There is no God

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Alois said:
Here’s the correct link for the fallacy mentioned above…

A large number of people supporting something does not prove it.

We can’t prove to you that he exists, we simply believe and have faith that he exists. You can’t prove he doesn’t exist. You simply believe he doesn’t exist. Sounds like an impasse to me.

Hopefully, God will reveal himself to you in due time.
 
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mikew262:
We can’t prove to you that he exists, we simply believe and have faith that he exists. You can’t prove he doesn’t exist. You simply believe he doesn’t exist. Sounds like an impasse to me.
On the contrary, while the existence of “God” is not self-evident, we can nevertheless prove by demonstration (through logic, natural sense, and human reasoning) the actual intrinsic existence of an eternal “perfect somethingness” that is the cause of all extrinsic existence, and that it is this Being that we call “God”.

Romans 1:20 For the invisible things of him, from the creation of the world, are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made; his eternal power also, and divinity: so that they are inexcusable. 21 Because that, when they knew God, they have not glorified him as God, or given thanks; but became vain in their thoughts, and their foolish heart was darkened.

So you see that it is not a matter of faith to know whether God exists.

However, it is a matter of faith to respond to God with love.

We all have the ability to exercise faith, but we are not made to automatically give it to God. By our free will we can either give thanks or not.

But faith can either grow or become smaller. Those who refuse to exercise it will become darkened and will have a harder time responding to the known truth with justice, for we can only be just if we walk by faith.

hurst
 
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hurst:
On the contrary, while the existence of “God” is not self-evident, we can nevertheless prove by demonstration (through logic, natural sense, and human reasoning) the actual intrinsic existence of an eternal “perfect somethingness” that is the cause of all extrinsic existence, and that it is this Being that we call “God”.

Romans 1:20 For the invisible things of him, from the creation of the world, are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made; his eternal power also, and divinity: so that they are inexcusable. 21 Because that, when they knew God, they have not glorified him as God, or given thanks; but became vain in their thoughts, and their foolish heart was darkened.

So you see that it is not a matter of faith to know whether God exists.

However, it is a matter of faith to respond to God with love.

We all have the ability to exercise faith, but we are not made to automatically give it to God. By our free will we can either give thanks or not.

But faith can either grow or become smaller. Those who refuse to exercise it will become darkened and will have a harder time responding to the known truth with justice, for we can only be just if we walk by faith.

hurst
I’m afraid your explanation won’t cut it with an atheist. If he/she can’t acknowledgable God with one of their 5 senses then he doesn’t exist. You and I both know that God’s presence is beyond the senses, but the atheists limit themselves to those 5. Sadly, theirs is strictly a “material” world.
 
Gilbert Keith:
Bowser

My other question remains unanswered: why shouldn’t we believe in the supra-rational FSM?

You seem to have forgotten that I said I would answer one question at a time. Please remember that in future posts if you ask several questions at once, I will choose to answer only one, so as to keep the focus narrow and intense, rather than scattered and shallow.

Your turn to answer a question, if you will.

How do atheists account for the universal instinct (except for atheists) to believe in the suprarational? That is to say, a reality beyond, above, or behind the reality that is visible to us.
People are afraid of death? They’re afraid of meaninglessness? We’re strongly imitatitve - more so than other primates? God used to be a good way to explain things, and it’s stuck with us? People are brought up that way? Religious institutions are institutions and seek to perpetuate themselves? Because we see patterns in static - we see the hand of God in chance occurrences? Because it makes us happy? We want to believe that it will be all right in the end? We want to believe that the good are rewarded and the wicked punished? We can’t get through life without a father figure? Go ask a psychologist.
 
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mikew262:
I’m afraid your explanation won’t cut it with an atheist. If he/she can’t acknowledgable God with one of their 5 senses then he doesn’t exist. You and I both know that God’s presence is beyond the senses, but the atheists limit themselves to those 5. Sadly, theirs is strictly a “material” world.
I think I mentioned this previously on this thread, but it’s so neat that I’ll run the risk of repeating myself. We actually have at least seven senses, and possily more (I’m not entirely sure). The sixth is obvious - our sense of balance. The seventh is less well-known - proprioception. It’s the sense that tells us what position our body is. For example, if you wake up blindfolded, you can tell how you’re arranged without using your other senses. This particular sense is actually fairly important - it becomes rather difficult to walk without it.
 
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EnterTheBowser:
I think I mentioned this previously on this thread, but it’s so neat that I’ll run the risk of repeating myself. We actually have at least seven senses, and possily more (I’m not entirely sure). The sixth is obvious - our sense of balance. The seventh is less well-known - proprioception. It’s the sense that tells us what position our body is. For example, if you wake up blindfolded, you can tell how you’re arranged without using your other senses. This particular sense is actually fairly important - it becomes rather difficult to walk without it.
I’ve never heard of these, but ok, I’ll buy it.
 
BOWSER

I said:

How do atheists account for the universal instinct (except for atheists) to believe in the suprarational? That is to say, a reality beyond, above, or behind the reality that is visible to us.

You answered:

People are afraid of death? They’re afraid of meaninglessness? We’re strongly imitatitve - more so than other primates? God used to be a good way to explain things, and it’s stuck with us? People are brought up that way? Religious institutions are institutions and seek to perpetuate themselves? Because we see patterns in static - we see the hand of God in chance occurrences? Because it makes us happy? We want to believe that it will be all right in the end? We want to believe that the good are rewarded and the wicked punished? We can’t get through life without a father figure? Go ask a psychologist.

O.K. Now I’ll give you the same kind of answer for why so few people choose atheism:

Because they are afraid of God? Because they are too lazy to look beyond their senses? Because their parents were atheists? Because they cannot stand the thought of a brain smarter than their own? Because they can be wicked without fear of reprisal?Because they hate their fathers? Go ask a psychologist.

Now, have we made any progress with that exchange? I don’t think so.

I asked you why the whole human race (except for a few atheists) look for a reality beyond the reality that is in front of their noses.

You gave me every reason except the two reasons that would make the only sense: theists are following instinct and imagination. In other words, they are following their human nature, planted in them by God, to imagine and desire the suprarational.

Now I am going to contradict something I just said. It is not quite true that atheists do not look for a reality beyond the reality that is in front of their noses. You, for example, are only one of many atheists world wide who are searching for God. Some of you come to Catholic Answers to see if you can find Him here.

Lo and behold!!!
 
Gilbert Keith:
BOWSER

I said:

How do atheists account for the universal instinct (except for atheists) to believe in the suprarational? That is to say, a reality beyond, above, or behind the reality that is visible to us.

You answered:

People are afraid of death? They’re afraid of meaninglessness? We’re strongly imitatitve - more so than other primates? God used to be a good way to explain things, and it’s stuck with us? People are brought up that way? Religious institutions are institutions and seek to perpetuate themselves? Because we see patterns in static - we see the hand of God in chance occurrences? Because it makes us happy? We want to believe that it will be all right in the end? We want to believe that the good are rewarded and the wicked punished? We can’t get through life without a father figure? Go ask a psychologist.

O.K. Now I’ll give you the same kind of answer for why so few people choose atheism:

Because they are afraid of God? Because they are too lazy to look beyond their senses? Because their parents were atheists? Because they cannot stand the thought of a brain smarter than their own? Because they can be wicked without fear of reprisal?Because they hate their fathers? Go ask a psychologist.

Now, have we made any progress with that exchange? I don’t think so.

This is great and all… but do you intend to answer the question I asked you? I don’t exactly see what your counter-question had to do with it; I answered it because that’s just the polite thing to do. I don’t particularly like speculating about psychology; I rather think it pointless. Why do people believe what they believe? Beats the snot out of me. I’m more concerned with whether these beliefs are justified.
 
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hurst:
I am not addressing “a monotheistic God as described in the scriptures”. I am addressing existence, and the manner in which the recognition of existence leads logically to “a God”.
That is the definition of a monotheistic God. A God as described in the scriptures.
More specifically, I have shown intrinsic existence in that post. I followed up with post #791 to show that “intrinsic existence” is the source and cause of “extrinsic existence”. I showed this clearly and logically. This is indeed God as knowable by us through inference in our nature.
You’re misusing the definition of intrinsic. Existence is intrinsic of itself and everything is intrinsic to existence. There is no seperation between intrinsic existence and extrinsic existence, because of all existence is contained within existence. Saying otherwise is changing the meaning of the word itself. Changing the meaning is a leap not supported by logic, and only support by your own claims.

To get to the root of the matter I’ll go back and show you again the fallacy in that argument. You claim that existence is “white lettering on a colored background”, rather than “white letter on a black background”. Essentially, that existence isn’t contained in nothingness, but is contained with in somethingness. This is completely illogical as existence can not logically be shown to exist with an even greater existence. In a phrase, existence IS the background. Existence isn’t “contained” within something, it is everything. I have explain this so many times over now that I’m just stunned you’ve failed to see it. Stop changing the meaning of words and definitions,.please.
What more can I show you?. For you to reject this is to reject logic and natural sense.
You can respond to my posts that show the fallacy in your logic. I’m not going to continue debating with you if you continue to dodge points as you have been.
I pointed out the difference between intrinsic existence and extrinsic existence, even citing natural analogous examples, and you reject even those. You merely repeat your assertion that “existence is not a God”. I have shown how it is, and why it must be, but what have you shown?
You told me you could prove the existence of a God logically. Don’t try to shift the burden of proof, as you have still failed to shoulder it. I have responded to your false analogies, (posts 773, 775, and 780) and have shown you the definition of existence: everything that exists. You are making the claim that we do not exist, I have shown that to be logically false as not only is the basis for it false, but the claim itself is illogical. What are you confused about here? Why do you keep citing arguments I’ve already refuted?
 
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hurst:
The “set of Integers” is indeed the source of all integers. You just don’t accept that.
Because telling me that I just “don’t accept that” means that you’re right? I have shown you why your ideas on the number system are unsound, and now you must back up your reasoning behind it.
But as for saying “therefore existence is the source”, as if my understanding of number sets had to be accurate in order for my point to be valid, I did no such thing! You are knocking down a strawman.
Am I? Here’s what you said right above the number analogy.

It seems logical to me for there to be such an infinite source providing our own instances of power, time, dimensions, intellect, will, and etc. Let me explain by way of analogy where people already accept such a thing.

People don’t accept such things.

The number system was the basis of your argument. It MUST be correct for you to continue using the point. If it is not, your points based on it are faulty.
No it wasn’t. My logic was that people already accept the notion of infinite sources without questioning, so therefore they should not suddenly question it in regards to existence.
They don’t. People regard the number system as an infinite series of numbers, and that’s in fact what it is. The infinite sum of all numbers. It is not a formula that produces a result, it is all of the numbers there are. There is nothing we use as a source of numbers, we use the number system composed of the numbers themselves.
This point is not dependent on a precise understanding of an INS regarding semantics, because if I were wrong (and I don’t think I was), then it would only mean I used a poor example.
An example that you’ve founded point after point on. If it were a poor example, it can not hold up any of the things you attempt to base off of it.
But there are other examples I could use to show the reasonableness of accepting an infinite God.
Anytime you’re ready, go ahead and share them.
I was not building on, because it was not dependent upon it.
If you didn’t follow my analogy, then you should be willing to accept a different one. But you won’t. You seem to be saying that since I made an analogy unacceptable to you, that I have not only not proven my point, but that I can never prove my point, as though it had been disproven by that analogy.
You have yet to provide another analogy that logically shows the possibility for a God to exist. The number system was suppose to be it, but it now seems that you are saying otherwise. Do you have another analogy, or another logical reason to believe in a God?
It is not false. I did not say “number system” anyway. I referred to the set of Integers, which has no beginning or end. It conceptually provides numbers that become manifested, before they were ever manifested. It is not a false analogy, but you refuse to accept it. That is ok by me, since I have other analogies. But for you to say this disproves my point is simply false.
For one, numbers aren’t manifested. They remain a logical concept applied to reality. For instance, you see apples on a table. You logically state that there are 2 apples. Secondly, you continue to assume that there is a pool in which we pull numbers out of. We don’t, we use a particular part of the infinite number set to logically state that there is an “x” amount of something. There isn’t some entity that gives us these numbers.

Furthermore, you state that the set of integers provides numbers. This brings up a good question: How could numbers be the source of themselves? The answer: they aren’t. There isn’t a “source” of numbers.
Yes I have. You simply refuse to accept it. I am not here to coerce your will. You ought to let the evidence and reason direct you, but you must put forth some effort to follow it.
You haven’t provided logical and reasonable evidence. The only thing that could coerce me to follow you is blind faith, and I guess I lack that trait.
 
BOWSER

This is great and all… but do you intend to answer the question I asked you? I don’t exactly see what your counter-question had to do with it; I answered it because that’s just the polite thing to do. I don’t particularly like speculating about psychology; I rather think it pointless. Why do people believe what they believe? Beats the snot out of me. I’m more concerned with whether these beliefs are justified.

If you are not going to answer my questions except by saying you don’t like these kinds of questions, I don’t think we have much more to say to each other.

Thank you for your time. I don’t want to waste any more of it.

God bless.
 
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hurst:
It is not a product of your mind. By essence I mean the “constituent substance”.
A constituent of existence? You’re taking a step of regression that isn’t logically possible. Existence is everything, existence is the base. There is nothing more fundamental then existence.
Essence is not a product of existence…
This is akin to trying to p(name removed by moderator)oint something smaller than 0, you can’t. Using your definition of essence, it is existence. Existence is the essence of everything.

This “p.s.” you speak of is a product of wishful thinking, not one of logic. More on this in the next paragraph.
This follows logically from the fact…
Do you not see what I’ve been saying? You’re defining existence when you speak of perfect somethingness. It has always existed, is by itself (because there is nothing more), and is compose of what’s in itself. You then have to connect this to a sentient God that is the source of everything, not just everything.
This must be…
Agreeable so far, except for your slight-of-hand trick in replacing definition with “perfect somethingness”. Can you differentiate the two?
This causes a fork in the road…
No, it doesn’t. Everything within existence and perfect somethingness is intrinsic, for it is what makes up the totality of existence, or the perfectness of perfect somethingness.

Why do you say total nothingness rather than perfect nothingness?
Not quite…
You have not shown that we are extrinsic. It is an illogical position to take that this existence is extrinsic, because existence consists of all possibilities, and we are one of those possibilities.

On to the issue itself in this paragraph; this is my point. If we understand their logic, and can observe them, they then become natural.
In a similar way…
This is, again, my point. It no longer remains supernatural if it is logical, it becomes natural.
It would not be illogical with the new knowledge.
Not really. If we saw randomness, we would conclude that there is no guiding logic behind the realm. It wouldn’t be logical, and therefore, not natural either.
I am showing the first knowable aspect of existence, which is the p.s. from post #735.
No, you define infinite existence in that post. You then throw in the catch phrase of “perfect somethingness” to make existence seem closer to the definition of a God. More on this next.
In post #791 I go on to…
Faulty logic.

1.) Perfect somethingness is your reclassification of existence, you have not seperated the definement of the two terms.
2.) You name existence God because it contains all existence, this is not the definition of a God by any means. It is the definition of existence.
3.) God - aka perfect somethingness - aka existence exists due to everything within in it.
4.) Existence does not create anything, as I have shown you. It is everything.
5.) Your last sentence is unclear, but I assume you’re saying that existence is contained within in PS, otherwise known as God. Of course, this is blatantly false logic because you have failed to seperate the definition of PS from that of God. It’s like saying that a cell phone only exists because of the cell phone it is.
6.) What are you defining creation as? Our world?
I started elaborating on…
Like I have said, you can not reclassify something and say it is something else. Existence is defined (and not just by me) as everything that exists. Your PS is defined as everything that exists. Your PS is, therefore, existence coated in a new, God friendly paint color. Is a switch a router because they both handle network flow?
This is not faith…
You have not shown your last sentence to be true. You’ve defined PS as existence, if you wish for it to be more, then give me some examples on how it differs from “everything that exists”.
It would seem that you know it is illogical to believe that “existence” does not exist, which is why you reject the classification of “existence” as God. But again, I have shown you that the p.s. is not the “existence” you are thinking of. It is intrinsic, and the manifested universe is clearly extrinsic.
You shot yourself in the foot here. I think we both know that I have been classifying existence as all possibilities, I mean, I’ve only said that in just about every post… It is not just the manifested universe. It is all possibilities, it is all that is.

Furthermore, you still haven’t proven your intrinsic and extrinsic claims. You happily ignored my posts concerning the topics and have asserted them as truth.
 
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hurst:
Not an assumption, but shown and established by clear logic and natural sense.
Refer to the above posts.
It is also borne out…
Everything is still a quantity or arrangement of the base partical. We refer to an atom as an atom because it’s much more simple to do so than to name off the attributes of its base partical. Much like we refer to a chair as a chair because it is much easier than calling it “Four wooden legs, a flat wooden board on top of those legs, and a backrest of wood”. They are not extrinsic, because their base is intrinsic.
In the same way…
This is untrue. Existence (aka PS) is defined as everything there is. All possibilities. We are one of those possibilities, and if we were to be removed existence would no longer be complete. We are a part of the composition of existence, and we are insintric because if you were to remove our manifested universe, you would cause existence to not contain all possibilities.
That is just a generality, and not the essence of existence.
As I’ve said before, your concept of “essence” is something not present in reality, or logic. This is proof of such. To say that there is something more fundamental than existence is illogical.
This is illogical and demonstratably false.
While it is logical and demonstratable that “perfect somethingness” always existed, and that everything that exists subsists in it, it does not follow that everything that exists “is” it.
I remind you again that your term “perfect somethingness” is, as it stands now, just another term for existence. You then try to attach additional traits on to it without founded them in your original proof.
We know for a fact…
Nope, shown to be false. In fact, shown to be false in the same manner as I have shown many of your other analogies to be false.
This is untrue, as I have shown before. There is nothing manifesting everything. To claim that there is would be no different than claiming a God exists. You’ve run yourself into a logical wall.
Why do you deny the logic and reason in this?
Because there is none in it? It is just you asserting, and claiming that existence isn’t what it is defined as with no evidence (logical or empirical) to prove otherwise.
Everything that exists not of itself is extrinsic existence.
This isn’t even close to the definition of extrinsic.
That which exists of itself is intrinsic existence.
Same issue as above.
“Perfect somethingness” exists of itself, and is intrinsic existence.
Perfect somethingness IS EXISTENCE. If you wish to claim otherwise, you need to have a logical foundation from which to seperate the two. You have NOT established this foundation anywhere. Post 735 is nothing more than an attempt to reclassify existence (all that exists) as perfect somethingness, which you yourself define as all that exists. You attempt to make the claim that perfect somethingness is some sort of outside being, but this is not a claim you have supported by your original logical basis. It is a seperate claim that you have made, a seperate assumption.
The p.s. is the only intrinsic existence that there can be.
The p.s. must be “God”.
Both are subsequently false. Oh, and remember what I said about making elaborate claims without waiting for verification of them?
“God” is intrinsic existence, and as I have shown, there is no other, nor can there be.
I’ll just expose one of the many logical flaws in your statements here and be done with it. - You assert that there is intrinsic existence, and therefore, existence. However…
But “God” is not extrinsic existence…
You here assert that extrinsic existence exists. For existence itself to exist, it must contain all forms of existence, and as an infinite set defined as being made up of all forms of existence, it must be made up of our existence as well, extrinsic or intrinsic. Thus, there is no extrinsic or intrinsic existence when you’re talking about the totality of existence, and it is a logical flaw to suggest such, in the way you are doing.
There can not be extrinsic existence…
It is not the source or cause, it is. I’ve explained this before, and already show one of the logical flaws in your statements, refer to those pervious statements.
Yes, this also…
Making a claim on a broken base.
 
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hurst:
I showed logically, naturally, and reasonably that “perfect somethingness” is intrinsic existence, and not the other way around. Please stop misconstruing my case.
How many times do I have to say this? Just as I had shown in my response to that post, you defined infinite existence, not a seperate infinite existence. You are now adding extra traits on to existence to make it “perfect somethingness” without logical backing.
Are you in denial? Did I “invent” it? Did I not rather demonstrate, show, and prove that the concept was already there, regardless of the name one might give it?
You demonstrated infinite existence. You invented a term that sounded more like God in an attempt to alter the meaning of existence to that of God. You then created the illogical false dichotomy of intrinsic and extrinsic existence as an attempt to save face on your example. I have shown your analogies on the subject to be false, and have shown that position itself to be false. I think it’s fairly obvious that the only one in denial here is you.

Here’s a goal for you to shoot for. Using the basis of your argument, seperate “perfect something” from the definition of existence as “all that exists.”
How is it “just as much a leap”? I showed in 4 steps using logic, natural sense, and human reasoning. There is no leap of faith, nor blind claim here.
You showed infinite existence in the four steps. Your leap in faith comes with claiming that there is more to perfect somethingness than the definition of existence itself.
Yes, but more specifically, intrinsic existence.
There is no other form of existence, as I have shown. Existence is all there is, and it is illogical to claim otherwise. Oh, and before you cite your analogies for us being nothing, I’d advise you to take a look and respond to my refutations of them.
You don’t seem to be listening to reason. There is clearly a hierarchy of existence even in the visible universe.
False.
So at a minimum, the logic is clear with respect to concepts and objects: that there is a giant pool of non-manifested concepts from which manifested existence pulls its possibilities out of.
You make the claim that there is only one manifestation in existence?
An example is an author thinking up a story, and then writing it down. Another example is an artist visualizing a scene, and then painting it.
All of what we imagine is made up of everything we have sensed before. You cannot visualize a color you haven’t seen. You can’t imagine a thought with no senses in it.
It is clear that there is no end to the number of stories or paintings that could be produced in this manner, and that they don’t all exist in the universe already.
False. All parts of them do.
Why do you continue to ignore extrinsic, or manifest, existence as separate from intrinsic existence?
Because, as I have shown, it is a false and illogical differentiation.
What is the point of that? It neither proves nor disproves anything. Is it not a generality, merely a general reference to all things that exist? It includes both the eternal intrinsic and the (past, present, and future) extrinsic existences. In a general sense of the word, it includes the p.s. along with what is later created by the p.s.
No, much like the number system is not a generality of all numbers. Everything that exists exists. This, as you have claimed yourself by use of your PS examples, proves that existence as a whole, a definition of everything that exists or could exist.

Once again, it is the PS. It’s everything, and that’s all you’ve shown PS to be: everything. It is when you make the claims that PS “created” things that you move from logic to faith. It’s when you assume that the PS is God.
 
hurst said:
The observable fact of extrinsic existence, and the demonstrated fact of intrinsic existence are a solid foundation. I wonder how you miss this.

I don’t miss them. I disprove them, much like I already have.
I read all your posts responding to me. I hope you read mine, because I show why it is true and logical and reasonable.
Well, I respond to all of yours, (save 1 or 2 if they are a continuing trend) but I can’t say the same for you. You still have yet to respond to my refutations of your “we are nothing” hypothesis, and thus have not backed up your claims on intrinsic and extrinsic existences.
I agree we can’t fully “understand” perfect somethingness, ever.
However, we can certainly know it exists. It is logical, reasonable, and proven by the lack of total nothingness. And the observation of temporal forms of existence is proof that there is a kind of existence that is not eternal, and thus not intrinsically part of the logically existing eternal “perfect somethingness”.
This is a false dichotomy. There can be somethingness and nothingness. Both forms don’t need to be perfect.
Rather, perfect somethingness is intrinsic existence: not composed of anything else, for it has already been demonstrated that “total nothingness never existed”, thus, “perfect somethingness always existed”.
You again assume totalities. This may or may not be the case.
And I am not saying that it is separate from “existence”. But I am saying that extrinsic existence is separate from it, though yet dependent upon it.
This is illogical as shown earlier.
It is well founded, regardless of your assertions to the contrary. The fact is that “perfect somethingness” exists intrinsically regardless of the term you wish to use.
Refer to pervious posts.
Perhaps you are biased because you associate many other things to the term “God”. But I would encourage you to just start with what you can know about intrinsic existence and how it differs from extrinsic existence. Many “traits” of this intrinsic existence will become clear through continued observation and logic.
You continue to assert when shown that our existence isn’t extrinsic. Stop and respond to either my arguments in this round, or in previous rounds. Both, if you can.
So far I have shown that you have no logical, sensible, reasonable excuse to deny the eternal, intrinsic existence of “perfect somethingness” as a true reality.
Wrong, as shown earlier in this round.
I showed logically how they follow from the intrinsic existence of the “perfect somethingness” which I demonstrated logically, sensibly, and reasonably to actually exist.
Wrong, as shown earlier in this round.
 
Gilbert Keith:
If you are not going to answer my questions except by saying you don’t like these kinds of questions, I don’t think we have much more to say to each other.

Thank you for your time. I don’t want to waste any more of it.

God bless.
So you refuse to answer his question, and then accuse him of failing to answer your question? Please, don’t be hypocritical.
 
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Alois:
P(name removed by moderator)ointed? Hardly, you made an extraordinary claim of a “perfect somethingness” that gives its traits to existence.
I did not merely make a claim. Nor did I say the p.s. “gives its traits” to existence. It is the essence of existence. And “essence” is not a trait. “Essence” means “the constituent substance”.
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Alois:
Show how the logicality of existence leads to the assumption of a perfect somethingness that is its own being, and not a product of everything else.
I did this in post #735, and I will do so again:
  1. Logic: Nothing can come from “total nothingness”
  2. Sense: But there is not “total nothingness” now.
  3. Reasoning: Therefore, there could never have been “total nothingness”
  4. Corollary: Therefore, there must have always been “perfect somethingness”
Whatever this perfect somethingness is, we know it always had to have existed, of itself, for there was nothing to cause it. So it is essential to itself. And it must be perfect and complete in itself, for there is nothing else that can add to it, both because there is nothing essential that needs to be added and because there is nothing else available to be added or do the adding. It already has what is essential to exist. And anything that is not already in it can never become essential to it at any time. This is intrinsic existence. (The inverse of nothingness).

a. Nothing else caused it to exist, so it exists of itself
b. Nothing else was essential to keep it existing, so it is essential to itself
c. Nothing else was around to add to it, so it is complete in itself
d. Nothing else existed that could be added, so it is perfect in itself

etc.

We can come to recognize more about this “perfect somethingness” by continuing with logic, natural sense, and human reasoning.

Now to continue:
  1. Sense: But there is something now that has not always been.
  2. Reasoning: Therefore, something now exists that is not essential to “perfect somethingness”
Note that we observe things in the universe that were not always there. That alone proves it could not exist of itself from all eternity, and therefore could not possibly be essential to whatever “perfect somethingness” is, and therefore not an intrinsic part of it.

Note that this also demonstrates that the intrinsic existence cannot be “composed” of these non-essential existences.
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Alois:
I have already shown your analogies to be incorrect, and your proposition based on those analogies to be, therefore, incorrect as well.
You have typically merely claimed they are incorrect. Furthermore, a proposition is not “based” on analogies; analogies are used to convey understanding in an incomplete way.
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Alois:
Please read and respond to those posts before continuing with this logic.
I have done so and shown that on the contrary, your rebuttals ignore the evidence, logic, and reasoning I have laid out.
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Alois:
And what about the gaps in string theory that don’t have mathematical support yet? Isn’t that where they would tend to say “something comes from nothing”, rather than “God did it somehow”?
No, because the theory itself is still supported by mathmatics. Unlike the notion of God, which is supported by nothing.
I have shown the “notion of God” to be the name given to instrinsic existence, which is supported by logic, sense, and reason.
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Alois:
In fact, anything that exists extrinsically can reasonably be said to come from the intrinsic existence somehow.
You have not proven this basis. Refer to previous posts.
Yes, I have. Refer to posts #735 and #791.
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Alois:
Because anything that exists, exists from the intrinsic existence one way or another.
You have not proven this basis. Refer to previous posts.
But I have. Are you simply in denial?
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Alois:
Originally Posted by Alois
As for your fourth post, I completely agree. I think we both have an understanding on that point, and that there is no reason to continue discussing it.
Are you talking about the 4-point demonstration?

Yes.

So we agree at least on the necessity of the eternal existence of a “perfect somethingness”?

hurst
 
Gilbert Keith:
BOWSER

This is great and all… but do you intend to answer the question I asked you? I don’t exactly see what your counter-question had to do with it; I answered it because that’s just the polite thing to do. I don’t particularly like speculating about psychology; I rather think it pointless. Why do people believe what they believe? Beats the snot out of me. I’m more concerned with whether these beliefs are justified.

If you are not going to answer my questions except by saying you don’t like these kinds of questions, I don’t think we have much more to say to each other.

Thank you for your time. I don’t want to waste any more of it.

God bless.
Let me put it this way: if Einstein wrote his paper on general relativity because he thought a blue fairy named Shamanabla told him to… would that be evidence that general relativity was wrong? If all Catholic priests were pederasts, would that be evidence against theism? If all atheists were atheists because they couldn’t stand the thought of a mind greater than theirs… would that be evidence against atheism? In short: it does’t help your case to tell the devil’s advocate that she doesn’t really believe in the argument’s she’s making. So this does nothing to further the discussion.

Furthermore, it’s a nearly impossible question to answer. Why the hell do people believe the things they do? What combination of other beliefs, emotions, stresses, and other events brought them to where they are today? Should we expect that it will be the same for all people? Wouldn’t we have to conduct a wide-randing cross-cultural psychological study to answer this question? And wouldn’t it be a waste of time, given that the answer is unimportant to this debate?

And even more than that, your question had nothing to do with my question. If, as you said, you want to keep the discussion on a single topic… why did you introduce a new theme and ignore my question? Are you going to answer my question?
 
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hurst:
I did not merely make a claim. Nor did I say the p.s. “gives its traits” to existence. It is the essence of existence. And “essence” is not a trait. “Essence” means “the constituent substance”.
There can not be a constituent of existence. I have addressed this earlier. You’re trying to regress without logic. You have two options in this case: to infinitely regress, or to stop at what we can know; that existence is everything. You can’t regress to something we don’t know and stick at that position. (an essence of the infinite everything?) It’d be like using a particle smaller than a quark for the basis of your mathmatics with no actual knowledge of one.
  1. Logic: Nothing can come from “total nothingness”
Perfect nothingness, you mean? I find it odd that you switch that word out when describing nothingness.
  1. Sense: But there is not “total nothingness” now.
According to you, we are nothing. If we are truly nothing, but feel as if we are something, how could we know that total nothingness doesn’t exist? We may be in total nothingness, using the illogic you’ve provided earlier.
  1. Reasoning: Therefore, there could never have been “total nothingness”
According to you, we could be total nothingness. It is illogical to say “We are nothing, but we know there is something.” If we are nothing, then everything could be nothing.
  1. Corollary: Therefore, there must have always been “perfect somethingness”
False dichotomy. There could be partial existence and patial non-existence.



Your logical example is flawed. I agree with the outcome of there being a possible infinite existence, but to assume proof of “perfect somethingness” is faulty. Furthermore, I continue to contend that perfect somethingness is a simple throw-off to associate existence closer to that of God. A more accurate description of the counter to total nothingness would be complete existence.
Whatever this perfect somethingness is, we know it always had to have existed, of itself, for there was nothing to cause it.
Yes, complete existence has always existed. It is, as I said, infinite.
So it is essential to itself.
This is a false conclusion that doesn’t take the full situation into account. A cell phone is essential to itself, but also to the parts that compose it. Complete existence is much the same way, but infinite.
And it must be perfect and complete in itself, for there is nothing else that can add to it, both because there is nothing essential that needs to be added and because there is nothing else available to be added or do the adding.
Yes, I agree. Complete existence would contain all possible existences.
It already has what is essential to exist.
Not quite, it already has everything. Everything that exists is essential to it, and it has it all. Complete existence. There is nothing outside of it.
And anything that is not already in it can never become essential to it at any time. This is intrinsic existence. (The inverse of nothingness).
False conclusion. For one, there is nothing outside of complete existence. Secondly, all forms of existence are intrinsic because removing one possibilitity voids it from being complete existence. More on this later.
a. Nothing else caused it to exist, so it exists of itself
Yes, complete existence is infinite.
b. Nothing else was essential to keep it existing, so it is essential to itself
More directly: there is nothing else that could possibly exist.
c. Nothing else was around to add to it, so it is complete in itself
Yes.
d. Nothing else existed that could be added, so it is perfect in itself
No, it is perfect in that it contains all other things. Somethingness does not give traits to things, as I have said before. These are possible forms of existence that make up the totality of existence, just as it is in all infinite sets.
 
We can come to recognize more about this “perfect somethingness” by continuing with logic, natural sense, and human reasoning.
Not if applied incorrectly.
  1. Sense: But there is something now that has not always been.
This is untrue. Existence contains all possibilities, change is one of those possibilities. You’re irrationally assuming that we are the only form of manifestation, true complete existence would consist of an infinite amount of manifestations, as well as the possibilities for such.
  1. Reasoning: Therefore, something now exists that is not essential to “perfect somethingness”
False if the above is taken into account, and if it isn’t. Our existence would still be critical because it is a form of existence. Without it, existence wouldn’t be complete, or infinite. You have failed to address this point many times now, I’d appreciate it if you did.
Note that we observe things in the universe that were not always there. That alone proves it could not exist of itself from all eternity, and therefore could not possibly be essential to whatever “perfect somethingness” is, and therefore not an intrinsic part of it.
Incorrect. If we are to assume a complete existence, this complete existence would contain all possible change. There would be an infinite amount of possibilities. This rationale may sound familiar, because it is the basis for the belief of multiverses.
Note that this also demonstrates that the intrinsic existence cannot be “composed” of these non-essential existences.
A none-essential existence to complete existence is an oxymoron. By definition, a complete existence would contain all possibile forms of existence.
You have typically merely claimed they are incorrect. Furthermore, a proposition is not “based” on analogies; analogies are used to convey understanding in an incomplete way.
However, you choose to express the original idea of most of your arguments through analogies. This is usually seen as a logical fallacy, but I stuck with it because they do allow for the visualization of what you are proposing. You have only provided a logical proof for your “4 steps to God” proposition above. You’ll have to do better than that to show the logicality of a God.
I have done so and shown that on the contrary, your rebuttals ignore the evidence, logic, and reasoning I have laid out.
Have they? No offense, but I don’t see you making an attempt to refute them. I’ve given you the same explantion for the flaws in your logic for post after post now, but you just shrug it off and say “No it’s right.” Well, then you’re going to need to show a correct, logical basis, because the one you’ve proposed for an insintric PS is not, and I have given you step-by-step the reasons why.
Yes, I have. Refer to posts #735 and #791.
Refer to my responses to them…
So we agree at least on the necessity of the eternal existence of a “perfect somethingness”?
No, I agree that the converse of perfect nothingness is complete existence.
 
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