How insulting to imply that I look like Gods a**.We are looking at God's backside every time we look in the mirror.
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How insulting to imply that I look like Gods a**.We are looking at God's backside every time we look in the mirror.
Perceive it as you wish.How insulting to imply that I look like Gods a**.
Then he shouldn't go around mooning people.
Exodus
"33:21 And the LORD said, Behold, there is a place by me, and thou shalt stand upon a rock:
33:22 And it shall come to pass, while my glory passeth by, that I will put thee in a clift of the rock, and will cover thee with my hand while I pass by:
33:23 And I will take away mine hand, and thou shalt see my back parts: but my face shall not be seen."
Evidence isn't used in proofs.
That's because proofs requires a closed discourse realm such as that found in mathematics where we can appeal to assumptions/axioms and rules of inference in the merely syntactical manipulation that IS proof. Anything else involves a variety of assumptions.
On what basis would one expect this?
I understand that to be one possible (offered) reason. Why the only?
One advantage, if I'm wrong, I'll never know it. If the atheists are wrong, they'll have me ragging on them for all eternity....though all in good humor of course.
I read and enjoyed Kastner's monograph on the subject (and even commented on it to her). I don't see, nor do the vast majority of philosophers, metaphysicians, cosmologists, or physicists agree (and I don't think most proponents of the TI would either) that it "addresses all quantum weirdness". The notion is absurd. If there were such an interpretation, then basically all physicists would embrace it, as we have been attempting to rid ourselves of such "weirdness since before the origins of QM.Only one interpretation addresses all quantum weirdness, the Transactional Interpretation.
Many if not most physicists regard time as an artifice. It is, at least formally, nonexistent in modern physics thanks to its union with space and is for all practical purposes moot as any global or fixed entity thanks to the elimination of simultaneity.But physicists have been bending over backwards to try and show anything else is the answer, all because TI is a manipulation of time.
Multiple dimensions are completely unrelated to both the many-worlds interpretation of QM and multiverse cosmologies. This confusion is due to a confusion among nonspecialists between the notion of "dimensions" as in "higher dimension" or "parallel dimension" and actual dimension, in which EVERY SINGLE POSSIBLE version of quantum mechanics requires a (at times infinite) abstract, complex mathematical space that is basically never 3D or 4D but rather higher dimensional spaces.I think of it as multi-dimensions (another way to think of multi-worlds???)
If our universe is 4D, this is hardly the only dimensional space in which time can exert itself, nor is the fact (?) that our universe is 4D particularly relevant. The fact that special relativity requires a non-Euclidean geometry if far more important than the requisite dimensionality.which dimension can only exert itself in our 4-D universe
I'm curious as to what evidence could possibly motivate such a conclusion. Perhaps I misunderstand you.which was extruded from all the other dimensions by the Big Bang.
Indeed! Though at times I feel as Frodo did ("'I wish it need not have happened in my time.' said Frodo. 'So do I,' said Gandalf, 'and so do all who live to see such times. But that is not for them to decide.'")May we continue to live in interesting times.
Because we seek evidence. But history has taught us that claims of "proof" in the sciences are pathetically far from being such.Then why does the scientific method require observation and experiment?
I've done a lot of work in more "pure" mathematics, albeit not so much as I have in other fields of scientific research. The gulf between "proof" and scientific arguments, theories, research, etc., is vast. We don't seek to prove (unless it concerns some formal component of our fields, yet even here e.g., Bell's proof is subject to interpretive constraints).Evidence may or may not be sufficient to indicate proof.
That a divine creator could have done differently is evidence somehow? I must be misunderstanding you here.Because an omnipotent God could do anything else instantly. Imparting free will to creatures without influencing them with the knowledge of It's existence, and thus spoiling the pudding, is a very neat trick.
But there is nothing whatsoever of the kind. There exists a plethora of evidence. Also, if there were not, you could hardly claim to have evidence to the contrary.We live in a universe that's composed totally of evidence, yet there is a total lack of it from its inception?
The most convincing, I think, is, "Once you've eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the case." Many atheists, and even many theists, have not arrived at "god" in that way; if they had, they would be identically firm in a shared belief that is neither atheism nor theism. So what is impossible about the whole world? That path is, in philosophy in the West at least, the road of nihilism, which points to the uncertainty of an objective reality (specifically, the truth value of the world). The agnostic settles on "I don't know," in regards to the truth value (specifically, that there is no knowable truth value); the nihilist recognizes that truth is the one thing that cannot be eliminated, at least not without contradiction (the truth of the elimination). Hence, uncertainty is granted a certain certainty that moves realization past the possibility of eliminating the world, while maintaining its uncertainty. This is a brand of mysticism. "God" lies in knowing the complete uncertainty (for some, 'unlikelihood') of the world, while, still, the world remains.I am an agnostic atheist. That means that while I don't believe in God, I don't say that I know for a fact that he doesn't exist. I am perfectly willing to change my position, but I will need some good evidence.
So, what do you think is the most convincing argument for the existence of God? I'm pretty sure I've heard them all. If you post an argument that I've rejected, I'll try to explain why I have rejected it.
There is typo in my phrase. World. I wanted to write WORD. Like saying existence is when something exist. How come this can show to anyone what existence is? Can you clarify to me what is existence? What is the difference of something that exist to something that don't?That's how definitions work: we define words in terms of other words that are either synonyms of those we wish to define or variant forms of that word (or which contain that word). Semantic concept is by definition and is trivially ambiguous, informal, and ill-suited to formal logical analysis (which is why it is largely absent from proofs and logical derivations).
I didn't say proof nor the OP. Why are you bringing it? And another thing, who are you to judge the value of things (I can say with large looseness that you are not Legion)? To say something is purposeless to another? To say something has no benefit to no one? You think you know what I'm doing? Care to answer this questions?No. Trivial proof by definition and semantic equivalences amount to nothing. Demands for specific, formal definitions of concepts are likewise bereft of value, serve no purpose in dialogue (except insofar as they are intended not as arguments but to clarify), and run counter to meaningful dialogue. Semantic games benefit no one but can be exploited by anyone.
Why? What qualities or attributes of this "whatever-exists-I-don't-know-what-regardless-of-its-qualities-or-attributes" makes this whatever-it-is a god?I put it God = Truth. Whatever the Truth is, there be God, whether it's a divine super-consciousness or just a conglomerate of matter and energy.
And if you change it for "GOD = MARMALADE", we could easily say that God tastes good on toast and comes in a jar.If you change that concept for, let's say, "GOD = REALITY" would that make sense? With this concept of God you could easily say "God exist", no?
This claim never made any sense to me. "Obvious choice" does not equal "no choice".The only possible reason for God to create the universe is to isolate us from It so as to maintain our free will.
So...God could have done anything else instantly. By creating time God was able to put that Big Bang firewall 13 billion years ago. The more out of sight, the more out of mind, leaving us to exercise our moral free will....free from divine influence.
And it's tautological. (Language, that is, not your post. )That's how definitions work: we define words in terms of other words that are either synonyms of those we wish to define or variant forms of that word (or which contain that word). Semantic concept is by definition and is trivially ambiguous, informal, and ill-suited to formal logical analysis (which is why it is largely absent from proofs and logical derivations).
Two things:Hide his existence?
And the LORD appeared unto Abram, and said, Unto thy seed will I give this land: and there builded he an altar unto the LORD, who appeared unto him.Genesis 12:7
And the Lord spake to Moses face to face, as a man speaketh to his friend. Exodus 33:11
He also speaks through his a**:Then he shouldn't go around mooning people.
Exodus
"33:21 And the LORD said, Behold, there is a place by me, and thou shalt stand upon a rock:
33:22 And it shall come to pass, while my glory passeth by, that I will put thee in a clift of the rock, and will cover thee with my hand while I pass by:
33:23 And I will take away mine hand, and thou shalt see my back parts: but my face shall not be seen."
That's incorrect. A deist god doesn't entail the existence of an afterlife, nor does the non-existence of gods entail the lack of one.
I read and enjoyed Kastner's monograph on the subject (and even commented on it to her). I don't see, nor do the vast majority of philosophers, metaphysicians, cosmologists, or physicists agree (and I don't think most proponents of the TI would either) that it "addresses all quantum weirdness". The notion is absurd. If there were such an interpretation, then basically all physicists would embrace it, as we have been attempting to rid ourselves of such "weirdness since before the origins of QM.
Many if not most physicists regard time as an artifice. It is, at least formally, nonexistent in modern physics thanks to its union with space and is for all practical purposes moot as any global or fixed entity thanks to the elimination of simultaneity.
If our universe is 4D, this is hardly the only dimensional space in which time can exert itself, nor is the fact (?) that our universe is 4D particularly relevant. The fact that special relativity requires a non-Euclidean geometry if far more important than the requisite dimensionality.
I'm curious as to what evidence could possibly motivate such a conclusion. Perhaps I misunderstand you.
Indeed! Though at times I feel as Frodo did ("'I wish it need not have happened in my time.' said Frodo. 'So do I,' said Gandalf, 'and so do all who live to see such times. But that is not for them to decide.'")
Because we seek evidence. But history has taught us that claims of "proof" in the sciences are pathetically far from being such.
I've done a lot of work in more "pure" mathematics, albeit not so much as I have in other fields of scientific research. The gulf between "proof" and scientific arguments, theories, research, etc., is vast. We don't seek to prove (unless it concerns some formal component of our fields, yet even here e.g., Bell's proof is subject to interpretive constraints).
That a divine creator could have done differently is evidence somehow? I must be misunderstanding you here.
But there is nothing whatsoever of the kind. There exists a plethora of evidence. Also, if there were not, you could hardly claim to have evidence to the contrary.
Why? What qualities or attributes of this "whatever-exists-I-don't-know-what-regardless-of-its-qualities-or-attributes" makes this whatever-it-is a god?
I am an agnostic atheist. That means that while I don't believe in God, I don't say that I know for a fact that he doesn't exist. I am perfectly willing to change my position, but I will need some good evidence.
So, what do you think is the most convincing argument for the existence of God? I'm pretty sure I've heard them all. If you post an argument that I've rejected, I'll try to explain why I have rejected it.
That isn't the generic sense; it's the metaphoric sense.God in the generic sense, as in what money, power, sex and idols are gods for other people.
"Tiberius is uncertain, therefore God"?Your own uncertainty