If you want to get into a serious insult fest there little nerd wanna be you'd better go get your big boy pants on.
I was being facetious...
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If you want to get into a serious insult fest there little nerd wanna be you'd better go get your big boy pants on.
Yes, if it is correct. That is, "I don't know" is a more accurate answer than to assert that you know, when you don't. For example, "I don't know" is a better answer than: Hordes of enormous dustballs collected under the couch of eternity until the cosmic broom swept them into significance.Ah, so "I don't know" is worth more than "God did it"?
Indeed, it may be. But only one side admits this.It's an unanswerable question for both sides.
Not necessarily. The universe may be eternal.
Also, atheists are often content with "I don't know," which is a perfectly valid answer. The theist says that he does know, so the onus is on him to show that he does.
Not necessarily. The universe may be eternal.
Also, atheists are often content with "I don't know," which is a perfectly valid answer. The theist says that he does know, so the onus is on him to show that he does.
Yes, if it is correct. That is, "I don't know" is a more accurate answer than to assert that you know, when you don't. For example, "I don't know" is a better answer than: Hordes of enormous dustballs collected under the couch of eternity until the cosmic broom swept them into significance.
Indeed, it may be. But only one side admits this.
Well, I was not doing the anthropomorphizing. Penguino is the one who said that everything has a generator. He didn't say everything except God...
By definition everything means everything. Yes, even those concepts (or um, approximations??) that conveniently "transcend conceptualization."
Furthermore, coming up with something better as you propose would be superfluous. As these basic (childish as you call them) questions have yet to be answered.
I can easily claim that the universe, the big bang, and the origin of life are all natural, but they transcend conceptualization. Don't bother critiquing this claim though, for you will only be displaying your childish arrogance.
Oh, it's not just relevant. It is the most relevant.
A generator cannot be generated?? I beg to differ. What you mean to say is that your idea of an ultimate generator (which conveniently "transcends conceptualization" ) cannot be generated. This is an extraordinarily strong conviction to hold by weight of a (not so) common sense definition that you propose.
If people enjoy holding these beliefs, so be it. I would just hope that at the same time they could admit how tragically un-compelling this rhetoric is to someone not sharing these views. I think compelling arguments are out there - I used to be a Christian. Transcending conceptualization is certainly not one of them!
Our generator was made by Powermate; however Kohler makes better ones. None of them are eternal.
Maybe he actually knows how to use those big words and you just don't understand them.By using big words, it doesent make you look clever.
I was an atheist for a long time, and it nearly killed me.
I love it when "atheists" anthropomorphize God. It shows they aren't atheists after all: they just have a funny concept of God.
I assure you I'm not confused I don't call myself an atheist because that would mean "I don't believe in god" I on the other hand know there is no god.
Maybe he actually knows how to use those big words and you just don't understand them.
Why do people complain about the use of vocabulary. I suggest you stop whining and look up what those words mean. Just google them, its not like it takes too long.Maybe im just 13 and i am not grammatical genius. Maybe he uses them so i dont understand them.
Maybe im just 13 and i am not grammatical genius. Maybe he uses them so i dont understand them.
I disagree with this statement. What you say later shows you have the basic idea that we work off of probabilities (or more precisely confidence in data). Knowing there is no God is a stronger statement than not believing in God. The latter can be rephrased "I have no belief in God." You may have no belief in sky faeries that carve sleet into snowflakes, but you can not prove they do not really exist.Knowing there is no god and not believing in god is the same thing.
Strong atheism would basically say that they have seen the evidence and it leads away from all gods. A weaker version of this is to say that all God the atheist has theought about has been found to be self-contradicting. So they know some Gods do not exist, but can not prove all Gods do not exist. However, if positive evidence becomes available, then every atheist I know says they would believe.Unless you state that even if there is undeniably verifiable evidence for god you will still know there is no god, in which case you are a fundamental Atheist, or maybe an orthodox Atheist.
I agree with you. However, I go one further and say that by the basic definition, everyone is agnostic with leanings. So the agnostic label is useless since it includes everyone. So people have backed off a little and try to make it mean "undecided" or "polite atheist" or "spiritual but no solid beliefs."The best claim you can make is that the probability for god is so insignificant that you are convinced there is no god. So like myself I tell people I am atheist, but in reality I am agnostic with a strong lean towards atheism.
Yes, you do. Or, rather, your understanding is very limited, leading you to humanize God. By definition, God transcends conceptualization: the best and highest conception of God is only an approximation. When atheists compare God to something along the lines of a pink unicorn or aliens or anything else that is finite and the effect of an antecedent cause, what they are really doing is positing a ridiculous concept of God and saying that because such a God does not exist or has no more credibility than aliens, God does not exist. Concepts range from (your) primitive anthropomorphic concept to something like the Integrated Theory of Intelligence. When you are doing is defining God in a primitive way and saying that because such a God cannot exist, God does not exist. You are not "atheist" because you are Buddhist. You are not atheist because you "know" God does not exist.No, don't misunderstand a hypothesis based on what others believe, my point is that one has a bit more credibility than the other no matter how silly it sounds. If ET's exist which there is a very good chance that they do, due the the size and nature of the universe(s) they are bound by the natural laws as are we as would be any god that (supposedly) created them. I assure you I'm not confused I don't call myself an atheist because that would mean "I don't believe in god" I on the other hand know there is no god.
A rose by any other name...When the conception of Suchness is established, the reason of Mahayanism becomes evident. Buddhism is no more an agnostic system than a system of atheistic ethics. For in Suchness or Dharmakaya it finds the reason of existence, the true reality, the norm of morality, the source of love and goodness, the fountain head of righteousness, absolute intelligence, and the starting point of karma— for Suchness, according to the Mahayana thinkers, is not a mere state of being, but it is energy, intelligence, and love. But as Suchness begins to take these attributes upon itself, it ceases to be transcendental Suchness; it is now conditioned Suchness. So long as it remained absolutely transcendental, allowing neither negation nor affirmation, it was beyond the ken of the human understanding, and could not very well become the object of our religious consciousness. But there was the awakening of a will in Suchness, and with this awakening we have conditional and self- limiting Suchness In place of the absolutely unknowable. (As to the why and how of this process, we have to confess a profound and eternal ignorance.) It is in this transformation, so to speak, of Suchness that the Mahayana system recognizes the religious significance of Dharmakaya. (D.T. Suzuki)
I disagree with this statement. What you say later shows you have the basic idea that we work off of probabilities (or more precisely confidence in data). Knowing there is no God is a stronger statement than not believing in God. The latter can be rephrased "I have no belief in God." You may have no belief in sky faeries that carve sleet into snowflakes, but you can not prove they do not really exist.
Strong atheism would basically say that they have seen the evidence and it leads away from all gods. A weaker version of this is to say that all God the atheist has theought about has been found to be self-contradicting. So they know some Gods do not exist, but can not prove all Gods do not exist. However, if positive evidence becomes available, then every atheist I know says they would believe.
I agree with you. However, I go one further and say that by the basic definition, everyone is agnostic with leanings. So the agnostic label is useless since it includes everyone. So people have backed off a little and try to make it mean "undecided" or "polite atheist" or "spiritual but no solid beliefs."
No, it is not. The best assertion one can make is that one is aware of no evidence that one believes warrants an appeal to supernatural agency. Talk of probability is simply misplaced.The best claim you can make is that the probability for god is so insignificant that you are convinced there is no god.