R
Russell_SA
Guest
Yeah not even going to bother with this.I don’t understand you. Are you saying that you don’t believe in logic?
Yeah not even going to bother with this.I don’t understand you. Are you saying that you don’t believe in logic?
God does want to be found. The Hound of Heaven is chasing after you even as we speak.According to christian mythology, the devil was presented with enough information to not just be convinced of the deity’s existence but to actually know the deity exists and then choose to have a relationship with it or not. Why can’t this standard of evidence be enough for everyone and then let them decide whether or not to have a bro-mance with it? Hard to have a relationship with someone that doesn’t want to be found.
Do you suggest something can come from nothing?How do you differentiate between things that occur naturally and those that do not?
I was hoping for an answer, not a question about a different matter.Do you suggest something can come from nothing?
Then I’ll ask you the same question I asked vz: How do you tell the difference between a naturally occurring number and one which your software ‘designs’?If I design a program that incorporates a true random number generator that determines outcomes then those outcomes are “natural” to my program logic and I remain the designer.
The fundamental requisite for your revised and novel definition of “atheism” hinges on there being a very observable boundary separating “belief” and “knowledge”.Atheism and deism are about belief claims… …The statement of “I am not sure if that case is possible or not” is a knowledge claim.
I don’t follow. Do you have an example of an unnatural thing? What are the parameters that make a thing unnatural?Then I’ll ask you the same question I asked vz: How do you tell the difference between a naturally occurring number and one which your software ‘designs’?
It’s no good claiming a designer and then claiming that things must be designed. You need to be able to explain the difference between the two so we can look for a designed object and then ponder on a designer.
In your example, even you, who wrote the programme, would not be able to point to a number and say if it was naturally occurring or ‘designed’ by your software. There would be literally no difference.
In the context of the existence of God, I am uncertain it is pertinent.I was hoping for an answer, not a question about a different matter.
Forums are for discussion. A discussion entails making a point and then answering questions that are posed in relation to the point made so the situation is made clearer for all. So maybe I should try again:
You have described some things as occurring naturally. I would like to know how you differentiate between something which has occurred naturally and something which hasn’t.
It seems you wish to argue about the properties of something instead of address existence.Then I’ll ask you the same question I asked vz: How do you tell the difference between a naturally occurring number and one which your software ‘designs’?
It’s no good claiming a designer and then claiming that things must be designed. You need to be able to explain the difference between the two so we can look for a designed object and then ponder on a designer.
In your example, even you, who wrote the programme, would not be able to point to a number and say if it was naturally occurring or ‘designed’ by your software. There would be literally no difference.
I’m not asking about the difference between natural and unnatural. It appears that you and vz want to argue that some things are designed by God - that is, could not have occurred naturally.I don’t follow. Do you have an example of an unnatural thing? What are the parameters that make a thing unnatural?
No.I’m not asking about the difference between natural and unnatural. It appears that you and vz want to argue that some things are designed by God - that is, could not have occurred naturally.
Indeed. But you have conceded that some things occur naturally.I actually only attributed the existence of creation itself to God.
So we have a situation where we cannot tell the difference between what is designed (that which could not occur naturally) and what does occur naturally.That some things occur naturally does not discount a creator.
I’m not proposing anything at all. I’m trying to work out if you can differentiate between something that is designed, that is, something that is not natural, and something which is entirely natural.So are you arguing against design or that God created?
It is hard to tell.
Existence itself is evidence of God since something cannot come from nothing.
Unless you propose otherwise.
Do you?
That’s correct, I’m the one asking because your argument requires that you define your terms if you want a rational response.I’m not asking about the difference between natural and unnatural. It appears that you and vz want to argue that some things are designed by God - that is, could not have occurred naturally.
How do you know that things come to existence from nothing? Things might have been existing since the beginning (Big Bang). In simple word, no nothing.So are you arguing against design or that God created?
It is hard to tell.
Existence itself is evidence of God since something cannot come from nothing.
Unless you propose otherwise.
Do you?
You’ve been around here long enough to know that the immediate and elementary objection to your statement is “And where did the big-bang come from?”.How do you know that things come to existence from nothing? Things might have been existing since the beginning (Big Bang). In simple word, no nothing.
Ok so you don’t seem to like the words I use, but don’t seem to care what I am trying to say is the honest experience that I have with the claims of religion. If you can’t hear what my true experience is on this issue, then sorry, but that’s not my problem. I am honestly telling you that the supernatural comes across as no different than what I have described. If you can’t accept that, then again, not my problem. If your deity gets upset about this, again, not my problem because it should know how to change that for me and has yet to do so.The fundamental requisite for your revised and novel definition of “atheism” hinges on there being a very observable boundary separating “belief” and “knowledge”.
There isn’t one.
You no more know quarks and black holes are real any more than you know that there is/isn’t a god.
This is why your revised classifications/definitions of “atheism” that have popped up since around the 90s haven’t gained a whole lot of traction with people other than atheists who emotionally need to deny that they also have a burden of proof.
The classic, etymological definition still stands. An “atheist” is a person who thinks there is no god. And that is a claim. If you wish to honestly avoid that claim, send a “pm” to Agnosticboy on these forums. I’ve found him to be informed and philosophically consistent with his agnosticism.
As an aside, your imagined boundary between “belief” and “knowledge” is something that’s always intrigued me about skeptics. They’re happy to be skeptical about things written in holy texts that they haven’t verified. However, they’re also happy to swallow most things from a “scientific source” that they also have not verified.
It seems they’re very arbitrary about when and where they apply their skepticism or trust.![]()
Big bang is the initial point. There is no point before Big Bang since there is no time that we could have causal chain for the act of creation. Think of existence which starts from time zero (Big Bang) and stretches to infinity. The act of creation, bring something from nothing, is incoherent. I have a thread on this in here.You’ve been around here long enough to know that the immediate and elementary objection to your statement is “And where did the big-bang come from?”.
It is also “ex nihilo”. Thus your objection is merely a delay of the same question by one mere degree.
C’mon, man.
Still ex nihilo. Otherwise, what caused it? No effects without causes…Big bang is the initial point. There is no point before Big Bang since there is no time that we could have causal chain for the act of creation. Think of existence which starts from time zero (Big Bang) and stretches to infinity. The act of creation, bring something from nothing, is incoherent. I have a thread on this in here.