Is The Big Bang Really Proof Of Gods Existence?

  • Thread starter Thread starter MindOverMatter
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
If they’re building cities, worshiping idols (female figurines), and painting horses, then they’re pretty clearly rational. The city of Sumer - which lasted until well into the “historical” period, was built before then (5000’s B.C.). Agriculture was also practiced in Egypt by 5500 B.C. - not something animals normally do. The Chinese have used writing (the Jiahu script) since 6600 B.C.
Well, why can’t we have rational folks who lack an immortal soul infused by god? Isn’t that the religious belief? At some point god stuck an immortal soul in a guy and called him Adam? Then everyone is happy. Creationists and biblical literalists can p(name removed by moderator)oint Adam’s birthday where they need it, and the rest of us can investigate the history of humanity.
 
Well, why can’t we have rational folks who lack an immortal soul infused by god? Isn’t that the religious belief? At some point god stuck an immortal soul in a guy and called him Adam? Then everyone is happy. Creationists and biblical literalists can p(name removed by moderator)oint Adam’s birthday where they need it, and the rest of us can investigate the history of humanity.
Because that’s what the purpose of the soul is - to give rationality. You can’t explain rationality and consciousness through physical means alone. You can make a computer which imitates a living being as perfectly as possible, but you can’t give it consciousness.
 
Because that’s what the purpose of the soul is - to give rationality. You can’t explain rationality and consciousness through physical means alone. You can make a computer which imitates a living being as perfectly as possible, but you can’t give it consciousness.
]]

I agree I can’t explain onsciousness and rationality. So what. My inability certainly isn’t grounds for concluding a soul is necessary.
 
]]

I agree I can’t explain onsciousness and rationality. So what. My inability certainly isn’t grounds for concluding a soul is necessary.
Sure it is. It is impossible to explain consciousness through physical means, therefore there must be a spiritual component to it.

Or do you not believe that the world is intelligible and needs explaining? If not, then you’ve undermined the premise behind the scientific project.

If so, then you’re being irrational and inconsistent by refusing to admit the existence of the soul.
 
Sure it is. It is impossible to explain consciousness through physical means, therefore there must be a spiritual component to it.

Or do you not believe that the world is intelligible and needs explaining? If not, then you’ve undermined the premise behind the scientific project.

If so, then you’re being irrational and inconsistent by refusing to admit the existence of the soul.
Can you demonstrate it is impossible to explain consciousness through physical means?

My beliefs have nothing to do with the possibility or impossibility of explaining consciousness through physical means.
 
Can you demonstrate it is impossible to explain consciousness through physical means?

My beliefs have nothing to do with the possibility or impossibility of explaining consciousness through physical means.
Because it is not a physical phenomenon, and the effect cannot be greater than the cause. What-it-feels-like-to-be-conscious (what analytic philosophy calls the qualia of consciousness) is simply nothing remotely similar to quantifiable, physical things. It is not possible to describe consciousness - you must be conscious in order to know what it is. And no physical description can be you.
 
Because it is not a physical phenomenon, and the effect cannot be greater than the cause. What-it-feels-like-to-be-conscious (what analytic philosophy calls the qualia of consciousness) is simply nothing remotely similar to quantifiable, physical things. It is not possible to describe consciousness - you must be conscious in order to know what it is. And no physical description can be you.
How do you know it is not a physical phenomenon? To assert that, one would have to know what consciousness is. What is it, and how did you determine what it is?
 
What preceded Abraham was over a thousand years of the descendants of Adam and Eve. The first two born to Adam and Eve, were Cain and Abel. Abel was killed by Cain, but, God allowed Adam and Eve to have another son, whose name was Seth. Since Abel was the “good” son (while Cain, the “bad” son) God allowed another son. It is the lineage of Seth that follows through to Abraham, through Noah, Shem, Ham and Japheth. But, the lineage actually continued on through Shem, one of Noah’s sons. Then, from there directly to Abraham, about 2,000 B.C.

So, God has been around since at least the beginning of (men and women, as we know them), if not before, the Copper Age, which was about 4,300 B.C. Prior to that we know from the fossil records of prehistoric precursors of men.

Paganism has been around for a couple of thousand years, give or take. It is usually associated with the Abrahamic traditions, as sort of an adaptation of the “gentile” from that tradition. So, “paganism” did not pre-date Christianity. That said, what were the non-religious people, or rural people, called prior to Abraham? Probably “heathens”. But, certainly, the line of history does not flow from pagan —> religion. People who bring that up in their logic for being anti-religious know very little history.

I could be wrong, but, I believe that the word comes from the Latin, something like “paganus”, or close. And, I think, Latin came about as the preferred language spoken by the Romans some time shortly after, 1,500 B.C.

It is important to get the history right, otherwise, one might continue to believe something that is incorrect, which could result in a huge error, down the road.

By the way, why did you say, “When Adam and Eve () fell,”?

jd
Thank you for your reply, it was a great help. I just don´t understand why atheist who said the Abrahamic religion was invented after paganism didn’t reply to this. go figure.

Anyways, I said metaphorically because I wanted to somehow indicate that I am not a creationist. But I do personally believe in Adam and Eve. sorry for the confusion.
 
When i was young in faith and plagued with doubt, the Big Bang Argument helped me to have hope that life was more then the cold impersonal physical interactions that ultimately thrusted us into being. But i didn’t always feel confident with it as a “proof” because of the various multi-verse theories which had the superior label of science slapped on it. And so the Big-Bang was for me a strong source of encouragement, but nothing more. It was not an air tight proof.

Since then i have developed far more superior arguments which do not require the Big-Bang. But philosophers like William lane Craig still think that the Big-Bang argument is still one of the best evidences for the existence of God, and seems to think that its a valid refutation of naturalism, since all space and time began to exist.

What do you think of the Big Bang Argument and the alleged alternatives? And should we be promoting it as a proof?
My mind is simpler and I don’t tend to see these enormously complicated questions in the light of science.

Yet when science takes the time to explain things so that even I can understand them,- I observe what is there to be seen.

If the Universe was (allegedly) at one time compressed to a single point, the size of a “bb” or smaller… in my mind (pardon the simplistic view) there is something “outside” of that point!
It doesn’t matter if you call it dark matter, anti-matter, nothingness, void or timeless/spaceless emptiness!!

Outside of that point there exists…something. Or is it just that we can’t imagin anything beyond the point of origin?

Sorry everyone, I told you it was simplistic.🤷
 
My mind is simpler and I don’t tend to see these enormously complicated questions in the light of science.

Yet when science takes the time to explain things so that even I can understand them,- I observe what is there to be seen.

If the Universe was (allegedly) at one time compressed to a single point, the size of a “bb” or smaller… in my mind (pardon the simplistic view) there is something “outside” of that point!
It doesn’t matter if you call it dark matter, anti-matter, nothingness, void or timeless/spaceless emptiness!!

Outside of that point there exists…something. Or is it just that we can’t imagin anything beyond the point of origin?

Sorry everyone, I told you it was simplistic.🤷
Saying that the universe was compressed to a single point is kind of an analogy to help us understand it. The Big Bang was an explosion from everywhere to everywhere. There was nothing “outside” the universe. We can’t really imagine what this must have been like. Since the universe is finite, I think that when you move in one direction for long enough you would have ended up back where you started - like going around the circumference of a globe. (This is the geometry of the universe today - spacetime doesn’t have a Euclidean geometry.) But there is no extra dimension where either the “outside” or the “center” of the universe are to be found. We simply can’t visualize non-Euclidean geometry, even though we know that (mathematically) the universe follows this pattern. We’re bound in our imaginations by that restriction (as Kant taught us in his philosophy; he was wrong in saying that we would be unable to discover if the universe were any other way, however).

That’s the best I can do. I don’t understand it either; I don’t think anybody does. We just know that that’s the case. Everyone has to think simplistically to some degree.
 
To date that is true, but there is no reason to presume that into the future.
We all know what consciousness is. We all experience it. And what I mean by “consciousness” - the qualia of the state of being conscious - is something that makes no sense to try to “measure” or “quantify”. If you know what I am talking about when I say “consciousness”, then you wouldn’t even try to observe it. It is too intimate to you to observe - you might almost say that it IS you in a sense. When consciousness permanently ceases, you are dead.
 
We all know what consciousness is. We all experience it. And what I mean by “consciousness” - the qualia of the state of being conscious - is something that makes no sense to try to “measure” or “quantify”. If you know what I am talking about when I say “consciousness”, then you wouldn’t even try to observe it. It is too intimate to you to observe - you might almost say that it IS you in a sense. When consciousness permanently ceases, you are dead.
We all know what we experience. However, our opinion about our own experience is no reason to claim it is impossible to explain consciousness through physical means. I’d suggest we would need much more information in order to make that claim.

Is a cat conscious?
 
We all know what we experience. However, our opinion about our own experience is no reason to claim it is impossible to explain consciousness through physical means. I’d suggest we would need much more information in order to make that claim.

Is a cat conscious?
Cats act conscious, so I’d be extremely surprised if I found out that it weren’t.
 
Cats act conscious, so I’d be extremely surprised if I found out that it weren’t.
Earlier you told us, " It is impossible to explain consciousness through physical means, therefore there must be a spiritual component to it."

What is the spiritual component to the cat’s consciousness?
 
Earlier you told us, " It is impossible to explain consciousness through physical means, therefore there must be a spiritual component to it."

What is the spiritual component to the cat’s consciousness?
Its soul.
 
Earlier you told us, " It is impossible to explain consciousness through physical means, therefore there must be a spiritual component to it."

What is the spiritual component to the cat’s consciousness?
Spiritual in this case does not mean rational, however; but all living things have souls. Animals souls are not “spiritual” in the same way that ours are, but they aren’t something physical that you can measure - they’re just “bound up” with matter, so to speak, and don’t exist on their own as a separate substance.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top