Does God exist?

L Gilbert

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Reminds me of infomercials: if the product is so good, why does it take a half hour to sell rather than the normal half minute? All these people have been ranting about their gods and whatnot for thousands of years and have STILL not convinced the intelligent, rational thinkers.
 

talloola

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the quran order from the arab to

writing one sura from quran if

he can , then the quran say If meet

all human and gins do not can they made

one sura like him ,

and it that is happing no one can

made one sura like him he


is amazing and he ( rival order but no one can rival him )
All of the above means 'nothing' to me, nothing at all, it has no connection
to my life, only yours.
 

Dexter Sinister

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I hope you have chance to visit this country Dexter ;I am convinced that you would enjoy the visit immensely.
I believe you're right, and I'm working on it, sort of. I'm retired now, but my former employer has interests in China and Mongolia, and one of the guys most heavily involved in that is one of my fishing buddies. I've told him several times, if one of the projects over there could use my particular expertise, I'd be happy to go over there and help out on a short term contract basis. Nothing yet, but the door's open at least a crack. Might work out, and I'd instantly jump at the chance to visit one of the oldest civilizations on the planet. I've been to several places in Africa on similar projects, and they were real eye openers and consciousness raisers, I'm sure a trip to China would be too.
 

talloola

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earthly = work for eschatological " finish ''

eschatological = this truth life



why the scientists proselyting to islam ?

If the god just fantasy ,,

why islam dash to religion 1 with the little of powers ?

Since the time of the Prophets to our current day,


the Truth has always been under attack.

Amazing how the Truth continues to grow.

You speak in gibberish, I imagine you understand yourself,
I guess that's all that matters.
Have a nice day.
 

ahmadabdalrhman

Electoral Member
Sep 14, 2008
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From all that I have seen it seems there could be something after this life. Like reincarnation, if this is true we will not have a place to reincarnate to if we destroy our planet. I know the planet is strong but how much pounding can it take.


Why do you fear the other ways, if your way is the true way it will remain. If any of your ways cause suffering then they must be changed because they are not the way of true good or God.

terrorist he is way not truth .

them kill woman and the children and elders and innocents that haram In Islam

them the young not have known like boffins elders take knowing for old years .



بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

{ لا ينهاكم الله عن الذين لم يقاتلوكم في الدين ولم يخرجوكم من دياركم أن تبروهم وتقسطوا إليهم إن الله يحب المقسطين }

[8] Allah forbids you not, with regard to those who fight you not for (your) Faith nor drive you out of your homes, from dealing kindly and justly with them: for Allah loveth those who are just. )


and for the earth it end , but the god create we for reckoning ,

for the know islam read from the know it not from enemies

look here
 

ahmadabdalrhman

Electoral Member
Sep 14, 2008
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rival order but no one can rival him
its because he has no enemy.

no , that namely no one can made like him from miracle ,
for example :smile:

1- the arab amaze from articulation in quran no wrong in him ,
2 - he is from weights no one can write like it ,
3 - he have is effect in heart even not arabic his feeling from him ,
4 - in more of poetry in quran on word meaning more of meaning and all meanings is truth ,
5 - in the quran telling happing will happing and he happing ,
6 - in sciences quran be for 1400 old not any one known it solely now ,,
7 - no the in the quran arabic gainsay
8 - the order rival no book he say I do not have gainsay

Etc......................
 
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In Between Man

The Biblical Position
Sep 11, 2008
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Well Dex....

I have to say, you definitely gave me a lot to chew on all week. I've rethought everything about my argument, and I feel even more confident in my philosophical foot hold. I don't believe I am presupposing anything.

First of all,
Then how did he get here, where did he come from?
I already replied to question "Where God comes from." He eternal.

The onus is on you now. Whatever you think was before the time-space-matter universe also needs an explanation. Where did it come from? If you say it was eternal.... well....allow me say that I believe God is eternal.

Your original purpose was to prove that god exists using the argument from design. This simply assumes a priori that he exists, and is thus the logical fallacy called begging the question, which is to assume the truth of what you're trying to prove. You've merely shifted the hypothesis from "Everything has a cause" to "Everything but god has a cause," which explains nothing, it's just a refusal to explain.
Wrong. I didn't create the law. The law actually does state everything that comes to be, had a cause. Not everything has a cause.

Moreover, even if your assumption is correct, that something eternal caused the universe, that doesn't necessarily mean it was god. Maybe what's eternal is just geometry. Quarks, the simplest structures we know of, have three characteristics called colour, flavour, and charge, and they can't be pried apart. The three dimensions of space can't be pried apart either. So what's so great about 3 dimensions, as opposed to 2, or 4, or 24? Three dimensions, topologically, are what you need to make a knot that won't spontaneously unravel, and the simplest particles may be, according to some interpretations of string theory, knots in the fabric. That's pretty far out stuff, but at least it has some empirical grounding, unlike the claims for god's existence, and has some hope of leading to further insights.
Quarks, huh? You wouldn't be foolish enough to believe that matter would presuppose the beginning of all time, space, and matter, would you? Because that's exactly what your doing. Matter exists because matter exists. That's circular arguing and a fallacy.

Begging the question again, you try to prove he exists by assuming he exists. The second postulate begs the question again, you assume the universe was designed in order to prove it was designed. You've offered that fallacy three times, first by assuming that god exists and the universe must therefore be designed, and here by assuming the universe is designed and therefore god must exist, and a third trivial time in between that follows from the first one. . Taken together, the argument is entirely circular: god exists because god exists,or alternatively, the universe is designed because the universe is designed.
Hold on a sec, let's examine that argument again.

1. All designs have a designer.

No mention of God whatsoever. All I'm talking about is design. Moreover, logically we can believe beyond a reasonable doubt that Number 1 is true. As you know, science is the search for causes. Our good friend logic, tells us that there are only two types of causes. Intelligent and non-intelligent.

Intelligent:


Non-intelligent:


Nature does not create design. In fact, the second law(law of entropy)says that as time passes, the design falls apart. Only intelligence can be behind design.

The second point is where the debate lies: The universe has a highly complex design. I say it's design. Atheism say its the appearance of design.

Number three -therefore the universe is designed - is only true if number one and number two are.

I still have not mentioned God. But if one, two, and three are correct then logically one could say that this designer is God, or some supreme alien force, whatever suits ya. See? I'm not presupposing anything. Again, my logic tells me that design comes from an intelligent source: a designer. Therefore, I stand by number one. All designs have a designer.

Atheism does not want to admit design, because its philosophical assumptions have impacted how it interprets the empirical evidence we have all seen. If one assumes beforehand that only natural causes are possible, then no amount of evidence will convince him that intelligence created the universe. To admit design would mean to admit intelligence. That's why atheism has a problem with number one of my argument. It cannot admit design. As soon as it's mentioned, the red flags for you side go up, and it must be discredited.

You've got nothing here but the same tired old fallacies I've seen many times before.
I resent that.:x

I have not posted one quote from the bible, or the Q'uran. (unlike some of the very weak arguments presented by ahmadabdalrhman, or that other muslim guy eassanir, or something:roll:) I'm actually trying to show how one can look at the empirical and forensic evidence that is accessible to all, and using reason and logic, determine how belief in God, so to speak, is rational.

And if it's rational, then it should be included in the market place of ideas. I already knew that this case would be discredited before it has barely begun. I recently read Scott Free's post on how people have a genetic leaning to belief in God. Therefore implying people without this leaning base their interpretation on logic and reason, and others don't. (He left me with a lot to chew on this past week as well, I'm working on my "fool proof" reply! lol)

Quoting Scott Free:
Perhaps there is some kind of genetic disposition toward religiosity that could be somehow exploited to this end.
What are your thoughts on this Dex? I'm interested to know. Am I biologically dispositioned to believing in a creator? Or am I using logic and reason to interpret the evidence? I'm sure you know what I believe.:roll:

But back to you accusing me of fallacies.:x I didn't want to play this card just yet. I was saving it for as one of my points in regards to the philosophical portion of my case. But I feel it's a good time to use it:

You accuse me of fallacies because I allegedly presuppose things.

I'm going to show you how atheism presupposes a big no no for your side.

I really want you to marinate on this one, so I'm gong to break it down, so I can be as clear on my point as possible.(I'm refering to atheism in general, but I'm going to pick on you Dex, ;-))

The very fact that you think you have reasons to be atheist actually presupposes that God exists.

How so?

Because reasons require that this universe be a reasonable one that presupposes there is order, logic, design and truth. But order, logic, design, and truth can only exist and be known if there is an unchangable objective source and standard of such things. To say something is unreasonable, you must know what reasonable is. To say something is not designed, you must know what designed is. To say something is not true, you must know what truth is, and so forth.

Your aethistic view unwittingly borrows from the theistic view in order to look more intelligent. Gotcha! :lol:;)

I was pretty sure you'd get to this "fine tuning" argument too, and I'm expecting the "irreducible complexity" argument eventually as well.
It's just one portion of my science section in regards to my case. It's coming. LOL, I sense your getting ready to discredit it.

With regard to the anthropic constants arguments you've offered, you need to understand two things. First, the composition of the atmosphere is not now what it's always been, so any argument based on its current composition, and its degree of transparency to certain wavelengths, as an example of design has no merit.
Empirical science and Forensic science assumes(by faith, I might add) that the universe operates in the same way as it did millions of years ago. It's the only tools we have in regards to science. How does the universe operate? What is the origin of the universe? What we study now, definitely has merit. It's observation. It tells us the truth.

The presence of free oxygen in particular is a consequence of the life on this planet, not a cause of it, and other forms of life have adapted to it.
That's right, oxygen is not a cause of life. But notice how critical it is for life.

Second, numbers like the gravitational coupling constant are irrelevant, they depend entirely on the system of units chosen to express them in.
Gravity is constant. Let me pull out my grade four textbook and double check....yup... it's right here...constant.....;-)

The only things that matter from the fine tuning perspective are the dimensionless constants, numbers that'd be the same no matter what system of units was chosen, like the ratio between the proton and electron mass, or the relative strengths of the gravitational and electromagnetic forces.
Seems to me that a lot of fine tuning is required in the universe. Ratio between the proton and electron mass....thanks Dex, I'll add that to the list...didn't have that one...;-)

So, how significant is this fine tuning? Several physicists have done some calculations on this, and their conclusion is, not very.
I would say that this fine tuning is signifcant. It shows design.

Anywayz, I got to keep plugging along here. I'm absolutely itching to get to some philosophical questions, and I haven't even finished the anthropic points yet! Later friend!:smile:
 
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In Between Man

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Sep 11, 2008
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This is my fifth official post on my case in favor of intelligent design.

I'm going to list some more anthropic constants, then move on to other things.

Anthropic constant #6: Planetary movement.

If the centrifugal force of planetary movement did not precisely balance the gravitational forces, nothing could be held in orbit around the sun.

Anthropic constant # 7: Expansion

If the universe expanded at a rate one millionth more slowly than it did, expansion would stopped, and the universe would have collapsed on itself before the stars had formed. If it had expanded faster, then no galaxies would have formed.

Anthropic constant # 8: Speed of light

Even a slight variation in speed would alter the other constants and preclude the possibility of life on earth.

Anthropic constant #9: moisture


If water vapor levels in the atmosphere were greater than now, a runaway greenhouse effect would cause temps to rise too high for human life; if they were less, an insufficient greenhouse effect would make earth too cold.

Anthropic constant #10: Jupiter

If Jupiter were not in its current orbit; then earth would be bombarded with space material. Jupiter's gravitational field acts as a cosmic vacuum cleaner, attracting asteroids and comets that might otherwise strike earth.

Anthropic constant # 11: the earth's crust

If the thickness of earth's crust were greater, too much oxygen would be transferred to the crust to support life. If it were thinner, volcanic and tectonic activity would make life impossible.

Anthropic constant #12: earth's rotation

If the rotation of the earth tool longer than twenty four hours, temp differences would be too great b/w night and day. If the rotation period were shorter, atmospheric wind velocities would be too great.

Anthropic constants # 13: earth's tilt

The 23 degree axil tilt of earth is just right. If the tilt were altered slightly, surface temps would be too extreme on the earth.

Anthropic constant #14: lightning

If the atmospheric discharge rate were greater, there would be too much fire destruction; if it were less, there would be too little nitrogen fixing in the soil.

Anthropic constant # 15: earthquakes

If there were more seismic activity, much more life would be lost; if there were less, nutrients on the ocean floors and in river runoff would not be cycled back to the continents through tectonic uplift.

Okay, that's enough of those. Like I said, moving on to other things next post. I leave you with the words of Nobel Laureate Arno Penzias, codiscoverer of the radiation afterglow, on what he said about these athropic constants.

"Astronomy leads us to a unique event, a universe which was created out of nothing and delicately balanced to provide exactly the conditions required to support life. In the absence of an absurdly-imporabable event, the observations of modern science seem to suggest an underlying, on might say, supernatural plan."
 
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L Gilbert

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This is my fifth official post on my case in favor of intelligent design.

I'm going to list some more anthropic constants, then move on to other things.

Anthropic constant #6: Planetary movement.

If the centrifugal force of planetary movement did not precisely balance the gravitational forces, nothing could be held in orbit around the sun.

Anthropic constant # 7: Expansion

If the universe expanded at a rate one millionth more slowly than it did, expansion would stopped, and the universe would have collapsed on itself before the stars had formed. If it had expanded faster, then no galaxies would have formed.

Anthropic constant # 8: Speed of light

Even a slight variation in speed would alter the other constants and preclude the possibility of life on earth.

Anthropic constant #9: moisture

If water vapor levels in the atmosphere were greater than now, a runaway greenhouse effect would cause temps to rise too high for human life; if they were less, an insufficient greenhouse effect would make earth too cold.

Anthropic constant #10: Jupiter

If Jupiter were not in its current orbit; then earth would be bombarded with space material. Jupiter's gravitational field acts as a cosmic vacuum cleaner, attracting asteroids and comets that might otherwise strike earth.

Anthropic constant # 11: the earth's crust

If the thickness of earth's crust were greater, too much oxygen would be transferred to the crust to support life. If it were thinner, volcanic and tectonic activity would make life impossible.

Anthropic constant #12: earth's rotation

If the rotation of the earth tool longer than twenty four hours, temp differences would be too great b/w night and day. If the rotation period were shorter, atmospheric wind velocities would be too great.

Anthropic constants # 13: earth's tilt

The 23 degree axil tilt of earth is just right. If the tilt were altered slightly, surface temps would be too extreme on the earth.

Anthropic constant #14: lightning

If the atmospheric discharge rate were greater, there would be too much fire destruction; if it were less, there would be too little nitrogen fixing in the soil.

Anthropic constant # 15: earthquakes

If there were more seismic activity, much more life would be lost; if there were less, nutrients on the ocean floors and in river runoff would not be cycled back to the continents through tectonic uplift.

Okay, that's enough of those. Like I said, moving on to other things next post. I leave you with the words of Nobel Laureate Arno Penzias, codiscoverer of the radiation afterglow, on what he said about these athropic constants.

"Astronomy leads us to a unique event, a universe which was created out of nothing and delicately balanced to provide exactly the conditions required to support life. In the absence of an absurdly-imporbable event, the observations of modern science seem to suggest an underlying, on might say, supernatural plan."
Of course it suggests a supernatural plan to some. To others it doesn't. I would suggest that due to the laws of physics and other applications the universe can only act as it does. Nothing "supernatural" about it: it is natural.
BTW, very few people can actually grasp the concept of nothingness. Also few people can actually grasp the size of the universe and how little space the matter inside it occupies.

I might direct your attention to something the editor of Scientific American wrote called "15 answers to Creationist Nonsense"


"Intelligent" design isn't new. It was around when Descartes was around.
William Paley asked his readers to think of finding a watch while walking on a path. Because of the intricacy of a watch, we assume that someone made it. Unfortunately, a few people extend that assumption to natural objects as well, and people think anything of a complex nature was designed that way. This is pseudo-logic.
The nifty thing about Darwin's theory is that it explains how complex things can occur without being designed. ID can't explain anything of the sort. It just makes the assumption that something designed the universe and contents, and we are not to question any further. What's more, there is nothing to contradict ID, so in spite of all the efforts to offer ID as scientific; the fact that it cannot be contradicted makes it by definition, non-scientific.

ID is simply a disguised term for creationism. And some of us know how unrealistic and irrational creationism is.
 
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Dexter Sinister

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Well Dex.... I already replied to question "Where God comes from." He eternal.
You miss the point entirely. You're trying to prove god exists, you can't simply assume as part of your proof that he's existed eternally.
The onus is on you now.
No it's not, you're the one trying to make the case, I'm simply pointing out where you go off the rails.
Not everything has a cause.
Agreed, but again you simply assume god is one of the things that exists without cause, you haven't demonstrated it.
1. All designs have a designer.
Agreed, that's trivially true, a tautology.
The second point is where the debate lies: The universe has a highly complex design. I say it's design.
You're right, that's where the dispute lies alright. The universe shows considerable complexity, certainly, but you don't know that it's a result of design. You can't simply state "I say it's design," that's part of what you're trying to prove and, once again, you can't merely assume it as part of your argument. Biological evolution provides an instructive example of how great complexity can arise in the absence of a designer, it's never been necessary to invoke a designer to explain anything in it, and all such attempts to do so, such as those proposed by people like Behe and Dembski, have been thoroughly discredited, essentially on the same grounds I'm discreditng yours: begging the question.
. See? I'm not presupposing anything.
Yes you are. You are presupposing both that god exists (and has existed eternally), and that the universe is designed. That's not a valid argument for demonstrating that god's existence is shown by the design of the universe, it just assumes the truth of that conclusion.
That's why atheism has a problem with number one of my argument. It cannot admit design.
No, atheism has no problems with your first premise, it's the second one about the universe having a complex design that's the issue, and I've already dealt with that.
Quoting Scott Free:
What are your thoughts on this Dex? I'm interested to know. Am I biologically dispositioned to believing in a creator? Or am I using logic and reason to interpret the evidence?
That's a pretty long discussion in itself, and I don't want to hijack the thread with it. But to put it briefly, I think it's pretty clear that the widespread existence of religious beliefs of some sort in every culture and society means there's something in human nature that it speaks to, something that once must have had survival value. The great variety of religious beliefs, their many inconsistencies, and their specificity to culture and time and place, also means none of them are true, they're invented for some other purpose, which I strongly suspect--haven't done much research or thinking about it yet--is related to group identification, social cohesion, maintaining order, things like that. I don't think we're predisposed to believe in a creator god necessarily, Buddhism didn't go that way, though that's often how it manifests. You're doing a pretty good job with logic and reason. :smile:
The very fact that you think you have reasons to be atheist actually presupposes that God exists....
Your aethistic view unwittingly borrows from the theistic view in order to look more intelligent. Gotcha!
Nice try, but there's no gotcha there, and you've committed several more fallacies in that paragraph. You completely misunderstand the nature of atheism. In the absence of convincing evidence that some extraordinary claim is true, no clear-thinking person will believe that it is. No baby is born with a belief in a deity, those things are learned, and which particular ones are learned depends entirely on the culture the baby is born into.
Empirical science and Forensic science assumes(by faith, I might add) that the universe operates in the same way as it did millions of years ago
Another fallacy, confounding two different meanings of the word faith. That particular example of faith is evidence-based, and is similar to saying you have faith the sun will rise in the morning. It has every other morning of your life, that's a reasonable induction.
That's right, oxygen is not a cause of life. But notice how critical it is for life.
It is *now*, but when it first appeared in the atmosphere it was almost certainly toxic. Life has adapted to it.
Gravity is constant. Let me pull out my grade four textbook and double check....yup... it's right here...constant....
I didn't suggest it wasn't. I said the size of the gravitational coupling constant depends on what units you use to express it. It has dimensions. If you work with units of kilograms, meters, and seconds, it has a certain value, 6.67 x 10^-11 if my memory is correct. If you use pounds, feet, and seconds, it'll have a different value. Or you could use megatons, light years, and years, it'll have a different value. The point was that only dimensionless constants matter in the fine tuning argument, the others all vary with the units chosen. Even one of the dimensionless constants, the fine structure constant, which currently has the value 1/137, we know has varied over the history of the cosmos.
I would say that this fine tuning is significant. It shows design.
There you go assuming what you're trying to prove again.
... I haven't even finished the anthropic points yet!
Most of the so-called anthropic points you raised would at best demonstrate that the earth was designed, not the entire cosmos. It's perfectly clear that every other place we know anything about in the entire universe would be rapidly fatal to human life in the absence of elaborate technology, which certainly doesn't suggest it was designed for anthropoids. Moreover, those anthropic points you offer really seem pointless to me, they amount to saying that if things were different then things would be different. There was a time in the past when the earth could not sustain life. There will be a time in the future when the earth can not sustain life. It can now, but the life that's on it has been shaped by the circumstances, and if the circumstances were different, the life would be different.

What you're really offering is more accurately called the Improbable Universe Argument, but improbability by itself isn't evidence of anything. Suppose you're playing poker, you're dealt a royal flush in spades, and you calculate the probability of getting that hand as about one in 2.6 million. Would you then conclude that you could not have been dealt that hand except by design? Or try it with a perfect bridge hand, the odds are even worse. Moreover, the sun is one of several hundred billion stars in the galaxy, there's another bigger galaxy called M31 within about 2.2 million light years and a few smaller ones within a few hundred thousand light years, and that's just our local group. There are billions of galaxies just in the part of the cosmos we can see, so there are billions of billions of stars in sight of our telescopes. Doesn't seem much of a stretch to think that all these anthropic coincidences couldn't come together for one of them. And finally, we really have no a priori way of estimating the probabilities for the cosmos being the way it is, we have only one example to study. We don't know that it's improbable, maybe it isn't, or the apparently improbable conditions may be related to each other (i.e. not statistically independent) in ways determined by things we haven't even guessed at, maybe there are multiple universes and life happens to work in this one. No convincing argument can be made on probabilistic grounds, we simply don't know enough about the probabilities.
 
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Dexter Sinister

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I know God exists. I don't have to prove it to anybody.
Nobody's asked you to, neither have you offered, but if you know it, as you claim, you should be able to explain how you know it. Dogmatic assertions like that don't add anything to the discussion.
If you don't believe in God then that's your fault.
Well sure it is, at least in the sense that I'm responsible for the conclusions I come to, but phrasing it that way clearly implies you think there's something wrong with that conclusion. If you want to contribute to this discussion and be taken seriously, you'll have to do better than that.
 

talloola

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There is 'no' fault, in either way of thinking.
Each of us obviously know 'what' we 'know'. Simple.
I know that there is 'no' god.
It is interesting reading all of the posts, for each side,
working very hard to prove their positions. Some very
intelligent people on this board, making good points.
The believers have their belief system, and the athiests
have their facts, that is the difference.
The believers try to turn their belief system into facts,
and they try to turn the athiests facts in beliefs.
Interesting indeed, doesn't make much sense, but interesting
none the less.
 

Dexter Sinister

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There is 'no' fault, in either way of thinking.
Ah, but there is, there must be. Theists and atheists can't both be right, one side has to be wrong, and it's conceivable that both sides are wrong, in the sense that there might be a higher intelligence guiding things but not one that has the characteristics usually ascribed to a god. It's not provable either way on present knowledge, but have a look at Arthur C. Clarke's novel, Childhood's End for an interesting exploration of that theme.
 

talloola

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Ah, but there is, there must be. Theists and atheists can't both be right, one side has to be wrong, and it's conceivable that both sides are wrong, in the sense that there might be a higher intelligence guiding things but not one that has the characteristics usually ascribed to a god. It's not provable either way on present knowledge, but have a look at Arthur C. Clarke's novel, Childhood's End for an interesting exploration of that theme.

Of course you are right, the fault is in the lack of any proof, as I see it.
I was only making the point that, there is no fault, in the 'person', to either
believe or not, it is one's right to do as one thinks.
I don't accept the view that my 'non' belief is a fault.
 

mikemac

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Oct 13, 2008
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Nobody's asked you to, neither have you offered, but if you know it, as you claim, you should be able to explain how you know it. Dogmatic assertions like that don't add anything to the discussion. Well sure it is, at least in the sense that I'm responsible for the conclusions I come to, but phrasing it that way clearly implies you think there's something wrong with that conclusion. If you want to contribute to this discussion and be taken seriously, you'll have to do better than that.

It would be a waste of my time to try to explain God to you. I knew that from your first post on the first page of this thread.

Well there is something wrong with your conclusion, you'll go to hell for it.

I don't want to contribute to this discussion other than these two posts. Like I said it would be a waste of my time.

These discussions are going on all over the net, same arrogant atheist types causing the same anarchy. It seems like a communist plot. Are you a commy Dexter Sinister?

I heard they are talking about another round of McCarthyism in North America. I think it's needed.

Have a rainbow day.