FYI: your threadjacking isn't answering the question either.I don't know. Can you just answer the question posed by the title of the thread?
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FYI: your threadjacking isn't answering the question either.I don't know. Can you just answer the question posed by the title of the thread?
Seems they have no interest in actually addressing the thread topic them selves.FYI: your threadjacking isn't answering the question either.
I'm not an atheist, so the OP wasn't addressing me. But it IS an open thread. Created because the other thread asking this question was a DIR.FYI: your threadjacking isn't answering the question either.
And yet you were completely unable to answer without a sermon....I'm not an atheist, so the OP wasn't addressing me. But it IS an open thread. Created because the other thread asking this question was a DIR.
And anyway, my answer is I don't know.
See, it's really an easy answer to give, and one that doesn't require any gibberish about what I do or don't believe about what someone else does or doesn't believe aout God or gods existing. It's just a simple statement about where I stand on the question of God existing. That is, after all, the whole point of this thread ... to ask where you atheists stand on the whole God existing thing. It doesn't seem like this should require any dissertations on what other people believe and why you don't believe them. I mean, it's a very simple question that only you can answer for yourself. It doesn't require anyone else's believing anything at all.
No, Virginia, there is no God! (Santa, of course, is quite another matter.)Since the question has been posed to theists, I figured another thread for everyone else might be illuminating.
So... what do you think, atheists? Does God exist?
But what do YOU call God, and does that exist?What some call God does exist; what others call God does not.
What some call God does exist; what others call God does not.
I haveI don't know. Can you just answer the question posed by the title of the thread?
Yet here you are.I'm not an atheist, so the OP wasn't addressing me.
But it IS an open thread.
The problem with asking about the existence of God, is the term God means different things to different people; sorta like asking what type of tool is a widget, or a thing-a-ma-gig. If you want to know if I believe in the existence of whatever you might call God, you need to describe this being you call God first, then I can tell you if I believe it exists or not.Note to atheists ... no one is asking you what you don't believe. No one cares what you don't believe. The OP is asking you what you think/believe ... what your position is on the existence of God. "Yes", "no", or "I don't know" would be sufficient, and simple enough.
Well that settles it once and for all.God does exist, and all humans are created in His image - spiritual beings.
The utter oblivion of the atheist is appalling.
And reasoning skills and education is how to attain this potential. Of course intelligence is largely a natural phenomenon, and varies among humans.The potential of intelligence is extremely high
It's the lottery of life.despite the fact that many people fall below the average.
You're throwing a lot of spaghetti at the wall here. Dogs and cats have consciousness too, so if you are going to refer to human brain processes (that aren't mentally defective) then you need to clarify the details.The contents of consciousness have the appearance of being put together with memory, and all other capacities, especially identity self. Everything human is for to do something in the environment. I have not heard of anything that demonstrates that brain function can carry all our capacities. How does brain translate into all of that?
And I think quite the opposite. Consciousness includes many animals, not just humans. So this specialness needs to apply to other conscious animals, not just humans. For the religiously inclined I see a lot of emphasis on human consciousness but not about other animals, and it is a serious flaw.I think the peculiar nature of consciousness is undersold as being nothing special. Passed off as a byproduct of chemistry. The mind is a construct that serves purposes we make. I think that's intentional. Intention is intentional. Why would existence progress into anything at all beyond complex, mindless blawbr. As meagher as consciousness can be intellect is geared at achieving goals.
Can you cite any consciousness that exists outside of a living brain?Even if brain function is all there is consciousness still needs further explanation. If it's all physical that means consciousness is a special arrangement and special composition and nothing more. I think that misses.
It's still a process of material brains.All the properties of consciousness are conceived of without reference to physical properties.
There is nothing that I call God, but I do hear other people calling various things God.But what do YOU call God, and does that exist?
No doubt there!And reasoning skills and education is how to attain this potential.
Of course it is natural, but natural may include a whole lot more then the senses can perceive.Of course intelligence is largely a natural phenomenon, and varies among humans.
I believe intelligence can be learned, but as time goes by the quality of information and experience one lacks, or has can severely handicap one from learning intelligence in the span of a lifetime.It's the lottery of life.
I know other animals have consciousness and I don't see that being a problem.You're throwing a lot of spaghetti at the wall here. Dogs and cats have consciousness too, so if you are going to refer to human brain processes (that aren't mentally defective) then you need to clarify the details.
The fact is that even though there are varying degrees of intellect in all animals, one animal managed to gain vast potential.And I think quite the opposite. Consciousness includes many animals, not just humans. So this specialness needs to apply to other conscious animals, not just humans. For the religiously inclined I see a lot of emphasis on human consciousness but not about other animals, and it is a serious flaw.
I infer it based on the non physical properties. I think you are overly confident that everything is physical in the most mundane way; only by looking at life through the senses. There really should be a science of introspection. Third person observation won't reveal everything there is to know. Third person can't reveal first person properties of inner experience.Can you cite any consciousness that exists outside of a living brain?
That's a sense perception that is your unproven assumption. The self exists beyond just being conscious. Humanity does not have the whole of physics and my hunch is that existence is grander than the senses reveal. I know that GR, and QM cannot currently be reconciled together as well.It's still a process of material brains.
The question is very simple, yet for some reason some atheists just cannot seem to grasp it.The problem with asking about the existence of God, is the term God means different things to different people; sorta like asking what type of tool is a widget, or a thing-a-ma-gig. If you want to know if I believe in the existence of whatever you might call God, you need to describe this being you call God first, then I can tell you if I believe it exists or not.
Your insecurity is noted.The question is very simple, yet for some reason some atheists just cannot seem to grasp it.
No one is asking what you think or believe about anyone else’s idea of God. And no one cares. The question is asking what you think or believe about YOUR idea of God. And if you have no idea or definition of God in your mind (which is highly unlikely), then you can’t answer the question.
The problem here is that a lot of atheists are so intent on negating everyone else’s idea of God that they have never actually considered and developed the idea of God for themselves. What does the term “God” mean to them? So that when they are asked this question, they are unable to answer it. They can only tell us what they think and believe about everyone else’s idea of God. Which means nothing to anyone.
I find this a very curious phenomena, this need to attack everyone else’s idea of God while never actually considering or developing the idea for themselves. I mean, imagine we were discussing music, and the person we’re talking to tells us constantly why they hate whatever music we like, and yet doesn’t seem to like or listen to any kind of music, themselves.
Weird, right?
Weird, no. Why would we want to invent gods for ourselves when such has been done to death by so many others? With hardly a gap to fill in.The question is very simple, yet for some reason some atheists just cannot seem to grasp it.
No one is asking what you think or believe about anyone else’s idea of God. And no one cares. The question is asking what you think or believe about YOUR idea of God. And if you have no idea or definition of God in your mind (which is highly unlikely), then you can’t answer the question.
The problem here is that a lot of atheists are so intent on negating everyone else’s idea of God that they have never actually considered and developed the idea of God for themselves. What does the term “God” mean to them? So that when they are asked this question, they are unable to answer it. They can only tell us what they think and believe about everyone else’s idea of God. Which means nothing to anyone.
I find this a very curious phenomena, this need to attack everyone else’s idea of God while never actually considering or developing the idea for themselves. I mean, imagine we were discussing music, and the person we’re talking to tells us constantly why they hate whatever music we like, and yet doesn’t seem to like or listen to any kind of music, themselves.
Weird, right?
Seems to me that having your own mind would imply using it to generate your own ideas about a question this significant to humanity. What conception of "God" (deity, higher power, existential source, etc.) WOULD YOU consider possible, and/or acceptable? And then if you're still rejecting it, why?Weird, no. Why would we want to invent gods for ourselves when such has been done to death by so many others? With hardly a gap to fill in.
No it isn't.The question is asking what you think or believe about YOUR idea of God.