Originally posted by: KingNothing
Originally posted by: StormRider
Originally posted by: gopunk
Originally posted by: KingNothing
Proving that something doesn't exist is extremely difficult because you have to exhaust every possible way it could exist. Proving that something does exist is relatively simple because you only have to find one way.
That said, you can't prove conclusively that God does or does not exist because there's an element of faith in either belief. Scientifically proving something requires observation, and God can't be observed. What atheists and evolutionists will rarely admit is that their beliefs require as much if not more faith than Christians/creationists.
that's not true, you can simply prove that if it exists, the existence would contradict a proven fact.
The problem is that the existence of God is an axiom. You either accept it or you don't.
The existence of God is hardly an axiom, in that it is not a universally recognized truth. I would say it's self-evident, but a lot of people disagree with me.
What I mean is that it is unprovable -- you either accept God exists as an axiom or you don't.
It's just like Non-Euclidean geometry. In Euclidean geometry one of the axioms is "Two parallel lines never intercept". But in Non-Euclidean geometry you don't have this as one of the axioms (in this framework, two parallel lines can intercept!).
In both cases, you have a consistent mathematical system. It turns out that Non-Euclidean geometry better models the real world.
Anyways, it seems the existence of God is unprovable in our logic system (there is a very big theorem in logic that states that in every logic system you construct, you can always construct a statement that is unprovable).
Hence, you can either accept the existence of God as true or you can accept it as false. This is basically saying that the belief in the existence of God is based on faith.