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Mother Nature vs. God?

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lunakilo

Well-Known Member
Your first example does not leave much room for an individual's purpose or personality.

I’m going to lean towards your second example. There are some laws of nature that humans do not (yet) have the intelligence to hack or mod and there may be laws that are set not to be tampered with (if only for the purpose that the program runs efficiently). If one can get into the mind of the programmer, one can find evidence that some natural laws were designed so that they should run by themselves (without any outside influence having to constantly observe or fix it) while some laws could be bypassed and experimented with (creative software that allows others to share in the creativity).


Experience has taught me that nothing is created unless thought is first applied. So there may have been an original entity (who thought itself into existence) but I do not share in the concept that this entity created everyone or everything. I have no preference whether these designers occupy a physical or spiritual form. Part of my philosophy is that some of these (spiritual) “gods” (designers, programmers) could now currently be active players (enrolled in a physical experience).
Ahhh, my head is exploding :eek:

I love your theory (love it, not agrre with it) :)
 

McBell

Unbound
Imagination, thought and wonder are powerful starting points towards creation.
Interesting how you avoid answering the question.
Not the least bit surprising though.


So tell me, why do you assume that everything that exists had to be "created"?
 

idav

Being
Premium Member
That depends on you definition of a god.

Does a god have to be sentient?
If not, god does not have a will to impose on us.
You could have a kind of god whose only concern is the laws of nature.

I don't know how godlike such a god is. But if the effect of gods decisions are lange enough then I guess the fact that god needs a brain smaller than that of an earthworm to make the world turn isn't really important :)
No I don't believe god has to be sentient but I do believe at least some sort of perception would be necessary. An omniscience would be ideal without needing to be all powerful. When we get down to the basic building block like say an atom we find that the atoms arranged in a certain very complex order that they become sentient but if this is so how is it that this atom doesn't have awareness to begin with. At least I would think that the atom reacts to stimuli similar to a living being. I do believe we existed before we were born in some form or another. I also believe when we existed we were perceiving as far as matter and energy go. We just aren't aware that we can perceive until we become a sentient being. For example how a tree perceives without having a brain.
 

science_is_my_god

Philosophical Monist

PolyHedral

Superabacus Mystic
There are actually many modern physicists that believe time is an illusion. The only thing that makes time appear to us is the universe's constant change of state. We are living in an infinite number of "nows."
So it still doesn't make sense to say the universe was created. You've have to bring in another, seperate "time" for that.
 

idav

Being
Premium Member
Creating the universe doesn't make sense, because time is an integral part of the universe.
So your saying the universe couldn't have a beginning or end just because time is part of the fabric of the universe? I'm not too sure about that. Time would have been "created" along with the universe.
 

science_is_my_god

Philosophical Monist
So it still doesn't make sense to say the universe was created. You've have to bring in another, seperate "time" for that.

Well, sure. I'm not necessarily using "creation" as a means of something coming from nothing, but more of a "creation" from a previous existence. The universe as we know it was created, but only from another state of existence.

It's like if you were to take a glass vase and smash it to pieces, then rearrange it into a mosaic.
 

Anonymouse

Member
Mestemia-Interesting how you avoid answering the question.
Not the least bit surprising though.
I thought I already answered it.
Mestemia-So tell me, why do you assume that everything that exists had to be "created"?
Post #140
anonymouse-Experience has taught me that nothing is created unless thought is first applied.

Now my question to you Mestemia is:
Does your experience greatly differ from mine?
 

McBell

Unbound
I thought I already answered it.
Hmm...
Seems you did.
My bad.

Post #140
Does not answer the question:
Why do you assume that everything had to be created?
Now my question to you Mestemia is:
Does your experience greatly differ from mine?
Nope.
Every thing that is created must have a creator.
Seems to me that that is a Captain Obvious remark.
What you have been avoiding is why you assume that everything has been created.
 

PolyHedral

Superabacus Mystic
So your saying the universe couldn't have a beginning or end just because time is part of the fabric of the universe? I'm not too sure about that. Time would have been "created" along with the universe.
No, the universe quite clearly has a beginning, though I'm not sure about an end. However, "creating" the universe involves there being a time where there wasn't a universe, which is nonsensical.
 
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