- Oct 10, 2006
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Originally posted by: EvilRage
Personally, I believe the idea of a god is a man-made concept; its original design was to manipulate the masses. Give them a god to fear and that will keep them in line.
No one can prove or disprove the existence of a god. That is completely unknowable for the forseeable future. One cannot discount the possibility (however infinitely small) that someday there may be a way to prove it one way or another, but until then, the answer is up in the air.
Still, the question isn't about what can be proven, the question is about belief. I do not believe in any kind of god. The fact that the universe has any kind of order is not evidence to me that some being is responsible for creating order; only that the universe as we know it is only capable of functioning as a system with fundamental rules governing its behavior. Without these rules, the universe would collapse into chaos. It's certainly feasible that before our theorized big bang there were other similar explosions that resulted in flawed systems, which either immediately collapsed or collapsed over some indeterminable amount of time. (Or perhaps they didn't collapse, and there are parallel universes out there with different rules than our own system, which we are currently unable to detect. But I'm getting side-tracked here...) The fact that our universe WORKS is not the result of any special influence from some supreme being. I think it's more likely that the set of rules that are enforced by nature allow the system to exist without collapsing, and have done so long enough for intelligent life to spring up and have a debate about it.
So the rules just came out of nowhere? Given the probability of this happening, I find it unlikely. Yes, the Universe continues to exist because it's laws permit it to function, but who/what created those laws? It's too convenient to be a coincidence for me.