certain one thing, God couldn’t have been responsible for any of it because he does not exist. [/quote]

Yes, I’ve already stated that atheism is a conclusion, as I’ve stated previously before that. Of course it’s a fucking conclusion, good grief. My claim as an atheist, one that I’ve already put out there ad nauseam, is that there is no reason to believe in any sort of deities, being that there is NO EVIDENCE for any sort of deities; my conclusion for is drawn from that fact.

Burden of proof is still on you. If you have any real evidence for the existence of a deity, then by all means man, get on with it.

[quote]Pat wrote:

[quote]bigflamer wrote:
Have the humility to accept that there’s so reason to believe in god, and the good sense to not believe in archaic mythological stories of god magic as a means to fill in that big “I don’t know” gap.

LOL…you believe in a god of which you have no proof of, and yet you label ME as a wishful thinker. There’s that sense of humor again. [/quote]

I have an a priori argument based on causation that leads to a conclusion you cannot refute the premises or the conclusion. In a basic sense, your screwed. You cannot refute it, any part of it. You’re the one that has nothing, literally nothing.

Let’s examine what you have to support your conclusion:

  • No physical evidence, which if you know anything about the reality of physical objects, you know actually isn’t true.
  • Just don’t believe it.
  • Something from nothing.
  • Oh and let’s not forget “I don’t know”

Basically, you got shit. Actually, shit would be an improvement over what you have currently.[/quote]

Sorry patty cakes, but these conversations of ours always seem to end the same, with you falling back into a cosmological argument and backpedaling into deism. Quite frankly they’re beginning to get boring.

There’s just no evidence for, nor any reason to believe in any deities. You say that something cannot come from nothing; fine, but what if “nothing”, never really existed? Then we’ve always had “something” then, didn’t we. You call that something god, and say that “god” was the prime mover and is eternal. I say that if it’s possible for your god to be eternal, then so is it possible that the universe is eternal (or at least matter/energy). The idea of a personal creator of all things is ludicrous on many levels. Existence itself is not proof for god, as you would falsely have me believe.

Think about it, a being which directly, deliberately created the whole universe would be more complex than the whole universe put together. That makes a “creator being” the most complex, most exotic and most unlikely thing ever. Any other hypothesis is then preferable to a god. When you favor the simplest explanation, an uncreated, uneducated and yet all-powerful and all-knowing god loses out to anything else you can come up with.

We also cannot rule out the possibility that matter and energy have always existed in some form. It could very well be that this is what your “god like qualities” are, nothing more than some form of energy/matter. Therefore I think that matter and energy have always existed. In order for a god to be the best explanation, every other possible explanation would have to be found inadequate, and that’s not likely to happen soon.

Now please don’t forget to answer the question; Do you believe in the very personal christian god, and that his son Jesus was sent to earth to die for our sins?