Thief
Rogue Theologian
Perhaps the universe was created by millions of gods. Why should there be just the one?
It is written.....ye ARE gods....
(not sure where)
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Perhaps the universe was created by millions of gods. Why should there be just the one?
I had to re-read my post. I never said anything about how atheist are scientist and how the two relate to each other. I am an atheist by technicality (no belief in deities) and that doesn't make me a scientist of any sort. Where did you get that from?
I personally brought up the big bang. I have no comments on evolution. In my personal opinion, something cannot come from nothing. Whether it can be proven true is irrelevant to me. The philosophy of how anyone (not specifically atheist) of human origin coming from the big bang puzzles me. I don't see how anyone can prove the existence of anything before the big bang.
Blah, blah, blah...and I believe in God because of science.
Science does not offer proof of God....it can't.
God can't be photo'd or stuffed in a petri dish.
There will be no equation.
But science relies on cause and effect.
Science will take you to that 'point' of choice.
You have to think about it.
I use cause and effect.
Atheists don't need to provide the burden of proof for scientific endeavours, let alone that of the Big Bang.
That's what I have been trying to say
Are you sure you read the whole thing?
"Snowflakes forming half an inch apart look completely differently"
Which is explained
"six sides of a half inch snowflake are exactly the same."
Which is explained.
"he more complex explanation is this:
These ice crystals that make up snowflakes are symmetrical (or patterned) because they reflect the internal order of the crystal’s water molecules as they arrange themselves in predetermined spaces (known as “crystallization”) to form a six-sided snowflake.
Ultimately, it is the temperature at which a crystal forms — and to a lesser extent the humidity of the air — that determines the basic shape of the ice crystal. Thus, we see long needle-like crystals at 23 degrees F and very flat plate-like crystals at 5 degrees F.
The intricate shape of a single arm of the snowflake is determined by the atmospheric conditions experienced by entire ice crystal as it falls. A crystal might begin to grow arms in one manner, and then minutes or even seconds later, slight changes in the surrounding temperature or humidity causes the crystal to grow in another way. Although the six-sided shape is always maintained, the ice crystal (and its six arms) may branch off in new directions. Because each arm experiences the same atmospheric conditions, the arms look identical. "
NOAA - National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration - Monitoring & Understanding Our Changing Planet
and I believe in God because of science.
Science does not offer proof of God....it can't.
God can't be photo'd or stuffed in a petri dish.
There will be no equation.
But science relies on cause and effect.
Science will take you to that 'point' of choice.
You have to think about it.
I use cause and effect.
Perhaps the universe was created by millions of gods. Why should there be just the one?
Furthermore, pulling a part the world atheist, it just means someone who lacks a belief in deities.
I stick with this definition.Atheist: a person who believes that God does not exist--Merriam Webster
Looking the terms up...Atheism is an active position taking a stance on the existence of God. What you're talking around is nihilism, materialism or existentialism.
If you're one of those, then claim that. A "disbelief" in God(s) is an academic slight of hand in an attempt, as all philosophical anarchists are want to do, to undermine the language and its definitions. The same tactic is used in the promulgation of socialism.
I don't know anything about deism, though. Half the child-forums in this forum referring to monism, deism, non-theism, and so forth I don't even get into.Further, there are only two reasoned positions on the existence of God, atheism and deism. The only difference between the two, from our point of view, is hope.
Atheist: a person who believes that God does not exist--Merriam Webster
Atheism is an active position taking a stance on the existence of God. What you're talking around is nihilism, materialism or existentialism. If you're one of those, then claim that. A "disbelief" in God(s) is an academic slight of hand in an attempt, as all philosophical anarchists are want to do, to undermine the language and its definitions. The same tactic is used in the promulgation of socialism.
Further, there are only two reasoned positions on the existence of God, atheism and deism. The only difference between the two, from our point of view, is hope.
That definition was probably written by a Christian.
Atheists don't believe that gods exist; plural, you see and not singular.
Yes, I did read it. As shown in the video someone posted previously, the arms initiate at the points of the core hexagonal crystal, not the flat sides. If the crystal is so sensitive to the micro-conditions it's subjected to and makes it different from all it's nearby neighbors, measured sometimes is fractions of an inch, then why doesn't it affect the arms of a given flake differently as they grow as well.?
The universe is run by universal, immutable natural law, as we've seen so far anyway (and without any evidence to the contrary), but that doesn't mean that it couldn't have been created by a supernatural force--whether "supernatural" means some more extensive set of natural laws, and/or it means something totally non-natural. But we apparently don't have to worry about that because the universe is apparently completely isolated from whatever the reality "outside" is.
If God has the omnipotence and omnipresence to be such a powerful God, all other gods that might pop up would be nothing more than extensions of It. Same for angels and that's why there'd be no demons and such.
But God (if It exists) likely created the universe for the specific purpose spawning creatures with a will of their own (free will), beyond It's influence. That doesn't mean we're gods, far from it. We can't even explain gravity, much less override it. But we can demonstrate our inherent integrity and character, or lack of it, free from that influence. Of course free means there will be those who exploit that freedom with lies for their own benefit, as well as those who buy the lies rather than think for themselves.
I stick with this definition.
Looking the terms up...
Materialism: a tendency to consider material possessions and physical comfort as more important than spiritual values.
Completely false. I don't understand where that came from in my posts.
Nihilism: The rejection of all religious and moral principles, often in the belief that life is meaningless.
Completely false. Where did you get that from?
Existentialism: a philosophical theory or approach that emphasizes the existence of the individual person as a free and responsible agent determining their own development through acts of the will.
Yes, I can agree on this just going by this definition alone. We each are free to determine what we want to do (pick up a spoon to buy a house). We are responsible for our actions.
Anything other than that--philosophical wise--you have completely lost me.
It just means disbelief in God. I put no philosophical meaning to it. I don't have a lot of views about "disbelief" because it is pointless. That is like me talking to you (if you are an atheist) about how the possibility of a unicorn can exist. We can philosophize about it. However, talking about it as if it does exist is, well, silly.
Actually, translate that whole post. I just don't believe in deities. Nothing philosophical and political about that.
I don't know anything about deism, though. Half the child-forums in this forum referring to monism, deism, non-theism, and so forth I don't even get into.
But of course ....if God be God.....then He can tweak His creation at will.
He would be free to do so.
Not without altering natural law and/or our free will.
I see. The closest I'd get to that spiritually is the natural world and the spiritual world coincide. Not money and new pair of shoes, things like that (unless that is part of [not is] someone's faith), but actual people, the earth, and everything living. Food and water for example is spiritual nourishment to me because it keeps me alive. I guess it's a matter of how one sees it too.In it's simplistic form, someone who only cares or values things of the material world.
I guess that is true for me in the sense that God, to me, is not a Being. It is not the laws of nature. So, I cannot see "Him" in anyway connected to life--as a person--unless it is through the people who say He exists. I see "God" in them; alone, I don't have that conviction.The root word, to believe in nothing including God or the value of life.
Someone who does not want to philosophize?Yeah, a more tenuous connection, but basically I'm just going for the cynical nature of most existentialists and express disdain for our weak powers of perception and the ultimate pointlessness of trying to discern any meaning.
That sounds more like theology. If God is an external being as in the movies who is above all and shapes the universe, that is so far from reality that it will take a long shot for me to think about it in realistic terms. I guess I can philosophize that God consist given there is a situation or concept to which we can relate God to in order to talk about it. We can talk about how we see God through others. That doesn't mean He exist just we are philosophizing (if you will) that if He does, you can see Him through the life of His creation.But you can't say it has no philosophical meaning. You say you believe God doesn't exist, that's a philosophy.
Although severely out played and it took me a long while to actually type it, you have to admit, it makes some sense from a philosophical perspective? There is a thread I posted "creating something into reality" I believe. It said we can put our fingers on our temples and think the box siting on the table in the air, we can concentrate, have faith, and believe, but that doesn't make the box float--and if it is not there, that does not make it exist either. We could philosophize that what if a box could exist; and, if it does, we can talk about it (if not consider it's existence--agnostic) what does that do unless we are proving a part that replies on the concept of an invisible object? An atheist would say, the box doesn't exist. An agnostic, it is possible it could exist nothing is proven right or wrong. A theist, the box does exist, we just have to have faith to see it.And please with the unicorn red herring.
If He does exist, unless you mean Creator, God I see is an word not used by some religions. Those who do use that word see Him as a Creator who governs the universe. Whether or not He is active in it and a concrete person or abstract depends on the faith and the person.If God exists, It could look like anything It wants or nothing. To say not believing in God is the same thing as not believing in unicorns is the same thing as comparing God to the Loch Ness Monster...or a tree deep in the Amazon.
No there isn't, as long as you don't claim that your belief is certain.
To me, the evidence is in the experience rather than physical evidence. People pray to God and sometimes God intervenes and acts in their life. I can't say it's false. If someone said, God is right there siting on the bench swinging His feet, I'd have to decline His existence (unless He's Jesus who is said to be God and human).Right now, the only two possible reasonable positions are God and no god, and since there's no viable evidence either way, it's a 50/50 proposition, and if God does exist, that would have to be by design.
I guess I'd be a deist if I believed in a deity. I'm pulled to the Santeria faith who believes the Orishas (spirits of different concrete aspects of nature) are in between humans and God the Creator. (Olofin). The way to talk to God is through our ancestors and, if trained, talking directly to the Orishas. In this view, you have a direct relationship with life (God--my signature) and interact with people and nature (not the new age way) to communicate with "Him."Deism is the belief that God created the natural universe and has not interfered since--I think because the purpose of the universe was to spawn us with full self-awareness which would then spark our free will. Anything else God could do in an instant, if It exists.
Consider....miracles were performed for the weak of mind and heart.
But in occasion of solitude.....no alteration allowed.
No if you can't believe in miracles, that's ok with me.
I don't believe because of them.
Yet it is written....ye ARE gods.
Seems to me the indication is clear enough.
We are here to learn whatever we can and then we stand before heaven.
To each his own and to his ability.
I see. The closest I'd get to that spiritually is the natural world and the spiritual world coincide. Not money and new pair of shoes, things like that (unless that is part of [not is] someone's faith), but actual people, the earth, and everything living. Food and water for example is spiritual nourishment to me because it keeps me alive. I guess it's a matter of how one sees it too.
I guess that is true for me in the sense that God, to me, is not a Being. It is not the laws of nature. So, I cannot see "Him" in anyway connected to life--as a person--unless it is through the people who say He exists. I see "God" in them; alone, I don't have that conviction.
Although severely out played and it took me a long while to actually type it, you have to admit, it makes some sense from a philosophical perspective? There is a thread I posted "creating something into reality" I believe. It said we can put our fingers on our temples and think the box siting on the table in the air, we can concentrate, have faith, and believe, but that doesn't make the box float--and if it is not there, that does not make it exist either. We could philosophize that what if a box could exist; and, if it does, we can talk about it (if not consider it's existence--agnostic) what does that do unless we are proving a part that replies on the concept of an invisible object? An atheist would say, the box doesn't exist. An agnostic, it is possible it could exist nothing is proven right or wrong. A theist, the box does exist, we just have to have faith to see it.
I guess I'd be a deist if I believed in a deity.
In abrahamic translation, I see a more personal relationship with God by interacting spiritually and ritually through His creation.
Any, I understand what you're saying. Food for thought.
But neither can religion (prove God).Long story short: Science can't prove God
But neither can religion (prove God).
All we have hearsay, from so-called prophets, messengers, messiah, scribes, and most of which weren't written by the people they claim to be, written generations or centuries later.
Religion, by its very nature, proves God.
Religion, from a, let's say Abrahamic perspective, is "the system of beliefs and rituals devoted to worshiping a higher power or creator." The definition of religion (using a common definition rather than mine) is that it incorporates something of the supernatural (something that can't be seen with our five senses), and this unknown thing or person is the objective of another person's reverence or worship.And how does religion prove god?
Yes. If your life has been changed by this belief, you set your life on it, your world view changes, and you have devoted yourself in the acts and wishes of your deity, then yes, to you it is reality and to you, this reality is all that exist; it will be fact to you not a belief.So if I was to worship Zeus or Odin, does that mean I have proven Zeus or Odin to exist?
In reality, we cannot know everything by our five senses. We are fooling ourselves to think reality is only within the things we can see, touch, smell, taste, and hear.In reality, for anything to exist, I have to be able see it, hear it, touch it, or interact it, or any of combination of above.
I can't prove an invisible God (I don't believe in God). If I did, the proof would be in my experience and relationship with him or her. Every person I know who believes in a deity has because of some revelation. Maybe "he" hasn't revealed himself to you? Who knows.How do you prove an invisible god?
My honest opinion, we do not know. Hence, why we trust what we believe is true. For example, I believe that my grandmothers are talking to me even though they are deceased. Just as God talking to, I don't know, John, they and God are not here in front of me. I cannot see, smell, taste, hear, and touch them. You know they are there because of how your life changes...how you perceive yourself is different...you're "born again."How do you know it is not just your imagination or you're not banking on your faith on false belief?
Here's another thing. Do you want people to prove God the way you want to see him or do you want to accept the proof given by how the believer sees Him?Nothing in the world of religion, can they ever prove his or her god to be real.
I don't know about heaven or hell. The spirit is another word for an adjective of what we feel when we are at our healthiest full self--mind and body (combination of body and mind). When we are comfortable with ourselves and others. When we accept life on life's terms. Know our goals or callings. Comfortable with uncertainty. Know how to deal with things in a healthy manner. Acknowledge our faults and learn from them. When we get to this state even if it's one second, we are experiencing what people call spirituality. Instead of saying spirituality is a combination of body and mind being in good health, they define the combination as our spirit instead. They push it aside from the cause being psychological. Regardless of how one labels it, spirit or body/mind, it exists.There are no way to prove the existence of spirit, or that of heaven and hell.
Depends on how you view God and your experiences or perspectives of how God should be to you if someone where to prove Him real.The belief in god is no better than the belief in fairy, or unicorn, or that of goblins and ghouls.
But neither can religion (prove God).
All we have hearsay, from so-called prophets, messengers, messiah, scribes, and most of which weren't written by the people they claim to be, written generations or centuries later.