|
|||
|
Quote:
Blessings
__________________
"For it is written, As I live, saith the Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to God." |
| Sponsored Links |
|
|||
|
Let me try again. The teapot Russell refers to is a material thing. God is spirit. Two completely different things. Science could detect a teapot out there if there is one to be found. Science is not capable of detecting a spirit any more than it is able to detect my own self awareness. A self awareness that I assure you exists. Science cannot prove my self awareness is real. In fact, many would say it is not real. Personhood for them is considered only as what they call animal identity.
I don't ask you to believe in God. Clearly you have had no worthwhile experience to believe in. Face it, others have. Experiences that are not repeatable in a lab, cannot be duplicated in a controlled situation. They are beyond the scope of science to investigate. My personal experiences are of such stuff. This is evidence for me, and for many many others of all walks of faith. This is the form of evidence that is not available to the strict materialist like Russell. We might not have figured God out exactly, but is that reason to give up the pursuit? You have your standards of evidence. Good. Don't expect everyone to agree with you, and I will do the same in that regard.
__________________
"For it is written, As I live, saith the Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to God." |
|
||||
|
Scientists seem fairly comfortable with the notion that time has a beginning. Einstein postulates that time is part of the fabric of space and that space itself does not exist without the presence of matter to fill it.
Bearing this in mind it is quite possible to postulate that there was never a point in time during which God was non-existent. If God is the one who created matter and therefore the fabric of space-time and therefor time itself, then he must have an existence outside of any frame of reference that includes time as one of its dimensions. So for as long as time has existed, so has God.
__________________
:בראשׁית ברא אלהים את השׁמים ואת הארץ |
|
||||
|
Quote:
“God has always been.” And if we were to cease to exist God would still be, He is eternal, we try to understand and compromise with our intellect, but we can never come up with the answers, because we are only formed from the radiations of God. Peace and Light Peter |
|
||||
|
Hi Someday,
The line between convincing someone of the validity of your reasoning and expecting them to adopt that reasoning can be a fine one. I readily believe you when you say you weren't trying to convert me. But even just to go along with your reasoning, I do see the necessity to make assumptions that I would call wild assumptions that are certainly not required for the naturalistic world view. For one thing, there is the assumption that there is anything beyond the physical world. Thoughts, experiences, memories, etc have very clear connections to the physical world. While it's far from understood, your self-awareness example involves thinking that leaves plenty of detectable traces inside your brain. Not so for that spirit (that we agree on). Rather than anything traceable in the physical world, you hold up personal experience as a reason for believing. You wrote Quote:
So don't expect me to be convinced by something that you yourself wouldn't find convincing in plenty of cases. So where does that leave us? There is no physical evidence for the teapot, nor is personal experience of one to be considered as carrying any weight. There is no physical evidence for god, nor is personal experience of god to be considered as carrying any weight. So what is to stop me then from putting belief in god on the same level as the celestial teapot? greets, Peter |
|
|||
|
Quote:
100 year old George Burns said “when you get to be old enough, you get to be you again”. What George meant is that with age comes perspective, and towards the end of our physical lives the ego comes to accept its demise. The ‘becoming you again’ is a reference to becoming aware of the authentic self, and you will find many older people speak like this. Do you know of any instrument of science that can detect the observer? Prove to me that you are aware of your existence at all. You described mental functions and synaptic firings and such. Can you prove to me that your physical mental processes make you self aware? If there is a teapot in your head, an MRI or X-RAY will find it. What will reveal You, the observer of your own thoughts? Or must I make an assumption? Must I assume you are aware of your own existence without scientific evidence? It's safe to say then, since I can't prove it....you must surely not be. Perhaps I'm the only self aware being in the universe. Quote:
I am not one to say every experience is understandable by the one that has it, including my own. That's why we are in pursuit. We don't throw out such evidence, we seek to understand it. Others will toss it because it is outside of their box. That's fine. Don't expect me to stay in the box. I can think scientifically, logically and so forth. To say that is the only way is simply not true, and I believe it is confining. In my work, I confine my thought to what works in that atmosphere. Should I always think that way? I am not my work, I will exist even if my work does not. Blessings
__________________
"For it is written, As I live, saith the Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to God." |
|
||||
|
Quote:
Quote:
greets, Peter Last edited by friendly hardline atheist : 07-16-2008 at 02:56 PM. |
| Sponsored Links |