God existing because everything is going with a system.not starting by our bodies systems (Lymphatic System,Nervous System,Reproductive System,Respiratory System,...) and not finishing by The universe systems (Solar system, gravitational system, ..).
...What?
All life has spirit - that's what makes it alive. The difference between something that is alive, and something that is not alive, is that living things have a spirit. I know there are spirits because they are the source of our free will.
I'm not the only one who believes that our mind transmits, rather than produces, our thoughts - link
If something is alive, it has life. Being alive is not evidence for what it commonly referred to as a spirit, which is something that lives on after death. Brains and intelligence are our source of free will; does a person in vegetative state that's alive have free will? Do plants?
I tend to not click on links since I'm not going to watch an hour-long video from each person, but are there any peer-reviewed scientific journals that have published anything confirming that thoughts are transmitted?
I actually have heard an audible voice, (it actually scared the **** out of me, but then that's what the angels told the shepherds too - "fear not", so I'm not the only one who has felt fear) - it was more than just audible though, it came within my ears, but also within my mind - it was both outside, and inside at the same time. a bit like this:
But usually, "feeling" is perhaps the closest word? although feeling does not quite capture it either...
Personal experience is not a valid form of evidence, but there are natural explanations for hearing voices. People have a tendency to seek patterns, whether it's faces in clouds or voices in the wind. You can even listen to a Britney Spears song in reverse and read lyrics to set yourself up for a confirmation bias supporting what the lyrics say. If you're thinking of someone, you're more likely to be susceptible to these kinds of things. When my grandma died, during the viewing several people including myself thought we saw her chest moving up and down and her eyelashes twitching. Why? Because we knew her when she was alive, and her chest and eyelids used to move. The mind seeks patterns; it's part of how the brain interprets signals from the senses. It's very powerful at doing this visually and with sounds as well. It's why hearing a native language is so much easier than hearing a new one; you listen for patterns of things that have been said in the past instead of having to make out each word at a time.
I've been directed on things that were outside my physical ability to know - like being directed to take another route when driving somewhere, and later found I avoided a traffic jam, or being prompted to call someone, and then finding out after I called that they really needed that phone call at that particular time - these small little types of things have happened often enough, that I know these promptings did not come from within me - but from another source.
When I heard an audible voice, I was told something that would happen within my future - something I did not believe would happen at the time - and it happened.... so I am a believer.
These events demonstrate yet another case of the confirmation bias that human beings are so susceptible to. If every ten times something happens, something else happens that's unusually positive or negative, those instances will be remembered, and the others will be blurred into the background. The pattern-seeking mind will think, "Something is going on here," and the confirmation bias will cause the person to seek out instances confirming the assertion and to ignore instances that don't.
This may not be the best example, but let's say I pray to my car keys that I get home safely every night. Time and time again, I get home safely. Instead of focusing on the fact that even without praying to my keys, getting home safely is the ordinary thing to happen, I might choose to see the praying as effective. The keys are answering my prayers! I pray for something, and it happens. But maybe one night I don't get home safely. The keys were testing my faith, had other plans, are running out of power/luck, etc. This is sort of going off on a tangent, but my point is that while the keys answering my prayers is a more fantastic and exciting cause for me getting home safely, I should instead step back and objectively look at all variables.
Interestingly enough, I agree completely. The thing is that all things exist as concepts. And that is the most you can say for sure about anything. You can say, "A thing exists." with surety. Everything after that is speculative and/or arbitrary. In my oh so humble opinion that is
Something's existence can be demonstrated by physical properties and/or how it affects others. In case you might suggest that god has affected countless people throughout history, I'll only go as far to say that
belief in god affected those people, just like how belief in Santa causes many children to behave well as Christmas gets closer.
True, but that isn't why you know Dr. Doom is fictional. You know because the creator of Dr. Doom says so. That's a living being that created a character telling you its a fictional character. Not centuries of human belief telling you its not fictional and that it was created 'divinely'. That's a pretty clear distinction between Dr. Doom and God. Personally, I needed a lot more evidence than that to believe, and I assume you are the same given your name. But at face value the concept's existence suggests the literal existence more than it suggests fictional. Luckily, there is a lot more to go on than just this one piece of information. Just as there is for Dr. Doom.
Does Dr. Doom's creator specifically say that he's fictional? If he did, what if he didn't? Furthermore, if he did, what if either Dr. Doom does exist somewhere (and perhaps inspired the character), or what if Dr. Doom really does exist and the author just wants people to think he's fictional?
While few people would actually claim that Dr. Doom is real, the lack of evidence for him, signs of authorship, and similar other fictional stories make disbelief in him justifiable. Belief in him would not be justifiable.
Yet, the same is true of god. There's a lack of evidence for his existence, there are literary reasons to think the authors of the bible had specific intentions (not to mention the NT stories being spread orally for decades before finally being written down), and there are countless other examples of gods being created throughout history. The only main difference is that only the spawns of the Abrahamic god have survived time.
Since the number of people who believe in something doesn't affect whether or not it's true (people used to believe the Earth was flat and the center of the universe), it doesn't matter how many people believe in different versions of the same god, which are arguably different gods. The burden of proof rests with the people making the claim that this god is real.