Cerpin Taxt
Lifer
- Feb 23, 2005
- 11,940
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How does God "get a free pass"?
I stated that God is "non-terrestrial life". Wouldn't aliens be "life", though extraterrestrial?
That depends. What is "life"?
How does God "get a free pass"?
I stated that God is "non-terrestrial life". Wouldn't aliens be "life", though extraterrestrial?
I'd be reeeeaaaallllllyyyy interested in the steps you take:
1.) To arrive at the conclusion that a god did it.
2.) To move from (1) to "My God did it."
Getting to (1) is something you still haven't accomplished, but even if you could get to (1), getting from there to (2) is still another hurdle.
Yeah, Loki's rule. He's awesome. He wants exactly what I want.
Like the fact that there's no evidence he exists?
That depends. What is "life"?
I wholeheartedly agree with what I bolded.I have a friend I speak with almost daily, a believer of some sort I don't really fully understand probably because he is far more intelligent than I am and can pose to himself ideas that I can't follow very well and we have been discussing some of what went on in shira's thread. He was raised a Catholic but drove his Jesuit teachers crazy, he is not a believer in any traditional sense. I tried as hard as I could to follow what his reasoning is, and I don't really think I can do it justice or even know if I have what he thinks correct in what I am about to say, but I felt he was saying something like this and I found what I imagined he might be saying interesting:
We do not know anything about what happened before time began, I guess not even before something like ten to the minus 41st second as I remember. Everything, time and space appeared from nothing. The human mind can't comprehend such a thing. I got the impression that for him in a way I do not fully understand, the implication is clear to him it means there is something that had to, I don't know what, be involved somehow. Any way I think he feels the incomprehensibility of it all points him to a God. Maybe Einstein had the same kind of feeling.
At any rate, the universe seems to be here and whether your sense is that it just happened and nothing more can be said, or that if looking at the same facts one feels there has to be a Creator, why is one opinion more rational than the other? The time space continuum of our existence seems to have a beginning and any more than that we do not know so it's really not our knowledge that matters so much as it is as to what our knowledge causes us to feel, it seems to me. So why should I, a person who believes the universe just happened and no emotional or deeper Ah Ha moment comes with that contemplation, reject the experience of those who experience a feeling that we were created, perhaps with some intention. Some people can look at a picture and see paint and others a masterpiece. Beyond a point in time our physics doesn't tell us anything. What is the physics that has this limitation?
Anyway, no matter how deeply the Atheists rejects the logic of the Believer, and visa versa, and no matter how flawed or seemingly rational that logic may be, why one believes and another doubts, the ultimate validity of either view seems to me to be equally unknowable and maybe even ultimately personal and with no real relevance to anybody else.
The matter of importance to me, then, is not so much whether or not a God exists, but what you justify with your belief, where it leaves you morally. Do you see the world as one or do you see friend and foe. What do you intend.
Hey, Picasso was reputedly a monster when it came to his women. But he was also a hell of an artist.Meh, I think Hitchens was right about a lot of things, but I also think he was an asshole, fun to watch him debate.
So are you saying that aliens wouldn't be "life"?
But yes, it absolutely matters. You're suggesting that the scientists reject creationism because they are afraid of your god in particular. That idea is laughable. Scientists reject creationism because you can't get to (1), so it has nothing to do with (2).It doesn't matter how I arrived there (which I am not debating anyway), as that doesn't change the truthfulness of my statement.
What "substance"?Btw, stop this silly diversion and address the substance of my statement.
Uh-huh. Thanks for the mind-reading job, Swami. Who do you think you're convincing?Actually, its that you'd rather rule yourself, so you can answer only to yourself.
I cannot fear accountability to a thing that I do not believe exists. Again, you're putting the cart before the horse.No, like the fact you fear accountability.
I don't know. What is your definition of "life"?
The opposite of non-life.
But yes, it absolutely matters. You're suggesting that the scientists reject creationism because they are afraid of your god in particular. That idea is laughable. Scientists reject creationism because you can't get to (1), so it has nothing to do with (2).
What "substance"?
Uh-huh. Thanks for the mind-reading job, Swami. Who do you think you're convincing?
I cannot fear accountability to a thing that I do not believe exists. Again, you're putting the cart before the horse.
The opposite of non-life.
I suppose was asking too much to expect you to even know what a definition is.
This is today's Christianity.
I wholeheartedly agree with what I bolded.
With respect to the incomprehensibility of "What happened before the beginning?" that led your friend to a belief in God, I myself deal with this conundrum with the simple consideration that time itself is theorized to have been brought into existence by the Big Bang. Thus, if time itself didn't exist "before the Big Bang," the entire concept of "before the Big Bang" becomes meaningless. And if there is no "before the Big Bang," there is no causality "before the Big Bang." Look at that - a "creator" isn't even possible!
Unfortunately, it's probably impossible for the human mind to imagine a "timeless" universe from our timeful perspective. I'm comfortable with that contradiction; but I'm a physicist and I know from long experience that there are lots of well-accepted theories that are impossible to "see" in your mind. So why should this one additional "impossible to imagine" situation push me over the edge? For those of a non-scientific mind-set, however, I can understand that concrete "explanations" are demanded, and religion supplies those explanations for the vast majority of the human race.
MY definition of "life" would be anything that can make copies of itself.
Though this is the best I can come up with.
Now, what's YOUR definition?
It has everything to do with those scientists. "God did it" is rejected in EVERY aspect of science for reasons that have nothing to do with what you claimed.LOL -- my comment had nothing to do with honest scientists who are interested in finding out what's true or not
And I'm telling you that those atheists do not exist....but it was aimed at atheists who simply want to deny God's existence for the reasons I mentioned.
If you can't answer, then it doesn't exist.If you have to ask, then you're in over your head.
Yes, and we all think just like you do, Rob. Fucking A you have a tiny little mind.Nonsense. I wasn't always a believer, so I know the "benefits" of what I call "self rule".
I do not know what it's like to be accountable to a god, and neither do you.I thought you used to believe -- correct me if I'm wrong. So yes you CAN fear accountability if you knew what it was like to *be* accountable.
Well then nothing is alive. That's a pretty useless definition.MY definition of "life" would be anything that can make copies of itself.
I am Jack's complete lack of surprise.Though this is the best I can come up with.
Why do you need my defintion? Have I made any claims about what things are alive? You're invited to cite which usages of mine are unclear to you.Now, what's YOUR definition?
It has everything to do with those scientists. "God did it" is rejected in EVERY aspect of science for reasons that have nothing to do with what you claimed.
And I'm telling you that those atheists do not exist.
Yes, and we all think just like you do, Rob. Fucking A you have a tiny little mind.
Well then nothing is alive. That's a pretty useless definition.
Why do you need my defintion? Have I made any claims about what things are alive? You're invited to cite which usages of mine are unclear to you.
I'm not talking about "science", Sherlock.
I'm specifically talking about the plethora of atheists who used to believe, HATED the restrictions their religion put on them, and now are "free".
.
But yes, you are. You said "Actually, believe "God did it" has tremendous implications on humanity as a whole. So there are moral and philosophical reasons why they don't like that answer."I'm not talking about "science", Sherlock.
We're talking about the suitability of "God did it" as an "explanation" for a natural phenomenon. I showed that it is rejected for reasons which do not include what you claim.I'm specifically talking about the plethora of atheists who used to believe, HATED the restrictions their religion put on them, and now are "free".
Those who reject God for those reasons don't do so for scientific reasons.
Yet you've actually demonstrated neither.And I'm telling you you're either ignorant or lying, or likely both.
That's a bold accusation. Gonna try to substantiate it, Chief?Well, my experiences go a long way in helping me sniff out liars, like you.
I don't think the restrictions religion has had anything to do with it. I think they had an open mind and used their rational logic thinking brains to rule out God as a possibility since it's the least likely option with no proof other than an old book saying as such.
Actually, yes, that's exactly what it means. It means you're just going to label things "life" willy-nilly as it suits you. That's how we know your claims about "life" and "non-life" are total bullshit.Well, I'm fine with not knowing how to define life -- but that doesn't mean that I don't know it when I see it.
You're very much correct that I am not certain what "life" is. I do know that by the working biological definition of life, your God is not alive.Translation: "I don't know what life is, either".
Welcome to the club.
Actually, yes, that's exactly what it means. It means you're just going to label things "life" willy-nilly as it suits you. That's how we know your claims about "life" and "non-life" are total bullshit.
You're very much correct that I am not certain what "life" is. I do know that by the working biological definition of life, your God is not alive.
I've been there, and I am not the only one.
Its sooooo MUCH easier to live your life exactly they way YOU want to when your preferred way is in conflict with your religious beliefs.