J
JDaniel
Guest
Razredge:If aliens don’t exist, it is pretty much evidence that God definitely exists - the chance of life only existing on Earth is astronomically small unless God only created life on earth.
I don’t see how. Can you explicate an argument of some kind?
Such as . . .Though I believe they do, there is some evidence of recent supernatural events which could well be explained by alien visitors, time travellers or interdimensional beings.
That’s quite all right. Take your time and do ask questions.I don’t quite understand what point you’re trying to make, so forgive me if I miss something.
You have bought into an assumption from someplace outside of the Church. The soul of man is his form. It is that which individuates him/her from all other beings. It is the form of primary matter.Do you not think that appearance alone distinguishes us from one another? Now, if you do, then what about twins? Their appearance may not, at least not from a distant perspective, then, what is next? Could it be that personality is next?You seem to assume that evolution is a process that leads to perfection - it does not. There is no evidence that humans are ‘perfect’ creatures and the soul is not the ‘ultimate perfection of matter’ since if it was matter it wouldn’t be a soul.
Your concept of soul is, without being denigrating towards you in any way, juvenile. St. Thomas clearly tells us that the soul is the formal cause of a man. And, primary matter is the material cause. The form can’t persist, or be known, without its adherence in matter. So, somehow, the soul is matter too. The form is not some separate thing. The soul is not some thing that can fly, or float about. That’s the stuff of cartoons.
Well, don’t blame me; I’m in good company. St. Thomas Aquinas’ ideas are parallel to mine. And, I’m pretty sure so are the Churches. Again, you are viewing it through the lenses of Star Trek and other science fiction movies and other genera. The problem is: we have no proof of anything more perfect than the soul of man. Nothing. Name one thing more perfect. And not merely conjecture.Your conclusion seems to commit an anthropic fallacy as you are looking at the universe from a human point of view, through the lens of human history and science - we have no idea what other forms of life can look like or how complex they may or may not be.
On the other hand, it could be that the person has spent all of his/her life living in a building full of windows, TV’s in every room, the internet in every room, and books of all the most superficial kind, and assumes based on his/her experience that this is all there is to the world!It is rather like a person who has lived their entire life in a building with no windows, TVs etc, internet, books etc. and assumes based on their experience that this is all there is to the world.
God bless,
jd