Good morning gang!
OK, let's see how much time I can throw at this post:
Skace:
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The problem I have with your logic is the underlying assumption that humans are at the peak of their knowledge. Science knows everything there is to know and if something doesn't fit within the laws set in motion now then that must prove the existence of god. The problem here is that laws in the world of science are constantly broken or built upon. All it takes to break a law is continually proven theory otherwise. I think I can safely say that as we progress more laws of science will adapt, expand and some even break. >>
Yes they certainly will! But we MUST make our conclusions about the world around us based upon what we know now. We have no idea what we might know in the future, but for right now we do mase our ideas and beliefs about things on what we know here and now. As a species we have no other way of knowing things.
Also, my theories aren't based on the weaker scientific concepts and observations - we are talking about the fundamentals of our universe such as cause and effect, time, and motion. Everything is based squarely on those and other key principles - there aren't many scientists expecting us to disprove cause and effect anytime soon, although our understanding of it changes, the principle remains the same (effects are caused).
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How about this explanation? The big bang wasn't the start but the end. It was an alien-caused chainreaction of explosions born through galactic warfare with world-destroying weapons. Aliens were in the same stalemate with world destroying weapons as we are with nukes. Someone broke the stalemate and the chainreaction caused the destruction of the entire universe and the creation of our own. >>
Interesting and possible. Who can know?
But in relation to my theory on deity - where did those aliens come from? Are they eternal, cause-less causers?
Or are they a product of a deity?
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The one thing I hate about people turning to a god to explain big bang or creation is that its so medeival. It's like we as a species havn't learned anything from history, we pinned things we couldn't explain on god back then and we still do it now. Back before people understood anything about space, they thought god lived in the sky. Now we know better, but since we don't know a whole lot about our creation, some people decide to pin that on god once again. >>
Again, using God as a substitute for understanding of our physical world is indeed kinda medieval. But I think we make another mistake swinging too far the other direction and proclaiming our spiritual sides as mere chemical reactions... that everything we think, feel, know, love, etc is just chemicals reacting in our brains.
Belief in a deity and our own spirituality is the belief that we are more than a mere collection of atoms, water, and chemicals reacting away with no real self and control.
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These 2 points make for a huge reason why people feel the need to discuss religion. I don't see why that wasn't blatantly obvious. >>
Yes exactly! We are capable of making things up and not believing them. In fact, religion may well be the only thing we believe that could be "made up"... why? Is it a defect as Elledan thinks, or by design? If by design, is it nature's design? Why would nature instill that in us? Or is it by the design of, and some possible evidence of, a deity?
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I still don't understand why proof of god would mean the demise of free will. What if proof of god also meant proof that heaven didn't really exist? What if proof of god meant he didn't really create us? He was just a superior being we've been praying to and in his free time he likes making crop circles in random southern states. Even if we had proof god existed, we still wouldn't be forced to follow him. >>
If you KNEW - really KNEW, you'd really have no more choice to believe in a god than you do about gravity. Could anyone in thier right mind defy an all powerful deity? Even if a few could, many actually could NOT - the decision would have been taken from them.
Proof of God wouldn't cause a deity or its realm to cease - it would just take away our power to reasonable disbelieve (freedom).
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I hope you get a chance to respond to a few of the things I've posted. You have an interesting view point. >>
Well thanks - so do you!
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Oh yea, one other thing. Why does an all powerful and perfect god, need to make billions and billions of imperfect planets just to make one suitable for life, but is happy only populating 1 of those planets with imperfect species. I mean if all he wanted to do was have us worship him, he only needed to make 1 galaxy or even only 1 planet and a sun. To me the fact that planets can be so inhospitable shows me that they were created at random by something that doesn't think or act intelligently. >>
Ah - don't assume all christians have any issues with alien life. I sure don't. Actually the Catholic Church's official stance is that there could well be aliens with the same sentience and spiritual duality we have.
Personally? I think we are just ONE of many such creatures... the physical nature and history of which I can't begin to guess at!
Jeff7:
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From what I was told by a self-proclaimed "good Christian," that atheist would go straight to hell, while the believer would enjoy eternal bliss. They even said that if Osama bin Laden were to truly convert to Christianity, he'd go to Heaven, but the atheist would still go to hell. Makes sense to me. >>
Sadly many "christians" know less about their own faith than several atheists I know. Again - some people's ignorance on a topic does not invalidate the existance of the topic - otherwise computers would cease to exist!
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Most of what I hear from preachers, followers, etc, is that God is omnicient and omnipotent. So he's got infinite power and infinite knowledge. This poses several interesting problems/situations. One is that there is NOTHING he cannot do; and doing one thing would take no more effort than another. To an infinitely powerful being, creating a grain of dust should be no more difficult than creating a million universes. Yet this being needed to rest after creating one planet? Uh huh.... >>
Well, you are right about the act of creation being no harder for a million planets than a grain of sand. But you are taking the Bible literally with the "rest" thing - it doesn't mean he literally flopped into a chair and mopped his brow, it means god "finished" the act of creation and began maintaining it - allowing it to unfold. He stood back and allowed what he created to progress.
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Knowing everything: that means he knows what he's going to do in a few minutes. But knowing that he knows what he's going to do in a few minutes might change that future, which he now knows as well. His infinite brainpower would be cancelled out by having an infinite amount of knowledge to fill it and process. >>
The key flaw there is putting god inside time - a deity that created (creates?) time is not bound by it. He simply is - the beginning and the end, alpha and omega. Sorry, not trying to quote the Bible at you, just illustrating that god is not bound by his creation (time).
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Having infinite power requires by nature simply being everything. If anything is not a part of God, that means that God is not infinite. So just remember that - the next time you use the toilet, you're crapping out God all over God inside the toilet made of God. >>
Everything is of god and belongs to god - it all exists within his creation and being, so in a sense yes - everything is part of god. God created our crapping system - he isn;t offended by it! However, if your intent was to symbolically crap on god, I'm sure he'd notice that.
BOK:
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1.) You said that: "MY likelihood is that we will figure out most, if not all of the HOW, but the WHY... the "meaning" is deeper and the result of a deity." My question is, why have you implied that there must be a "why"? If this is your stance, can you provide reason? >>
I believe there is a "why" because I believe we are more than just chemical reactions, with no real self or control. I.E. - Do you really think you are nothing but a set of chemical reactions that you can't control, because your "control" - your decisions, feelings, love, etc are just chemical reactions that happen in the reactor you call a brain? If so these chemical reactions happen and follow the laws of reaction and physics, then you have no control - in fact "you" doesn't even exist, its just a chemical reaction that feels like "you". You become nothing, absurd, and pointless. We all do. We have no will, no love, no emotion - we are just hapless, random chemical reactions.
I don't believe thats the case. And some will well say thats an escape, that I feer being nothing and absurd. Well, I don't think anyone wants to be nothing and absurd, but I would contest that it too is an escape. If we are just reactions - another hapless species with no self, no free will, no emotions, no love, etc then we never have to feel guitl, responsibility, or emotional pain... as its all meaningless and we happen in a millisecond in the timeline of the universe.
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2.) Are you Christian (or other religion), or do you believe that there must be a God, but not necessarily a Christian God (for example)? >>
I am a practicing Roman Catholic, and I believe that there is a deity, that it is a loving deity, that this deity wants us to know it, that it therefore revealed(reveals) itself to us, and did so through sacred writing. After studying sacred texts, the Old Testament carries through to Catholicism a straight uninterrupted line from creation to now. A nutshell of whay and what I believe, so to speak.
Elledan:
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Query: how can you observe this? You keep repeating it, but so far you've given no explanation. >>
Yes - reread my original post.
1) Everything has a cause - observe the universe, read the observations of others. Find something that acts without any cause... nada. Now go back to the beginning - what was the first "cause"? And what caused it? If it was the first, nothing - a cause-less causer in violation of cause and effect.
2) Time - we can observe time all around us, and even manipulate it. But everything has an existance in time, and we can observe back through history as events unfold. Go far enough back to see the origins of the universe... now keep going. If time had a beginning, what was its beginning, and what did it come from? And if time had no beginning, what has always existed?
3)Space is infinite, and filled with matter and energy. Or it is empty space... but if empty space can be said to "exist", then it is in itself infinite. So either space itself, or whatever preceeded or caused it, must be infinte and omnipresent.
etc...
What is your theory on the origins of the universe? What started it all, what has always existed? What was the cause?
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Fact: there's a part in the Human brain which is responsible for certain experiences which can be linked to 'spiritual' experiences. >>
Again - we go back above to the reduction of self and spirit to chemical reactions. Could be true, although it reduces us to absurdities. But I respect your belief that its all we are in the end... sacks of mostly water with uncontrolled chemical reactions dictating everything we do, think, and are.
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Conclusion: if you simply felt that your conclusion, based on your observations (what kind of observations?), is right, then it's very well possible that this part of your brain is more active than by, for example, agnostic people. >>

That a bad thing?
Or maybe there is a part of myself that exists independantly of the chemical reacotr known as my brain - something that feels, thnks, knows, and loves and can mostly control the chemicals zooming around in my head. Again - back to a fundemental belief difference between us (simply chemical reactions vs. spiritual existance).
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Taking this a bit further, then we can say that this 'spiritual' center of the brain is the main cause of blind faith. >>
You keep saying "blind" faith - do you think all faith is blind inherently? And that no leap of faith can stem from observation and fact? Because I insist to you again that although my faith comes into believing in a sentient god and into believing we have real spirits, there are observable facts and defendable reasons to have such a faith - and therefore it is not "blind".
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Conclusion: until you can sufficiently and in a (scientifically) satisfying way explain your reasoning and provide your observations on which you based that reasoning, blind faith remains the only logical explanation. >>
Read above.
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In that case this supernatural being would be only partially aware of its own existance. It would be reduced to a mere force of nature, a part of physics, and everything but sentient. >>
Why only partially aware? If part of a deity's nature was a desire to create, it could be completely sentient and have full knowledge of that desire. As I hold that creation is an act of love, it would actually only be a part of the deity's nature to love.
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I would think some more about it if I were you =) >>
Ditto.

And duh, I'm always thinking about these things - questioning, debating, wondering...