Wildswanderer
Veteran Member
Which is what? We don't know. So calling it God is as good a guess as any.the singularity in the Big Bang theory
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Which is what? We don't know. So calling it God is as good a guess as any.the singularity in the Big Bang theory
Why not? People call all sorts of things God; there are those who worship nature, the Sun, even the moon! There is even a story in the Bible of people worshiping a big chunk of Gold (Golden Calf) so why not worship a singularity? Most people I know want to worship a God that is intelligent, and animated; however if you want to call a singularity God; ain't nobody stoppin' ya!Which is what? We don't know. So calling it God is as good a guess as any.
Well, the difference is, science knows it's limits.
No because we don't have to have a cause for an infinite being. Where as in science there are laws that regulate what is possible.
Or you simply just have something that was always there.
That is impossible according to science.
Or you simply just have something that was always there.
A short and simple answer is, it was always there since it wasn't created by anything.Why [ not how ] was it always there?
I have no idea what you are talking about or what it has to do with the fact that some truths can be empirically verified as fact.
That is not really an answer at all though.A short and simple answer is, it was always there since it wasn't created by anything.
If God existed would there be proof?
I am not asking if there could be proof or if there should be proof, I am asking if there would be proof.
- If God existed would God provide proof of His existence?
- Does the fact that there is no proof of God's existence mean that God does not exist?
- In other words, could God exist and not provide proof of His existence?
I agree, because I believe I have proof, but my proof is not proof to everyone else.
That's is a good point. If God provided proof how would anyone know it was God providing it, whatever that proof was?
Philosophy of Science??? My question was about truth not philosophy. I don't see how this relates to what I said.Sorry for the late answer. Let us just leave it here, unless you are willing to learn how come there is this piece of text and how it relates to what you say:
Philosophy of science - Wikipedia
"...
Naturalism's axiomatic assumptions[edit]
All scientific study inescapably builds on at least some essential assumptions that are untested by scientific processes.[42][43] Kuhn concurs that all science is based on an approved agenda of unprovable assumptions about the character of the universe, rather than merely on empirical facts. These assumptions—a paradigm—comprise a collection of beliefs, values and techniques that are held by a given scientific community, which legitimize their systems and set the limitations to their investigation.[44] For naturalists, nature is the only reality, the only paradigm. There is no such thing as 'supernatural'. The scientific method is to be used to investigate all reality,[45] and Naturalism is the implicit philosophy of working scientists.[46]
The following basic assumptions are needed to justify the scientific method.[47]
..."
- that there is an objective reality shared by all rational observers.[47][48] "The basis for rationality is acceptance of an external objective reality.".[49] "As an individual we cannot know that the sensory information we perceive is generated artificially or originates from a real world. Any belief that it arises from a real world outside us is actually an assumption. It seems more beneficial to assume that an objective reality exists than to live with solipsism, and so people are quite happy to make this assumption. In fact we made this assumption unconsciously when we began to learn about the world as infants. The world outside ourselves appears to respond in ways which are consistent with it being real. ... The assumption of objectivism is essential if we are to attach the contemporary meanings to our sensations and feelings and make more sense of them."[50] "Without this assumption, there would be only the thoughts and images in our own mind (which would be the only existing mind) and there would be no need of science, or anything else."[51]
- that this objective reality is governed by natural laws.[47][48] "Science, at least today, assumes that the universe obeys to knowable principles that don't depend on time or place, nor on subjective parameters such as what we think, know or how we behave."[49] Hugh Gauch argues that science presupposes that "the physical world is orderly and comprehensible."[52]
- that reality can be discovered by means of systematic observation and experimentation.[47][48] Stanley Sobottka said, "The assumption of external reality is necessary for science to function and to flourish. For the most part, science is the discovering and explaining of the external world."[51] "Science attempts to produce knowledge that is as universal and objective as possible within the realm of human understanding."[49]
- that Nature has uniformity of laws and most if not all things in nature must have at least a natural cause.[48] Biologist Stephen Jay Gould referred to these two closely related propositions as the constancy of nature's laws and the operation of known processes.[53] Simpson agrees that the axiom of uniformity of law, an unprovable postulate, is necessary in order for scientists to extrapolate inductive inference into the unobservable past in order to meaningfully study it.[54]
- that experimental procedures will be done satisfactorily without any deliberate or unintentional mistakes that will influence the results.[48]
- that experimenters won't be significantly biased by their presumptions.[48]
- that random sampling is representative of the entire population.[48] A simple random sample (SRS) is the most basic probabilistic option used for creating a sample from a population. The benefit of SRS is that the investigator is guaranteed to choose a sample that represents the population that ensures statistically valid conclusions.[55]
I disagree; I thought it was a very good answerThat is not really an answer at all though.
Perhaps he doesn't know why. What's he supposed to do; make something up?It simply avoids the issue of "why".
No it doesn't; you are reading into something that isn't there.It implies that all we see has no author, and is all one big coincidence.
Would you rather he just make stuff up to satisfy your inquiring mind?My inquiring mind cannot accept that.
Each to their own.
Philosophy of Science??? My question was about truth not philosophy. I don't see how this relates to what I said.
That is not really an answer at all though.
It simply avoids the issue of "why".
It implies that all we see has no author, and is all one big coincidence.
My inquiring mind cannot accept that.
It is my inquiring mind that led me to believe in G-d in the first place.Please... it's not an "inquiring mind". It's rather a "mind locked up in a specific religious doctrine".
It is my inquiring mind that led me to believe in G-d in the first place.
It is my inquiring mind that led me to consider which creed is closer to the truth.
Science can be employed for good or bad purposes.
Science cannot in itself distinguish between the two.
..hence, there's more to life than science.
This is arrogance.I disagree.
It is in fact through science that we can know and understand the consequences of our actions..