[Debate] Is God real? [Religion] (445)

1 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-07-01 19:02 ID:4LYwyQQi

To start off on a debate since it is allowed, I am going to go with one of the main subjects that appear in most people's discussions. Is God real?

RULES
-No flaming or trolling. Emphasis on flaming. Keep the argument down to a mild level.

-Back up what you say. I know it's hard for this, but don't just say something like "God is fake". Tell WHY you think God is fake, and use science to back it up if you have to. If you want to say "God is real", then the same goes for you. If you are going to use sources, then make sure they are credible, not just from someones blog (unless they source on that, and THAT source is credible).

-Keep this as mature as possible. This is basically like repeating the first rule, but don't let your emotions/beliefs get in the way of your argument. It makes you and your whole case look childish.

STARTING ARGUMENT:
God is not real because there is no scientific proof that he ever existed and did what he did (create people, make the world, etc.).

177 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-02 03:42 ID:Heaven

> You see the problem with such a position is that you cannot account for the science that you have faith in.

I account for it with my own senses.

All science is based on facts; all facts can be verified with the senses. And if you cast doubt upon our own senses, demanding that they need accountability, then we have no business debating the nature of reality at all (also, we are probably Buddhists.)

If there's one thing we must be certain of for science to work, it is that we exist, we percieve, and we percieve correctly.

178 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-02 09:42 ID:lA/laNI8

>>177

Science could not be done, if nature were not predictable. You would never put someone in a rocket and send them to space unless you were able to predict exactly what would happen when you lit the rockets. It's not a matter of "Let's push this button and see what happens this time." Science would be able to tell you nothing, or predict nothing without FIRST assuming that nature is uniform. You have no basis for such an assumption.

Still though, let me ask you this, is all knowledge gained by the senses?

179 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-02 10:57 ID:Heaven

>>178

Is there any knowledge that isn't gained through either taste, smell, sight, hearing or touch?

You have been proved wrong several times already and you keep pretending it didn't happen. Please leave now!.

180 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-02 14:35 ID:9djxdq4d

> The problem is that the non-theist has absolutely zero basis for assuming that nature is uniform

And you have zero basis for believing in your god. What else is new?

181 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-02 15:37 ID:Heaven

>>178

> You would never put someone in a rocket and send them to space unless you were able to predict exactly what would happen when you lit the rockets.

I think you misunderstand science. Science can never 'predict exactly'; it can only be really, really sure. Those who sent a man to space were taking a risk - a risk well calculated and considered extremely minute, but for all they knew Ahura Mazda might have been waiting invisibly above the stratosphere with his hammer of smiting for the first human foolish enough to try and escape his domain. They literally did choose to brave the unknown, and thanks to them, now we have definite facts about space instead of inductions which we're pretty confident about but that might, somehow, be in error.

> You have no basis for such an assumption.

I base it on the fact that everything I, and every other scientist, has ever observed is in line with such an assumption. Theories with no known exceptions to them are called laws or principles; this one is the 'principle of uniformity.' They are no more rock-solid then the rest of science, but when we observe something that seems to violate a law, we start to examine the anomaly very closely rather then immediately cast our suspicions on the law.

> Still though, let me ask you this, is all knowledge gained by the senses?

Sounds like more semantic games.
Well, I would say that it is impossible to determine the truth or falsity of knowledge not gained through the senses, thus it has no business in science.

182 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-02 21:32 ID:lA/laNI8

>>179

How about you just answer the question.

183 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-02 21:34 ID:lA/laNI8

>>180

We'll talk about my basis later, but let me get this straight, are you admitting that you have zero basis for believing in the uniformity of nature?

184 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-02 21:34 ID:Heaven

>>182

Then the answer is yes. Now you answer mine.

185 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-02 21:48 ID:lA/laNI8

>>181

Science can never 'predict exactly'; it can only be really, really sure.

Not without FIRST assuming that nature is uniform. If nature is not FIRST assumed to be uniform ALL bets are off.

I base it on the fact that everything I, and every other scientist, has ever observed is in line with such an assumption.

You mean HAS BEEN in line with such an assumption (ignoring the God-like claim that you know what 'every other' scientist has observed). Saying that the future is like the past, because it has always been like that in the past is 'BEGGING THE QUESTION.' Sure you can say that if the law is violated, you will examine the 'anomaly,' but don't you see that calling it an 'anomally' exposes your presupposition that nature IS uniform?

Let me put this in simpler terms...Is the past a guide to the future?

186 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-02 21:51 ID:lA/laNI8

>>184
Then the answer is yes.

So, you believe that all knowledge is gained through the senses eh? Maybe you could tell me by what sense you came to know that ALL knowledge is gained through the senses (That should answer your own question too).

187 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-02 21:56 ID:Heaven

> Still though, let me ask you this, is all knowledge gained by the senses?

No, sometimes we have hallucinations of a 900-foot tall Jesus that picks up an office building and then brags about it.

188 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-02 22:07 ID:Heaven

>>186

> Maybe you could tell me by what sense you came to know that ALL knowledge is gained through the senses

Well, it wasn't from an oral tradition invented by tribesmen that stoned people for believing in the wrong god and thought the world was ending at every solar eclipse.

189 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-02 22:16 ID:lA/laNI8

>>188

Not asking what it wasn't, asking by what sense you came to know that ALL knowledge is gained through the senses. Isn't the question clear enough?

190 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-02 22:47 ID:Heaven

>>189

> asking by what sense you came to know that ALL knowledge is gained through the senses.

Irrelevant.
Senses are our means of gathering information about the world. The only knowledge that isn't gained through the senses we are born with.
Whether through textbooks or tomes, the words of a preacher or the words of a teacher, everything we learn comes through our senses.
You have the same senses I do. Whatever conclusions we come to both use the same imperfect senses.

If you have any other mysticism you'd like to share... please don't.

191 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-02 23:07 ID:lA/laNI8

>>190

Hmmm, so NOT ALL knowledge is gained through the senses. Aside form that flip-flop, perhaps you can tell me by what sense you came to know that 'everything we learn comes through our senses.' Did you see, smell, hear, touch or taste it?

192 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-02 23:35 ID:Heaven

>>191

> Aside form that flip-flop

I'm not the poster you think I am, so there was no "flip-flop" since I am not that poster.
Either way, demanding an immediate answer then balking when clarification is presented is not a "flip-flop", and does not reveal a weakness in any argument or capacity for reason.

As for the substance of this loaded political implication (that the ability to change ones mind is a weakness of character), it couldn't be further from the truth.

193 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-02 23:46 ID:lA/laNI8

>>192

But it sure shows the inconsistency of the non-theistic position, coupled with the fact that my questions go unanswered.

194 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-02 23:48 ID:lA/laNI8

>>192
Not to mention the fact that 'changing one's mind' flies in the face of any evolutionary model.

195 Name: Not >>190 : 2007-10-03 00:56 ID:Heaven

>>185

> The only knowledge that isn't gained through the senses we are born with.

I question this statement. I assume you are referring to animal instinct, but can reactions programmed into our mind on an unconscious level really be described as 'knowledge'?

I suppose we should ask proofthatgodexists.org to define 'knowledge' to his satisfaction.

196 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-03 00:59 ID:Heaven

Whoops, somehow I became terminally confused while writing that reply. Ignore the mixed-up post references.

197 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-03 02:06 ID:lA/laNI8

>>195

Knowledge - justified, true belief.

198 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-03 05:47 ID:Heaven

>>197

Now will you answer what knowledge isn't acquired through senses?

199 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-03 07:20 ID:Heaven

>>198
I am pretty sure the answer is going to be along the lines of spiritual knowledge.

If so, I'll save us a post and inquire in advance how he is able to verify the truthfulness of such. Or perhaps more importantly, how others are able to verify the truthfulness of such.

Truth is sort of a nebulous concept, but I think the best benchmark we've got for it - so far as it pertains to the nature of reality - is near-unanimous opinion. The chief reason we place our trust in our senses and the natural world it reveals is that everyone (barring physical weakness or disability) perceives it in the same way, whereas it is blatantly obvious that the six billion of us on this planet perceive God, Allah, Buddha or whatever name you prefer to call him/her/it in some very different ways.

200 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-03 11:47 ID:9djxdq4d

> We'll talk about my basis later

No, we won't. You'll just drag out that old chestnut about how your god somehow "accounts for" something else, and you'll dodge the question, never admitting that your belief is entirely irrational and on much shakier ground that anybody else's.

201 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-04 00:09 ID:Heaven

>>194

> Not to mention the fact that 'changing one's mind' flies in the face of any evolutionary model.

Changing our minds is the very strength behind science, if we can't do this, it doesn't work.

202 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-07 12:23 ID:Bdiw1dN3

>>201

Changing our minds is the very strength behind science, if we can't do this, it doesn't work.

Which is exactly why the evolutionary model fails, as it does not account for 'changing one's mind.' You see, according to any evolutionary model, our thoughts are just the by-product of the electro-chemical processes in our brains. As Doug Wilson puts it, the difference between your thoughts and my thoughts could be likened to the difference between shaking 2 cans of pop and opening them, You happen to 'fizz' atheism, and I happen to 'fizz' Christianity, arguing which is right, or suggesting that anyone could 'change their fizz' is irrational. Heck, rationality is irrationl under that model.

203 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-07 16:40 ID:Heaven

>>202

Man, you're so incredibly confused about different philosophies here, it's not even funny. None of that has anything whatsoever to do with evolution. You're just grouping together everything you disagree with under one label. All you manage to do is look incredibly ignorant.

Hey, look, man. If you want to argue against something, how about you first go out and learn what the hell it is.

204 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-07 20:38 ID:Heaven

> You happen to 'fizz' atheism

No, I don't. I 'fizz' ignorance. From ignorance I can 'fizz' anything I want.

Doug Wilson? Are you referring to the hockey player, the interior designer or the Christian Theologian?

205 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-07 20:47 ID:Bdiw1dN3

>>203

Interesting how your post does not include any refutation. Tell me how free choice comports with any evolutionary model?

206 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-07 20:55 ID:Heaven

>>205
Interesting that you think I'd bother discussing anything with one such as yourself.

207 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-07 22:30 ID:Heaven

>>205

Go and finish high school so I can explain it to you and you'll understand it.

208 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-07 22:36 ID:Heaven

>>205

On a side note, wasn't christianity the responsible for burning Galileo for defending heliocentrism? Tell me, has your retarded religion changed its mind already or are you so retarded that still believe the world is flat and square and the middle of everything?

Please leave and stop making an ass of yourself, do it for your kids: it must be shameful for them to have you as a parent.

209 Name: 203 : 2007-10-07 23:41 ID:Heaven

>>205

The correct description of your statement is "not even wrong". It is so non-sensical, it cannot be refuted. It's like trying to refute a statement like "an apple is five".

210 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-08 04:55 ID:Bdiw1dN3

>>209

Seems pretty simple to me, no one here can tell me how one gets 'the ability to choose' from evolution.

211 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-08 05:47 ID:Heaven

>>210
Because it was a reproductive advantage.

212 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-08 05:48 ID:Heaven

> no one here can tell me

How Insightful

213 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-08 13:21 ID:Bdiw1dN3

>>211

You are missing the point. Explain how biochemistry = choice.

214 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-08 17:22 ID:Heaven

>>213
Evolution itself does not purport to explain how biological traits function, it merely describes the process by which they became more commonplace in a given population.

However, choice seems pretty easy to account for. Many types of insects and other simple organisms are unable to interrupt preprogrammed patterns of behavior in response to rapidly changing environments; for instance, a digger wasp that is eating its prey and is then caught by a predator will not flee, but will continue to eat until it is itself eaten. The ability to interrupt instinctive behaviors in response to emergencies would obviously be a survival advantage in this case, thus it was selected for in more complex forms of life. "Choice" is a far more refined version of this ability to adapt mental processes to the situation at hand.

We do not know much about the biochemical basis of choice, but it's thought to take place primarily in the orbitofrontal cortex of the brain.

215 Name: proofthatgodexists.org would say... : 2007-10-08 17:51 ID:Heaven

> We do not know much about the biochemical basis of choice

So you don't really know ANYTHING AT ALL? Nice Flip-Flop.
[Insert mystic escapism to defend lack of valid response and failure to address post >>1]

216 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-08 21:50 ID:G9i970BS

proofthatgodexists.org = unable to learn.

217 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-08 23:32 ID:Heaven

>>210

Please, make the tiniest effort to understand that what you're asking is like asking how economics can explain the taste of oranges. Evolution has never pretended to have anything to do with the question of choice. It makes no statements about it. That's the domain of philosophy.

218 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-09 00:59 ID:Bdiw1dN3

>>217
Um, evolution IS philosophy.

>>214
So, 1. If 'interpretation of instinctive behaviour,' is itself not an instinct, what is it then?
2. If the processes in the 'orbitofrontal cortex of the brain' are also biochemial, are the outcome of these processes predetermined by the laws of chemistry and physics?

219 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-09 01:43 ID:Heaven

>>218

  1. Beats me. I'm not in the mood for semantic games. But by its nature, it contradicts the dictionary definition of an instinct: "a largely inheritable and unalterable tendency of an organism to make a complex and specific response to environmental stimuli without involving reason."
  2. If you're trying to get us to espouse determinism and then claim that determinism is a fallacy, let's just get to the point:

http://www.truthseeker.com/truth-seeker/1993archive/120_5/ts205f.html

220 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-09 02:58 ID:Bdiw1dN3

>>219

1. Indeed, beats you.
2. Why don't you just tell me what you believe.

221 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-09 03:10 ID:Heaven

>>220

The evidence for evolution goes beyond the scope of philosophy (and beyond your comprehension as well).

222 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-09 04:06 ID:Heaven

>>220

  1. So because I don't care to specify a term for something unrelated to the primary matter at hand, a term which you will undoubtedly go off on a tangent about because your understanding of it differs from mine, I lose?
  2. The article in >>219 states my beliefs more eloquently then I could. That is why I linked it.

(FYI, >>221 ain't the same Anonymous Scientist as me. I'm not sure why he/she directed that post to >>220 instead of >>218.)

223 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-09 11:58 ID:Bdiw1dN3

>>221

So the evidence for evolution is that there can be no evidence? (sounds familliar actually - same as with 'punctuated equilibrium.' - how convenient).

>>222

1. Nope, was just agreeing with you.
2. I guess I'll have to read it then.

224 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-09 12:29 ID:Heaven

> Um, evolution IS philosophy.

This is why people keep telling you to go back to school before trying to make an argument. This is a ridiculous statement, and just shows that you are either a) a complete fool or b) blindly parroting fundamentalist dogma with no basis in reality.

Possibly "and" instead of "or".

225 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-09 17:11 ID:Bdiw1dN3

>>224

Well maybe you should just list the scientific proofs (or how about just one) for macro evolution. Don't worry, I won't hold my breath.

226 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-09 19:05 ID:Heaven

>>225

I typed "proof of macroevolution" into Google, and the first hit was http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/. You know how to use Google, don't you? You could have done it yourself, if you had actually wanted to learn anything.

Somehow, I'm thinking you're not really interested in learning.

227 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-10 03:56 ID:Bdiw1dN3

>>226

Rather than link to a site that you undoubtedly have blind faith in, why don't you attempt to answer my question and state one, just one, proof for macro evolution. I will be pleased to refute it.

Cheers

228 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-10 04:30 ID:Heaven

>>224
c) a troll

229 Name: Not 226 : 2007-10-10 04:54 ID:Heaven

Here's a summary of a proof stated by Ian Johnston at http://www.mala.bc.ca/~johnstoi/essays/courtenay1.htm

1) All living things come from living parents. (Evidence: Spontaneous generation was disproven centuries ago. Apart from that, lack of opposing evidence or alternate theories.)
2) There are many species alive today that are very different from each other. (Self-evident, I would hope.)
3) Very long ago, fewer and simpler organisms existed than exist now. (Evidence: Fossil record.)

Conclusion: Unless God is constantly creating new species out of nothing, "macroevolution" has to have occurred. Darwin's theory is the best naturalistic explanation of how that has happened.

Addendum in Ian Johnson's words: "To make the claim for the scientific truth of evolution in this way is to assert nothing about how it might occur. Darwin provides one answer (through natural selection), but others have been suggested, too (including some which see a divine agency at work in the transforming process). The above argument is intended, however, to demonstrate that the general principle of evolution is, given the scientific evidence, logically unassailable and that, thus, the concept is a law of nature as truly established as is, say, gravitation."

230 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-10 05:12 ID:Bdiw1dN3

>>229

1) A bold assumption that one could have knowledge about ALL living things, but I will even grant you #1. (We'll talk about how you can KNOW anything at all, another time).

2) Agree

3) Fossil record shows that simpler organism existed, timeline is spurious. "Very long ago" is invoking the god of atheism - time.

4) Unless God IS constantly creating new species??? Which new species are you talking about? If you are saying "unless God created species, macroevolution has to have occurred," I'm sure you can see the difficulty with your 'proof.'



231 Name: Not 226 : 2007-10-10 05:56 ID:Heaven

> timeline is spurious

Your post is a little hard to understand, but I'm guessing this is your main counterargument.

Why do you say the timeline of the fossil record is spurious? For the most part it's based on a very simple principle of geology, the law of superposition - in layman's terms, this law states "new dirt is deposited on top of older dirt." Extrapolated, the meaning is "new dirt containing new fossils is deposited on top of old dirt containing older fossils." Do you disagree with this?

There's a bit of radiometric dating involved, but carbon-14 decays to undetectable levels at around 60,000 years, and there are few other isotopes suitable for dating fossils and sediments. Geological evidence is the primary tool for constructing the timeline of the fossil record.

> Which new species are you talking about?

Those species that are present today, but are not present in the fossil record. Where did they come from?

232 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-10 07:50 ID:Heaven

>>225

Evidence:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6548719.stm

Will you say that god just happened to have recycled a protein from his protein database?

233 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-10 12:01 ID:Heaven

>>227

Oh, did that site have too much proof for you, so you had to ignore it? Ok, just pretend I copy-pasted all the contents on that site, and start refuting.

234 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-10 14:30 ID:Bdiw1dN3

>>231

My main counter-argument to your proof in my post (not my main counter-argument to evolution) would be #4. Your proof relies on the assumption that God DID NOT create the different species. This is 'question begging.'

As to your question - surely you are not suggesting that every species which goes extinct is fossilized somewhere? Fossilization requires very specific conditions. Otherwise people, like people in this forum, would say that we all evolved from less than one neanderthal man. Oh, and God created them.

235 Name: proofthatgodexists.org : 2007-10-10 14:33 ID:Bdiw1dN3

>>232

You are joking right? That is your proof for evolution??? How in any way does that prove that a dinosaur became a chicken?

236 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-10 21:39 ID:Heaven

>>235

It is more reliable than the belief of a cosmic Jewish zombie who was his own father can make you live forever if you symbolically eat his flesh and telepathically tell him you accept him as youy master so he can remove an evil force from your soul that is present in humanity because a rib-woman was convinced by a talking snake to eat from a magical tree.

237 Name: not an Athiest : 2007-10-11 01:41 ID:Heaven

> the god of atheism

Strawman. Atheism rejects all gods. This is the very definition of the atheism. Whether it's logical or scientific is up for debate. But we're not debating the validity of Atheism, we're debate the existence of God. (Yes, there is a large difference)
The comparison is invalid because time is not a god in any scientific sense. It's finite, limited in 'power', has no worshippers, and likely will one day cease to exist. We can also see it's effects, so we know it's real or 'real enough'.

You may be confusing atheism with science. They are not mutually exclusive, but are not the same.

> a dinosaur became a chicken?

Strawman. This is the same argument as monkeys 'becoming' humans. Not even creationists use this long-dead fallacious argument.

> Your proof relies on the assumption that God DID NOT create the different species. This is 'question begging.'

False. We also make the assumption that:

  • the world did not pop into existence spontaneously 15 minutes ago, with your fictional memories of it existing before then being fraudulent.
  • that other people do exist, have minds, and are not robotic shells
  • our nervous system (for the average person) reveals an reasonably accurate interpretation of the world around us

All these are reasonable assumptions. If any of these were true, we'd have to prove it was true. The same goes for any god(s) and/or goddess(es).
By making these assumptions, we have a foundation to base our beliefs on (all of science, religion, and philosophy). If you wish to reject these assumptions and invalidate all human knowledge, then we can further discuss our collective course of action here:
http://4-ch.net/general/kareha.pl/1165280951/

238 Name: Not 226 : 2007-10-11 03:18 ID:Heaven

In other words, the hypothesis that God is constantly creating new species without anyone noticing - like the other assumptions that >>237 listed - is (as far as I'm aware) completely devoid of factual evidence for and factual evidence against it, and thus beyond the domain of science altogether. It is not inherently false, but it's plain silly to try to disprove a scientific law by proposing it as an alternative.

Even if it were assumed to be true, I think it would be awfully curious how God created the various species in such a way that the fossil record shows us a clear evolutionary path of descent for nearly every one of them. Either that or He fabricated the fossil record completely. Is it all a divine joke, or some sort of test of our faith?

239 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-11 13:28 ID:Heaven

Once again, "proofthatgodexists.org" ignores arguments he can't answer. That's pretty immature.

You were given a list of proofs of macroevolution. Start refuting, or admit that you can't.

240 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-11 21:23 ID:Heaven

>>239
If you mean http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/, actually, it is a summary of evidence supporting macroevolution - not proofs of macroevolution. Many of the evidences are conveniently packaged with criticisms and alternate explanations, so proofthatgodexists.org wouldn't even have to do any extra research arguing against them; he can just parrot those which appeal to him most.

Not quite what we were looking for, I think. It's nice to see a fair, balanced and well-referenced webpage on the subject, though.

241 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-15 08:28 ID:d2mtC8lt

>Your proof relies on the assumption that God DID NOT create the different species. This is 'question begging

your proof relies on the assumption that the bible is completely true...yet you cant prove that either

242 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-15 23:38 ID:Heaven

I think ptgeorg has given up, let's not all pile-on and invite further recycled debate.

243 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-21 07:12 ID:m5Lt+BAw

more importantly why is god constantly proofing new species into existence only to kill them off a short time later

i can only think of 3 explanations

god doesn't exist

god does exist but doesn't actively maintain the universe and most of the scientific view of the universes origin is correct

the creationist view is correct and the Christian god is just one sick fuck

244 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-10-21 12:04 ID:Heaven

I vote for permasage

245 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-02 13:21 ID:PNNmabw2

what i believe is god only exist in your heart not any kind of physical form. i've read somewhere, that the power of thought of many people if they think as one, eventually can make it come true... so maybe thats the thing with god, he came true because many people believe he's exist.

246 Name: 43 : 2007-11-03 10:22 ID:Heaven

>>245

Heart is a muscle. If you have something living in there then it is an infection. See a doctor.

247 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-04 10:37 ID:4EQjmEFW

We created God, he didn't create us. He is the sum of all unknowns.

>>245
Whenever people have no Idea how something happened, like how universe was created, or how something which seems impossible becomes possible for no apparent reason, it is called God.
People and societies are flat out assholes who never admit that they are clueless of the workings of the universe and cling to God to give them meaning to what they can find no meaning in.
Religion is like this set of instruction on top of millions of people's minds. Of course this will have uncontrolled effects which looks like have been a miracle or someshit, but are actually are done by the people as a whole. Only because they are a mass that believe the same thing.
/245

Another thing: why is it that we believe that logic can explain everything. Logic can be inherently flawed. Its just a system of thought that we regard as perfect and follow it. In other words, you can prove god exists with logic, and you can prove that it doesn't exist, hell, you can probably prove anyshit to anyone using logic , but either side of the argument you wont know you are right or wrong.

248 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-05 12:13 ID:HvlEs/7S

>>246

maybe you need to read all the thing that i post before actually write something... i didnt meant that god actually exist in your heart... i did write "not in any physical form" its in the form of believe. like,
>>247
just said. thats exactly what im trying to said.

249 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-05 18:02 ID:aTNZL+ZM

God did not create humans, humans created god.

250 Name: 43 : 2007-11-05 20:23 ID:Heaven

>>248

If it's a belief then it is a thought. The organ you use for that is the brain. Therefore, not the heart. The heart pumps blood.

251 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-06 02:36 ID:G9i970BS

>The organ you use for that is the brain.

Some people use instead their gonads for that. :)

252 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-06 03:14 ID:HvlEs/7S

>>250
dude, you're not going to say to your girlfriend "i love you with all my brain". you're gonna say "i love you with all my heart", i want to see you said option no.1 to a girl, i want to see what she thinks about you.

the same with belief, if you "think" that you want to believe something then. you gonna say that "im gonna believe you with all my heart" not "im gonna belief you with all my brain"....

my friend just ask a similar question: which came first, chicken or egg?

253 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-06 05:29 ID:G9i970BS

254 Name: 43 : 2007-11-06 11:03 ID:Heaven

>>252

Egg of course, evolutionarily chicken was not the first egg-laying animal.

255 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-06 12:47 ID:G9i970BS

In the sentence "which came first, chicken or egg?", the word "chicken" comes first. :)

256 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-06 14:23 ID:HvlEs/7S

>>253>>254>>255
back to topic,(make another topic about this chicken and egg thing, seems interesting isnt it?)

will you still gonna ask a girl "i love you with all my brain" ??

257 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-06 14:56 ID:Heaven

>>252
That is a phrase left over from older times. It is obviously not correct in a biological sense, but it is so commonly used to convey a message that it is still being used.

Back on the topic though, I do not know whether God is real or not. I do not know what religion is the "proper" one to follow. No matter if God is real or not, I try to live my life in a morally positive way.

258 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-06 18:05 ID:G9i970BS

The whole thread "Is God real?" is flawed, because the OP has not defined "God".

259 Name: 43 : 2007-11-06 20:09 ID:Heaven

>>256

>will you still gonna ask a girl "i love you with all my brain" ??

It's none of your business but I'll reply anyway. I've never told anyone "love you". And if were to say it I'd say just "I love you" without any cliché attached to it.

Let this thread die already.

260 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-11 19:32 ID:TrGhIJV1

>>259

Language is but a collection of clichés,... So if you wand to express your love without clichés, keep your mouth shut and do things ;-)

261 Name: 43 : 2007-11-11 20:55 ID:Heaven

>>260

Sounds good to me, I'll do it as soon as I find the object of my love.

262 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-11 23:02 ID:G9i970BS

I said "I love you" to a few girls but I never felt the need to append anything to it. YMMV.

263 Name: 43 : 2007-11-12 19:36 ID:Heaven

>>262

So that's the answer to whose question?
How is that related to the main to topic?
Let this thread die already.

264 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-12 22:29 ID:G9i970BS

Bump.

265 Name: 43 : 2007-11-13 05:55 ID:Heaven

>>264 LOL, how puerile.

266 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-13 12:46 ID:hIAzx7KC

Is some sort of divine being real or not? I think it's safe to say that the existance of such a being cannot be proven in anything even resembling a scientificaly acceptable way.
I also think that it's pointless to try to convince another person of it's existance/non-existance. When has anyone who's ever really made up their mind about it changed their mind because f points raised in a debate over it? I think maybe never. So I say this debate = completely pointless.

267 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-13 13:07 ID:G9i970BS

Yeah it's pointless, but as I said several times already in this thread that's because "God" is undefined.
For example if we define "God" as Nature and/or the Universe, then "God" is real, yes.
If we define "God" as a money-making scheme created by some fat priests since immemorial times to exploit the superstitious mortal man, then yes it's real.
If we define "God" as 42 ID:Heaven, then lol no, it's completely unreal.

268 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-15 03:08 ID:GrE4MZ48

omg another stupid debate on a stupid subject. why bother arguing? all youpeople are doing is trying to force your beliefs onto others. cant we all just live together and forget about who follows what religion and who believes in god?

Its called faith for a reason. that reason is that there is no proof for or against a god.

/thread

269 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-16 06:59 ID:xAlZd/i9

I haven't been here in a long time (think a year or more) and this was on the top so I'll respond to it. I'll be simple so I can be understood.

I know God exists, I've proven that he exists. It's simple and it's an experiment others can perform as well, meaning it's repeatable. Millions of people have done the experiment and found it valid and I've met literally hundreds of people in my lifetime that have proven the existence of God themselves. They are witnesses, as I am, of the existence of God.

We prove the existence of God by first asking if he's there. Then we have faith enough to do as he asks and we receive answers in the form of his intervention in our behalf.

It always works.

For example. Let me imagine that I'm testing whether tithing is a real principle given by God. I need to have faith enough to pay tithing. As I pay tithing I'm rewarded for my efforts. As I continue through a cycle of paying my tithing and receiving blessings I have then proven that tithing is real and came from God.

I don't have faith. Faith is the belief in something that cannot be proven. I have proven the existence of God. I pray, I read scripture, I feel his spirit in my life, I obey his commandments, I receive blessings and I understand them as miracles in my life which bring me closer to God, the cycle continues.

I no many others that have done the same and they too can tell you this. If you don't yet have faith enough to believe in God, perhaps you can have faith enough to believe in me and others like me who have proven the existence of God. I can show you how you can find out for yourself and prove his existence as well.

Simple.

270 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-16 11:48 ID:Heaven

So in other words, you say "God, my main deity, you up there?" and drop a dime in the box, the next time something good happens in your life, God must have done it for you as a way of saying "Yep. Here I'm is"?

271 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-16 14:30 ID:kk36wO1f

>>270

In principle it could work. Not I obey and something good happens, but some thing much much more specific. For example, if a Diety says "Don't eat Lobster, or you'll break out in blue polkadots", then what you do is eat lobster and look for blue polkadots.

However there are other plausible tests. For one, if a deity created the universe, all statements that that diety makes about the universe must be true. So if you checked the Book, and found false statements of physical fact -- that diety isn't real.

Or if the diety is said to be outside of time, he should be able to predict the future -- very very specifically. Not "There will be a disease outbreak" but "There will be an outbreak of a diease that strikes the immune system. This disease will kill 40% of the population of Earth." Not "Wars and Rumours of Wars" but "The Germans will take over half of Europe and throw Jews in ovens". In other words, specifics, names, dates, locations, events. And not in the poetic symbolic form either. Symbols can be interpreted after the fact to mean anything.

272 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-16 20:32 ID:Heaven

There is no evidence for a god, other than people thinking there is one because they like the idea of it and re-affirming this to each other. Let's drop this.

273 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-16 22:28 ID:aAQqNSam

Hey, this is the Science board... how about some Science?

Intercessory prayer and cardiovascular disease progression in a coronary care unit population: a randomized controlled trial.

OBJECTIVE: To determine the effect of intercessory prayer, a widely practiced complementary therapy, on cardiovascular disease progression after hospital discharge.

CONCLUSIONS: As delivered in this study, intercessory prayer had no significant effect on medical outcomes after hospitalization in a coronary care unit.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=AbstractPlus&list_uids=11761499

274 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-18 08:30 ID:Heaven

>>273
Proof that God hates people with cardiovascular disease.

275 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-11-18 21:44 ID:xAlZd/i9

>>270

The simple answer is yes that is correct. However it seems that you're not understanding or at least not accepting it.

I'll give you an experiment that you can try yourself and you'll receive the proof you're looking for. Tithing is a good one and it's been mentioned already. Tithing, simply enough, is a tenth. In this case a tenth of your income.

For the next year each paycheck you get I'd like you to pay 1/10th of your income to a church. Choose a good one, I don't want you donating to the Church of Satan because you think it's funny. A decent, good church that teaches good principles. Whether it be Shinto or Muslim or Christian donate 1/10th of your income to that church for 1 year. Pray while you do this to know if God is real with a desire to know. After a year you will see the change in your life paying tithing will bring. Prove God, he will show you he's there.

276 Name: 43 : 2007-11-19 09:54 ID:Heaven

>>275

Let's assume for a second that god does exist, how do you know he relies on church to mediate his/her/its will? What makes you think he/she/it even listens?

Here is a good experiment to validate yours, get a good sample population and have part of them donating to cheesus and another part to donate to the church of satan (assuming it exists) and another part wont donate at all. After rone year evaluate the the rate of "success" in you sample population even if it's on an arbitrary value (let's say 0-10) then do some stats and make an analysis of variance. If your god relies on some human institution to mediate his/her/its will then one of the sample populations will be significantly more "successful" than the others.

Now, this is a good experiment because you have controls. Now, go back to high school and learn how to develop a good hypothesis and a good experiment.

Also, be aware that my experiment does not test the existance of a god but goes on the assumption that a exists and thus tests that deity's acceptance of people through an institution.

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