Can you prove God's non-existence(question only for atheists,if possible)?

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The discussion centers on the challenge of proving God's non-existence, with participants arguing that the concept of God is constructed to evade disproof. Key points include the assertion that if God existed, he would require laws and balance, which are not evident in the universe. Some argue that the idea of an eternal God contradicts the nature of energy and existence, while others suggest that God's existence cannot be logically disproven due to the ambiguity surrounding the concept. The conversation also touches on the psychological origins of belief in God and the implications of certainty in human understanding. Ultimately, the consensus leans toward the belief that while God's existence is unprovable, it may be more rational to adopt atheism based on historical evidence.
  • #51
Jameson said:
I would say the concept of God is unfalsifiable. I cannot prove it wrong to someone who says that God is outside of my ability to comprehend. The concept of God is full of paradox's, which normally might lead one to say this concept is false but some say otherwise. I think for most people who believe in God, a proof is not important, as it is faith that is crucial for this belief. Others luckily take a more thoughtful approach and we find ourselves debating in forums such as this.

My question is: Why should I have to prove God doesn't exist? You're the one who claimed He does. Normally when one states that something exists it is not a proof to simply say "You can't prove it doesn't!" So my next statement is -

Prove God does exist.

Jameson

I see exactly what youre saying and i agree to an extent, but look at it this way, atheists are essentially saying that despite everything we experience day to day having a first cause, we are going to decide that the universe itself has no cause, it simply came into being for no reason.
Further still, they are saying that they do not hold out the slightest possibility, not even a fraction of a percentage that there may have been a something before the universe, and that something may have triggered its creation. Now i personally think that's a pretty bold claim, to state with absolute certainty that nothing might have come before the universe and aided its creation. Is it really that unfair to ask an atheist to give proof and reasoning for their incredibly self-assured claim?
 
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  • #52
Overdose said:
Now i personally think that's a pretty bold claim, to state with absolute certainty that nothing might have come before the universe and aided its creation.
No more bold than a person claiming that there is a god or that the universe was intentionally created.

Overdose said:
Is it really that unfair to ask an atheist to give proof and reasoning for their incredibly self-assured claim?
Yes, it's rather ridiculous to ask people for "proof and reasoning" just because they do not believe in something that someone else believes in.

I believe that an invisible potato created the universe, it told me so. If you don't believe me then prove it's not true, if you can't prove it's not true, then it's true. :rolleyes: That's exactly what religious fanatics do. Why does it always seem to be christians? Are there any non christians here that believe in a non christian god that have problems with atheists?

I don't mind if someone believes in a god, I don't mind if someone believes in some supernatural force or whatever. Most atheists do not go around bashing religion, if they do, that's not nice, but there is nothing wrong with stating they do not believe.
 
  • #53
I think you're wrong, Evo:
I'm sure it is the imperceptible green hat floating above my head which created the universe.
But perhaps on a deeper level, a potato and a hat is the same thing, right?
 
  • #54
arildno said:
I think you're wrong, Evo:
I'm sure it is the imperceptible green hat floating above my head which created the universe.
But perhaps on a deeper level, a potato and a hat is the same thing, right?
:bugeye: My potato wears a green hat! What can it mean?
 
  • #55
Evo said:
:bugeye: My potato wears a green hat! What can it mean?
:smile:
Damned if I know.
(Or was that blessed?? :confused: )
 
  • #56
Evo said:
I believe that an invisible potato created the universe, it told me so. If you don't believe me then prove it's not true, if you can't prove it's not true, then it's true. :rolleyes: That's exactly what religious fanatics do. Why does it always seem to be christians?

If you live in the US then it always seems to be christians because 80% of US citizens identify themselves as christians. Why does it always seem christians are the ones buying fries from McDonalds?
 
  • #57
nwall said:
If you live in the US then it always seems to be christians because 80% of US citizens identify themselves as christians.
Good point, maybe it's not this bad in other countries. I know I'm sick of it here in the US. Why can't people mind their own business? If you want to believe in God, that's great, if you don't, that's great. Just keep it to yourselves.

Why does it always seem christians are the ones buying fries from McDonalds?
That's a scary thought. Probably why I buy my fries at Hardee's?
 
  • #58
In my theology I have a green hat that wears a potatoe(:biggrin:) that worries about being saved from the great deep frier! :smile:

There is also a lot of talk about a third, forth, and fith eye! :smile:
 
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  • #59
polyb said:
In my theology I have a green hat that wears a potatoe(:biggrin:) that worries about being saved from the great deep frier! :smile:
Could it be that potatoes can be many things to many people?

There is also a lot of talk about a third, forth, and fifth eye! :smile:
Potatoes have many eyes, this is a proven fact, and perhaps why they are considered all seeing.
 
  • #60
All praise the omniscient potato!

Believe in the redemptive powers of the potato or face the deep frier! :smile:


Do potatoes have toes? :rolleyes:
 
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  • #61
No, a potato is a subspecies of a TOE.
 
  • #62
Overdose said:
Well, I've experienced an expansion of my consciousness first-hand so its not something i base on assumption, its hard to explain how i knew it wasnt an illusion
Explaining any experience to anyone who hasn't also had it can be just about immpossible. I understand that frustration. If you were to set your mind to trying to verbally explain it you might succeed giving some people a usable understanding, but they'd never know what the experience in question was actually like.
the nearest thing i could compare it to is being in love, if you are in love you don't question it, you just know it.
If you are in love, you don't question that you are in love, no. However, remember that often when people are in love it fades over time, or gets modified with more experience of the object of the love. It isn't unreasonable for a third party to suspect it may be a fleeting experience. Not that I don't realize that's something a person in love doesn't particularly want to have brought up.
To put it prehaps in a different way, to question the validity of my experience would be about as absurd as asking myself if the conversation i just had with a friend really happened. Thats how rooted in reality the experience was.
Understood. This, though, is where you have to be the open minded person: I can tell you of two strange experiences I've had where someone said something very thought provoking and pointed to me in a conversation, but when I went back to them later to bring it up and discuss it further, they had no idea what I was talking about, and couldn't remember the conversations I was referring to. Before I went back to re-approach the subject, it would have been absurd for me to think they wouldn't know what I was talking about. To this day I don't know if I concocted a false memory, or if they experienced some kind of spot amnesia.
Now if you believe that an experience like this might be illusionary i have no problem with that, if i didnt have first hand knowledge in this instance i would probably be open to the same conclusion too.
This is probably the very best we can do given I haven't had the experience. As long as you have no problem with my suspecting it was an illusion I'm fine. I am not asserting that I absolutly know what is going on with this experience.
The thing that I am really opposed to however is people people classifying such experiences in an off-hand manner as glitches/malfunctions and offen in the process robbing them of any meaning or worth. If such an extreme position is going to be taken then i at least want to know why, even if i don't agree with the reasoning given.
My original post in this thread gave the erroneous impression that my thoughts about this are much more off-hand than they actually are. I threw it out like that, brief and sloppy, yes, to see if the originator of this thread would be interested in following this train of though, in his quest for a "scientific" disproof of the existence of God. He asked. I answered: you sorta, kinda can do it via neurology.

This is the more important question for you to tackle, I think: is it actually robbed of meaning and worth if it is proven to be an illusion? If it changes someone's life and attitude for the better, then how could it be ultimately worthless? Here's some ammunition for you for free, Overdose, because I think you're essentially a thoughtful person: Color has been scientifically proven to be an illusion created in our brains. Color does not actually exist as a property of the objects we see. Strictly speaking we should only see different shades of gray. Does this mean color is meaningless and worthless?
I can see now from talking abit more that the certainly i read into your previous posts was actually just a possibility of quite a few you are willing to entertain, which again is a position i can identify with had i not experienced this first hand.
This, I am happy to hear. Generally, though, I wouldn't bring things up in this forum that I feel protective about, that I don't want picked at by skeptics. I am very fond of bigfoot, for example, but not so attached that I get upset if someone says "That's a total load of cr@p!."

My main reason for persistantly raising the subject of simple partial seizures is in the hope that the information will get to people who are being tormented by them without knowing what they are. The majority of simple partial symptoms are very, very disturbing. Some are downright terrifying. I have often seen what are clearly simple partial seizures described as various paranormal events by people who've never heard of a simple partial. This is a real problem if they are in fear or distress because of them. I raise the subject even with people who aren't in any particular distress in the off chance that someone who is might be reading it.
 
  • #63
I see exactly what youre saying and i agree to an extent, but look at it this way, atheists are essentially saying that despite everything we experience day to day having a first cause, we are going to decide that the universe itself has no cause, it simply came into being for no reason.
Further still, they are saying that they do not hold out the slightest possibility, not even a fraction of a percentage that there may have been a something before the universe, and that something may have triggered its creation. Now i personally think that's a pretty bold claim, to state with absolute certainty that nothing might have come before the universe and aided its creation. Is it really that unfair to ask an atheist to give proof and reasoning for their incredibly self-assured claim?

The definition of an atheist is one without the belief in God. This does not imply any of their thoughts on the universe and its origins. I think you are associating a common stereotype, just as if I said all Christians are conservative Republicans.

Why do atheists have to prove theists wrong? I'm not trying to prove you wrong, it's just you haven't proved you're right.

Jameson
 
  • #64
What am I asking,is it possible to prove God's non-existence by logic or any other way?

Since there is no evidence of any kind, either way, I can't see how you could.

\psi

The Rev
 
  • #65
Proof?

Could it be possible that early man experienced a visit by an advanced culture that exposed them to things unexplainable by their current knowledge base? It was then assumed that these advanced "people" were god, or GOD? Possibly they had nothing more to do with representing God then we do?
If this were true, it would explain many references to man being "in the form of God", when god could really be just the existence of conditions that allow the universe to exist? Nothing human form about it?
Just a thought.
Roy
I love the smileys available here! :bugeye:
 
  • #66
No-where-man said:
First of all,I apologize to moderators,because I didn't know where to put this thread,maybe in General Philosophy forum...
I put it in the Scepticism forum,because I would like to hear what arguments sceptics have against God's existence.

What am I asking,is it possible to prove God's non-existence by logic or any other way?
I,personally,am an atheist.The real problem is when you look at it the universe seem to be like an organism-ameba that is expanding,but that doesn't prove the existence of God.My arguments are that if God existed he should have laws and the balance that support his existence.But no blance lasts for ever.Everything would fall apart-including God.So,basically even God shouldn't be eternal.
Many people-believers think that God is pure energy and that's why he is eternal-but they simply forget one crucial thing.Although energy can't be created/destroyed,it has its forms.God than would be an form of energy,and since no form of energy is eternal-everything that exists is made of zillions of forms of energy.
What are your opinions?

What a stupid question...you still did not get the point did you ? You really should start studying some religion man :rolleyes:

marlon
 
  • #67
James R said:
No-where-man:



Most religions say the exact opposite.



Maybe God is the exception to that rule.

Anyway, I bet there are photons still around that existed at the beginning of the universe, so there's at least one example of something which has existed for as long as the universe itself, and might well exist until the universe ends (if it ever does). Why not God, too?



Who are you to say what God wants? Did you ever hear that God works in mysterious ways?



Maybe he is beyond the laws which govern matter and energy. After all, if he is all-powerful, then he can pretty much do what he wants, right?



And, so the argument goes, the laws exist because of God. No God, no laws. No laws no universe. See?



Why?



All you're saying here is that you don't believe in God. But maybe God exists and doesn't care that you don't believe in him. Your non-belief, by itself, proves nothing.



Maybe God created evolution.

In a case you didn't see the answers,James R.,I'll rewrite them:

Most religions say the exact opposite.

No-where-man:You believe to all religions say.They only say in what they believe.When the believe and see their God.That's auto-suggestion.Man is very easy to be manipulated.

Maybe God is the exception to that rule.

No-where-man:None lives forever.Death is the strongest thing.God can live 10^1000...000..000..000...000...000...000000...000 millleniums,but eventually he will die.Nobody can have infinite amounts energy reserves.

Anyway, I bet there are photons still around that existed at the beginning of the universe, so there's at least one example of something which has existed for as long as the universe itself, and might well exist until the universe ends (if it ever does). Why not God, too?

No-where-man:Your argument doesn't prove anything.Every,just about every God wouldn't want to stay invisible and untouchable at all,he would be happy if everyone is hailing his name and he would show himself to us.That's the basic point of all of it.What you're saying can't be said for God's existence.If you were born in the ages when people think mere wind is a god,or a mountain,or clouds you would believe or be agnostic.But everywhere where science penetrates there is less and less place for the neccesity of God's existence.More and more science penetrates there is less place for gods and wonderings,but that opens another question-does science and technology make us happier and healthier?I'd say,the answer is the opposite.
After all,in the latest statistics 95% of all of the world's scientists say that God doesn't exist at all.




Who are you to say what God wants? Did you ever hear that God works in mysterious ways?

No-where-man:I explained above-every,just about every God wouldn't want to stay invisible and untouchable at all,he would be happy if everyone is hailing his name and he would show himself to us.Your point of God working in mysterious ways is religious point,I don't buy,I'm purely talking about God's existence from logic and science.

Maybe he is beyond the laws which govern matter and energy. After all, if he is all-powerful, then he can pretty much do what he wants, right?

No-where-man:Let's say he is beyond matter and energy,but that opens up a new question where does he live-none can really be infinite.If there was an infinite God-that would require infinite amounts of useful energy-which is totally impossible.

And, so the argument goes, the laws exist because of God. No God, no laws. No laws no universe. See?



Why?

No-where-man:Give me,one just one example where something exists if there are no rules/laws-everything including the entire universe,every living being tends to achieve an balance.Once balance is disrupted everything ends.For God to exist,he couldn't be able to do whatever he wants to do,but to comply to laws,and these laws don't have to be laws of matter and energy at all.If the supposed God is coming from the higher dimension-there are different laws of physics.


All you're saying here is that you don't believe in God. But maybe God exists and doesn't care that you don't believe in him. Your non-belief, by itself, proves nothing.

No-where-man:It proves to everyone God's non-existence,not to just me.Here is why(from the below):
This is all auto-suggestion,much like you can believe ghosts exist.Here is how:Psychologists have made an very interesting experiment.They asked one group of people to go into the house that was cursed(but of course it wasn't cursed at all,but SCIENTISTS SAID TO THIS FIRST GROUP OF PEOPLE that house IS CURSED).This first group of people believed to scientists saw ghosts and felt them all over and inside the supposedly cursed house-it's a funny thing that scientists have detected various magnetic fields in that moment connected with people's brains,since brain's activity of each of the men and women was active when they started to "see" ghosts.

To the other,second group of people was told that there are no ghosts,and and this second group of people didn't see any ghost-and there were no magnetic fields.So,you see this a definite proof how people are naive.First they believed winds and mountains are gods,aswell as seas and oceans-but they were wrong-if humans could have discovered the entire universe and well beyond(but in reality neither will ever be possible) they will find no God.
God created universe without leaving any evidence?
That's not God.

These 2 groups of people proved that ghosts exist because they want,as well as God/Gods exist because people want to-God/Gods do exist because people want to see God/Gods.Trust me,I have tested it on myself believe in something you'll see something(although it isn't there),don't believe in something you wouldn't see anything.Man creates his own God/Gods,because peoples' brains are very powerful natural tools.
 
  • #68
Circular Athiesm

Almost everything in the known visable universe is made up of things that are round. Planets, stars, orbits, rings etc. almost everything. Even the things that don't appear round at first are prob made up of round things.
Maybe GOD is a circle, or at least it is round.
RW
 
  • #69
pbj59 said:
Almost everything in the known visable universe is made up of things that are round. Planets, stars, orbits, rings etc. almost everything. Even the things that don't appear round at first are prob made up of round things.
Maybe GOD is a circle, or at least it is round.
RW


But we're talking about God not circle.God is supposed to be a living being,look at my arguments,I bet none could beat them since everything will eventually will become more and more explainable in all science and technology,and provable.You see if these today's economic and political leaders allow to science and tehcnology to evolve at this rate,there would be less and less God and his wonders.After all,people used to believe that wind is a god-now they think universe is a god,if man(I truly hope,but hard to say it) finds out all secrets of the universe,and the secret of the universe itself,than there wouldn't be any god to believe in much like wind,storms and other natural phenomenas are simply natural,not artificial made by soe being.
I explained above why God couldn't exist...oh,well.
 
  • #70
Probably not possible

Any knowledge we think we have or opinions we have formed about the existence (or not) of God have come from humans, so it is all flawed and skewed. We're all guessing.
Myself, I'm skeptical that God exists the way it is represented in religious writings etc. I lean more towards God being an existence of conditions that let events happen the way they do. Not a Micro-managing entity who knows all. There are too many bad things that happen for a "Good" God to be responsible for every little detail directly.
When a young person dies, some say It must be Gods will. Why? What purpose could it possibly serve to, for example, let some poor soul suffer immeasurably, and destroy their family? Even if it sets into play events that have a positive effect later, what was gained? Trade a good thing for a bad one. :smile: I don't believe it's that way. Then again, what do I know?
Roy
 
  • #71
If God is said to exist now, then imagine a world without God. How different would it be? I can't see any difference at all - bad sh*t happens now, good people die can young, millions die of hunger, poverty or war.. What difference does this supposed God make? There are no miracles, no revelations, no messages, no interference in world affairs. Did God 'help' people when the Tsunami struck?
If he did exist, how can we tell from his actions?

This to me is proof of the non-existence of God.
 
  • #72
Or

God may not exist in the form we expect, or have been led to believe.
 
  • #73
pbj59 said:
God may not exist in the form we expect, or have been led to believe.

So Jesus (if you are a christian) was wrong? Hmmm... odd that for a deity!
 
  • #74
Adrian Baker said:
If God is said to exist now, then imagine a world without God. How different would it be? .

We have no frame of reference. It there is a God or not, we have what we have, and we can't really guess at how it might be otherwise.

I can't see any difference at all - bad sh*t happens now, good people die can young, millions die of hunger, poverty or war.. What difference does this supposed God make?

How do we know that this isn't because God exists? So that by implication at least, evil exists as well; which could explain how humans can be so cruel. Don't you ever wonder how it is that people can do the things that they do? We can accept the premise of mental illness without excluding other influences. And we don't know for a fact that all "evil" can be explained by biology or neurology. In fact just the opposite is true: We assume without proof that it can be, which is called faith.

There are no miracles, no revelations, no messages, no interference in world affairs.

That is a statement of faith on your part. People claim to witness miracles every day. based on your own faith and beliefs about the world, you choose not to believe, or even seriously consider any of them as potentially genuine.

Did God 'help' people when the Tsunami struck? If he did exist, how can we tell from his actions? This to me is proof of the non-existence of God.

Everyone dies. If we assume that a deity exists, then we can always rationalize, or have faith, that tragedy is part of a greater plan that justifies all suffering.
 
  • #75
Adrian Baker said:
If God is said to exist now, then imagine a world without God. How different would it be? I can't see any difference at all - bad sh*t happens now, good people die can young, millions die of hunger, poverty or war.. What difference does this supposed God make? There are no miracles, no revelations, no messages, no interference in world affairs. Did God 'help' people when the Tsunami struck?
If he did exist, how can we tell from his actions?

This to me is proof of the non-existence of God.
or, god exists, but we created the fear of death. meaning that maybe death wouldn't be such a bad this as we believe it to be. And we can't have a perfect world, without death, we would have massive over-population years before now. and people that suffer, would never die, they would just go on, suffering forever. You're just upholding the illusion that death is something to fear, when in reality, death is nothing
 
  • #76
Ivan Seeking said:
We have no frame of reference. It there is a God or not, we have what we have, and we can't really guess at how it might be otherwise.
Do religous people have a 'better' life than those without faith? Put 1000 christians (for example) and 1000 atheists to scrutiny and try to spot differences in luck, life : expectancy etc. Could a scientific process determine a difference?? I think not.


Ivan Seeking said:
How do we know that this isn't because God exists? So that by implication at least, evil exists as well; which could explain how humans can be so cruel. Don't you ever wonder how it is that people can do the things that they do? We can accept the premise of mental illness without excluding other influences. And we don't know for a fact that all "evil" can be explained by biology or neurology. In fact just the opposite is true: We assume without proof that it can be, which is called faith.
So, to try to explain how bad life is for many even with a God, you invent the 'force of evil'. Basically you are saying that 'life is ****', but God can't help because a 'force of evil' is at work. Explain the difference between this and not having a God to help in the first place.

Ivan Seeking said:
That is a statement of faith on your part. People claim to witness miracles every day. based on your own faith and beliefs about the world, you choose not to believe, or even seriously consider any of them as potentially genuine.
No I don't. My schizophrenic friend has constant conversations with the "people around him, and also with God'' when he doesn't take his medication. Either the pills he takes are 'anti-god' pills or they make him more rational...

Also, there are many claims of miracles in the world today. My email inbox is full of claims for missing millions in Nigeria, penis extensions, get-rich schemes etc Are these claims true merely because the person claiming them says so? Or should I apply scientific method to what they claim? In Science, a majority belief or claim does NOT become true merely because most people state it.

Ivan Seeking said:
Everyone dies. If we assume that a deity exists, then we can always rationalize, or have faith, that tragedy is part of a greater plan that justifies all suffering.
So basically you want a REASON for your life so you invent God? Do you actually believe in free will? Is your life really totally mapped out? If it is all planned out, where is free will? Without free will there is no sin, no evil, no good... So therefore no way to follow God's guidance as you have no choice... So, all the sh*t in your life is a 'gift' of God! Great stuff.. let's get praying!
 
  • #77
yomamma said:
...You're just upholding the illusion that death is something to fear, when in reality, death is nothing

No, Religious people harp on and on about judgement and death. I have no fears whatsoever about death.. I will die, cease to be, will no longer be relevant.

Tough sh*t really but that's the way it goes... I have no fears.
 
  • #78
I'm just going to respond to several points I've heard here without referencing who said them.


It is commonly accepted that there is no possible way to prove something can NOT exist. If you prove something doesn't exist here, how do we know it doesn't exist elsewhere? If you prove conditions in our setting preclude something's existence, how do we know some set of conditions we can't see doesn't allow it outside our conditions? If we claim the inability to prove something means it doesn't exist, how do we know our standard of "proof" is the only standard by which to attain certainty? God cannot be proven to not exist.

I will stick my neck out and say God also cannot be proven to exist. There are ways to prove things DO exist, but I say God isn't one of them. A similar dilemma is trying to prove one's own subjectivity. Can we "externalize" our self and prove we exist? No, because the nature of subjectivity is that it can't be externalized. But that doesn't mean subjective experience doesn't exist, it only means it doesn't yield itself to empirical scrutiny. Same with God. A careful study of the most powerful reports of God reveal it is an internal experience.

It is agonizing (to me at least) to hear people talk about the enlightenment experience who haven't studied or experienced it. After thirty years of dedicated study I still find the experience a profound mystery, yet people don't hesitate to speak casually, uninformed, and even critically of it. What sort of criticism is it that has no research, experience, or serious reflection behind it?

Regarding the possibility that God exists, why must we accept any religion's portrayal? Isn't the general idea of God, at least by thinking people, that some sort of consciousness might be involved in shaping creation? Why throw in supernatural, or omniscience, or omnipotence, or eternal existence? Those are all traits merely imagined by theologians or tribal holy men or whomever. There is no reason to mess up the discussion of whether any type of universal consciousness exists by getting caught up in blasting baseless religious supposition.
 
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  • #79
I've tried to disprove God's existence [id est: a self referent information processing network with total and universal interfacing with the fundamental quantum computational matrix of Existence- id est: The Multiverse[es[es[es[...]]]]]- however it seems it is far easier to posit an infinite variety of self-aware universal computation/control systems in the infinite/universal phase-space of possible existences- or rather it is easier to prove that there are infinite gods that can totally manipulate our world and ourselves as they see fit-

one- Existence exists- so it emerges arbitraily/chaotically- how could some factor limit Existence fundamental structure thus allowing an ordered form? then we wouldn't be talking fundamental Existence- so chaotic/random structure/fluctuation must occur- and thus in an infinite number of such fluctuations some would be randomly totally universally connected as 'God'- a self-controlled quantum cosmological system-

in any event in an 'infinte'/'eternal' Multiverse [which I consider self-evident- once you consider that Existance exists at all] would randomly result in quantum cosmologies that are inherently configured as self-aware information networks with total interfacing with all possible structures-

theoretically a universal quantum computer would by definition contain an infinitude of such 'Gods'

[edit] the infinite set of total/universally connected quantum universes might- by their nature- be connected with all the other infinite possible world-states- or 'gods'- thus the Cosmos wouldn't strictly be 'monotheistic' or 'polytheistic'- but in a way both-
 
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  • #80
setAI said:
a unique God is thus impossible . . . a singular 'creator' deity such as YHVH/yaweh/Jehova is thus disproven

I would suggest that not only did you not disprove a unique God or a singular creator deity, you cannot disprove anything whatsoever. Want to try? Try to disprove the existence of, for instance, pink elephants farting universes via big bangs.

An empirical/logical proof derives from immediately present observables or logical tautologies; those methods cannot eliminate influences beyond observation or logical constraints.
 
  • #81
I know- I just edited before you replied (^___^)
 
  • #82
setAI said:
I know- I just edited before you replied (^___^)

Well shucks, I was hoping you'd take on the pink elephant challenge. :-p
 
  • #83
Adrian Baker said:
Do religous people have a 'better' life than those without faith? Put 1000 christians (for example) and 1000 atheists to scrutiny and try to spot differences in luck, life : expectancy etc. Could a scientific process determine a difference?? I think not.

First of all, I don't see how this speaks to the point that I made. I said that we have no frame of reference by which to judge how the world might be different with or without a God. But as for spotting a difference, IIRC, there are in fact quite a few studies that show a distinct difference between people who have strong religious beliefs and those who don't. I will dig a few up later. A quick check resulted in too many unrelated hits.

So, to try to explain how bad life is for many even with a God, you invent the 'force of evil'. Basically you are saying that 'life is ****', but God can't help because a 'force of evil' is at work. Explain the difference between this and not having a God to help in the first place.

Well, we could say that, but we then assume without proof [faith] that no one has ever had a genuine encounter with the divine; including for example, Moses. Most religions teach of two opposing forces in the universe - good and evil. This is considered one of the basic "truths" revealed to us. So is this just a rationalization, or is this the most basic truth of all? Take your pick. Its all a matter of faith.


No I don't. My schizophrenic friend has constant conversations with the "people around him, and also with God'' when he doesn't take his medication. Either the pills he takes are 'anti-god' pills or they make him more rational...

That is just one example. There are plenty of people who claim to have experienced one or a few inexplicable events, such as visits from a dead relative, but who are healthy, otherwise normal individuals.

Also, there are many claims of miracles in the world today. My email inbox is full of claims for missing millions in Nigeria, penis extensions, get-rich schemes etc Are these claims true merely because the person claiming them says so? Or should I apply scientific method to what they claim? In Science, a majority belief or claim does NOT become true merely because most people state it.

No it certainly doesn't. But I can also find plenty of crooked sales people. Does that mean that all sales people are crooks? Do internet claims of perpetual motion machines invalidate all of physics? By your logic it would. You can find scams associated with just about any subject.

So basically you want a REASON for your life so you invent God? Do you actually believe in free will? Is your life really totally mapped out? If it is all planned out, where is free will? Without free will there is no sin, no evil, no good... So therefore no way to follow God's guidance as you have no choice... So, all the sh*t in your life is a 'gift' of God! Great stuff.. let's get praying!

That would be your religion, not mine. :wink:
 
  • #84
Why should we *need* to prove something that is a figment of our imagination? Whether he *is* real or not, we are saying such thing exists, and anthropomorphic opinions are of dung-worth.

Obsurd question, i would say.
 
  • #85
Bladibla said:
Why should we *need* to prove something that is a figment of our imagination? Whether he *is* real or not, we are saying such thing exists, and anthropomorphic opinions are of dung-worth.

Obsurd question, i would say.

It could be seen as an absurd question, but I think it raises interesting issues. If you read Adrian Baker's comments (and a few other who've posted in this thread), you can see they cannot separate the question of some sort of creationary consciousness existing from the practices and devices of religion. You throw out assumptions too such as God being merely imagination or anthropomorphic projection. How do you objectively contemplate an unknown if you assume you already know the truth about it?

Here we are participating at a site packed with educated and studying individuals, a site dedicated to knowledge and intelligence, yet where you see otherwise very smart people suddenly turn opinionated lightning fast when the subject of God comes up. And make no mistake about it, being opinionated is a kind of ignorance because it means one's learning door is slammed shut, and also usually that the opinion is a generalization formed from prejudices created by specific negative experiences.

Ivan Seeking mentioned Moses . . . and contrasting the original spiritual guy with what developed later is one way to distinguish between types of reports about God. If you study the range of conscious experiences humans have had over the last 3000 years, there is one which has impressed a great many people. This experience is reported in such a way that it sounds like the person's consciousness has joined some greater consciousness (e.g., Jesus says "I and my Father are One"). When people met individuals having this experience, often they would listen or follow them around trying to have a bit of experience for themselves.

But once the high guy dies, and along with it the most powerful living example of the experience, then with each succeeding generation the experience fades. As the experience fades, people try to find ways to get inspired, but not knowing how to have the experience themselves, start developing substitute experiences.

I believe that is what religion is, all the stuff built up over the centuries attempting to recreate some sense of the original experience in the absence of the original guy who realized it. So whatever it was that Moses or Jesus or the Buddha et al experienced, I don't think much of it is found in organized religion.

As a few people here know, I've made a 30 year study of the experience (i.e., JUST the experience, sans all religion) trying to understand what it is, and I personally believe there is something to it. There have been a lot of people devoted to practicing it through a special type of meditation or inner prayer often referred to as union.

However, whether or not there's something worthwhile to union is a different issue from if the experience really is of some greater consciousness. People discussing the possibility of a creationary consciousness who've not experienced union themselves, or without even studying the history of it, or without the sense of it faith can give . . . are reduced considering the logic of God's existence.

Logic-wise we might ask, does creation need a conscious creator? In other words, if we define creator as whatever it is that brought about creation, then the "creator" is what it takes to account for all that we know to exist. Physicalists say physics alone can account for everything, so physicalness to them is the creator. But physicalists cannot yet account for either the quality of organization that originated life, or consciousness. So it might be that the creationary forces have more to them than pure physicalness and mechanics.

Getting back to your point that trying to prove God is absurd, and mine that it might be but it still raises interesting issues. . . summing up I'd say it reveals 1) how intelligent people often cannot talk about the creator subject intelligently because of prejudices toward religion, 2) that people are generally ignorant about the most reliable experience we have that "something more" might exist (i.e., union experience), and 3) that the only investigative-type questions we can really get anywhere with are if union experience has relevance, and/or if we need some sort of creationary consciousness to help account for what we know to exist in creation.
 
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  • #86
You throw out assumptions too such as God being merely imagination or anthropomorphic projection. How do you objectively contemplate an unknown if you assume you already know the truth about it?

I didn't say i knew the truth about it. But the truth (note, not *my* knowledge of truth) is, god *is* a anthropomorphic and yes, pure figment of our imagination. Otherwise, where is the unbiased proof of god? Do we see any recognized communication with god? Based on a pure scientific point of view (although there are varying degrees of thought within science, i agree), a pure hypothesis (god) based without any evidence is worthless.

Here we are participating at a site packed with educated and studying individuals, a site dedicated to knowledge and intelligence, yet where you see otherwise very smart people suddenly turn opinionated lightning fast when the subject of God comes up. And make no mistake about it, being opinionated is a kind of ignorance because it means one's learning door is slammed shut, and also usually that the opinion is a generalization formed from prejudices created by specific negative experiences.

But beyond the context of this forum, this isn't true. There are many highly intelligent and knowledged people in this world now, and in the past. Even famous physicists (who you say are opinionated in this god-discussion) such as keplar, Newton and co were devoutly religious, at least from what we can see from historical contexts. It is not necessary to say that people who practise science in a professional manner and atheist ARE atheist because of a bad experience. Humans arn't born with the knowledge of god, and therefore, for whatever reason, a scientist or ANY other person can acknowledge of deny the existence of god. This by no means means that you cannot make a discussion now, but to make a everlasting conclusion, which from what we have seen up to this time is the useful information, waiting is what we have to do.



There are many truths humans don't know about, or at least not now. Is this to say that there is a greater conscious known as god? Not necessarily. The human race is always learning, evolving, and developing. Scientifically it is not possible to know our futures, and with little extrapolation of the data we have now, we can hypothesise what *could* happen, e.g. progression in genetic research. (this applies to all aspects of science and society though). So until we have scientifically gathered all information, ALL information our brain allows to understand, from science to literature to whatever, *then* we can discuss the possible existence of god.

Getting back to your point that trying to prove God is absurd, and mine that it might be but it still raises interesting issues. . . summing up I'd say it reveals 1) how intelligent people often cannot talk about the creator subject intelligently because of prejudices toward religion, 2) that people are generally ignorant about the most reliable experience we have that "something more" might exist (i.e., union experience), and 3) that the only investigative-type questions we can really get anywhere with are if union experience has relevance, and/or if we need some sort of creationary consciousness to help account for what we know to exist in creation

This as i said before, just is not true. Its not as if this forum is the whole world, MANY knowledgeable people are religious and 'unopinionated'.
It is VERY ironic and misleading for you to say that 'only investigative people can really get anywhere..'. Arn't we discussing God now? Whether i like him or not, and whether you disagree with me or not, we are wasting at least some time on this post. Me writing this post now, and you writing your post. And its not as if people in science just play around with numbers and chemicals all the time. Who are we kidding here? Scientists ALWAYS are in research, and give answers to these kind of questions without becoming degenerative scum.
 
  • #87
Nope, I can't disprove that there is at least some form of god. I think you can tell a few things about what that god is like if it does exist by looking at the universe, but that's about it. Anyway...

"Can you prove god's non-existance?"

The word God in this question can be switched with absolutely anything your imagination can come up with that MIGHT exist. There are an infinite number of undisprovable things, but only a few provable ones in comparison. Because of this, it's the job of those who do believe in god to prove his existence before anybody should accept it. Also, of course, not being able to disprove something proves nothing. From a "logical" standpoint, I have to wonder, why start with god? Why not try to prove the existence of some of the other infinite things we have no evidence for, but that MIGHT exist, first? Why even bother with any of them? Until there is some evidence for something, there's no point in wasting any thought on whether it exists or not IMO. It'll never lead anywhere.
 
  • #88
deity

First, I like to play devils advocate in discussions like this, so don't take my writings on this too serious.
Since I have never personally met Jesus or his father, I couldn't say whether he was right or wrong. Can you? It really is all based on pure blind faith. But, what exactly do you have faith in? Everything we think we know about Christianity ( and most other " religions" ) has been written by humans who are prone to manipulate information to suit their agenda's. Consider comparing it to other knowledge of the day. We turn our souls and happiness over to a religion based on writings from 2000 years ago. Would you go to the hospital having a heart attack and let them use medical treatments from that era? How about geography? Let's use a map from 5 AD to get to Paris from Detroit? Should be an easy, since america is really part of asia and we should be able to see it from here- the world was flat then. Religion can't hold up to scientific scrutiny, it was never meant to be that. It gives you things to feel guilty about. If you feel too guilty when you die, you prob won't get to heaven. Thats the way it seems to be written.
Religion works for you if you really believe it. Thats what's important in the end. Dont see how Gods existence could be proved or dis-proved without Gods participation.

Adrian Baker said:
So Jesus (if you are a christian) was wrong? Hmmm... odd that for a deity!
 
  • #89
Could the existence of God be disproved by providing a rational basis for "god-like" phenomenon?
 
  • #90
Swampeast Mike said:
Could the existence of God be disproved by providing a rational basis for "god-like" phenomenon?

Can you give an example of what you mean?
 
  • #91
Les Sleeth said:
2) that people are generally ignorant about the most reliable experience we have that "something more" might exist (i.e., union experience)

That is where I usually have disagreements with people. Having an experience may be a great way to justify something to one's self, because you yourself went through it, but to everyone else I wouldn't say is credible. I can't understand your experience (I mean you in a general sense) and I just don't see how that can be used as an explanation.

People have weird feelings all of the time. We all worry about our loved ones. We all think of the worst case scenarios in our head and dread them, only to find out most of the time nothing bad happened. But what I've noticed is that the few times someone has one of these feelings and it does happen, that's all he/she can remember. It's like God spoke to that person and gave him/her a message.

Personally, and I know this is not a happy way to look at it, I think people's feelings and personal "experiences" cloud judgment and rational thinking.
 
  • #92
Jameson said:
Personally, and I know this is not a happy way to look at it, I think people's feelings and personal "experiences" cloud judgment and rational thinking.

That is certainly true, however, this is also true of personal bias - the need to believe that their is no God.
 
  • #93
Right, biases cloud open minded thinking. No disagreement there.

When I get in discussions with people about religion, what makes me want to get up and leave is when the other person says, "I just know." That's what I was talking about. Relying on personal "experiences" or feelings to justify something otherwise irrational.

Of course this comment is biased by my own personal views. I think it's impossible to write an opinion that's unbiased.
 
  • #94
Perhaps we are one tiny organism living inside of another organism? Just a thought. I mean, look at a cell. To whatever lives in a cell, it would seem to huge and infinate and unexplainable. But to us, it's so small you have to look at it with a microscope! I mean, an atom. Smallest building block of life. But what makes up an atom? And what makes up that? and what makes up that? and so on and so forth. do you get what I am saying?
 
  • #95
Can you give an example of what you mean?

Infinite examples should this be true.

Photons are the result and consequence of matter that is shared between separated bodies.
 
  • #96
Shouldn't this be a philosophy thread? I'm more accustomed to addressing unexplained phenomenon, unusual observations and outlandish interpretations in this niche of the forum.
 
  • #97
Jameson said:
That is where I usually have disagreements with people. Having an experience may be a great way to justify something to one's self, because you yourself went through it, but to everyone else I wouldn't say is credible. I can't understand your experience (I mean you in a general sense) and I just don't see how that can be used as an explanation.

Okay, but let's put things in context before getting off on stuff I didn't mean to say.

We are talking about proving the existence of God, and I think everyone generally accepts that the meaning of "proof" as used for this thread means empirical proof. Empirical proof has standards which must be met, and one of those is that whatever is proposed to exist must be "observable."

What does observable mean? It means to use the senses to directly witness either an event or indications by machinery designed to magnify or otherwise expose something beyond direct observation; also implicitly implied is that not only can you observe it, others must be able to as well.

The relevant points are: 1) all empirical proofs are dependent on sense data, and 2)whatever can be observed with the senses must be external to consciousness.

The senses give consciousness sense experience. With the senses we "feel" temperature and pressure on the skin, and in a way we "feel" smells, tastes, sounds and sights too in the sense of our nerves being sensitive to such information. To understand where I'm going with all this it's important to see that the signals senses carry are one thing, and what happens when they reach consciousness is another. Consciousness is what "experiences" and the senses are avenues set up to feed consciousness info from the outside world.

If we clearly distinguish between what can stimulate experience, and experience itself, then we might ask: Is consciousness capable of any other type of experience besides sense experience?

For example, if there were a way to remove sensory input, say even beyond what sensory deprivation devices achieve, is there anything left to experience? You might say there's the intellect and emotions. Okay, let's say we could turn them off too. In that rare inner silence, is anything left NOW to experience?

First, if there is, you cannot find out until you achieve that silence. Second, if there is, that experience happens from within experience itself, and so by definition it cannot be externalized for others to observe. If you experience something in that silence over and over for many years, you might have proven to yourself something, but you will never be able to prove to others you experience something there.

And you know what. . . who cares? If I have to wait until I can convince the world, or you or anybody that my inner experience is trustworthy, then I'll be nothing but a big mass of self doubt.

So the way such "inner" proofs work is, I prove it to myself, you prove it to yourself, Ivan proves it to himself . . . If you are someone who has faith in that inner thing, then you will work at strengthening that certainty by pursuing inner experinece; and you aren't going to waste your time trying to empirically prove something that is neither experienced with the senses nor externalizable.


Jameson said:
People have weird feelings all of the time. We all worry about our loved ones. We all think of the worst case scenarios in our head and dread them, only to find out most of the time nothing bad happened. But what I've noticed is that the few times someone has one of these feelings and it does happen, that's all he/she can remember. It's like God spoke to that person and gave him/her a message.

You are talking about mental confusion. Just because someone attributes something to God doesn't mean they know anything about God, or that somehow it's a reflection of everyone who says they experience God.

If someone says he has an invisible white cat, does that mean all people who claim to own a white cat are deluded? Joe McCarthy claimed to be a patriot. Does that mean John McCain, who claims to be a patriot, is just like him?


Jameson said:
Personally, and I know this is not a happy way to look at it, I think people's feelings and personal "experiences" cloud judgment and rational thinking.

That doesn't make sense. You cannot possibly escape your personal experience. It is you every waking moment (and maybe even while you sleep). Take that away and you are nothing but a computer. Of course, that is one's right, and some people do seem so afraid to feel they choose to become like a computer.


Jameson said:
When I get in discussions with people about religion. . .

Ahhh, but we weren't talking about religion, we were talking about God. And that was one of my points, that people can't seem to distinguish between the two.


Jameson said:
. . . what makes me want to get up and leave is when the other person says, "I just know." That's what I was talking about. Relying on personal "experiences" or feelings to justify something otherwise irrational.

How do you know you love your mother? Do you "just know"? Can you prove it in a laboratory? If not, then is your love an illusion? Love isn't rational, love is a feeling and there are legitimate feelings and deluded feelings, just like there is rational thought and irrational thought. Why mix up the two realms (feeling and rationality)? They are completely different, each with its own rules for knowing.
 
  • #98
Thank you for your response.

As for the main part of your statement, I agree. Our personal experiences give us our perception of our reality. The point I was making is that some of these experiences can be validated by other means (math, science), and some cannot. When I say that I had an experience with God this could be valid, but someone else cannot vouch for that experience. It is completely within my own senses, not the senses of the universe like many common accepted things are.

Les Sleeth said:
You are talking about mental confusion. Just because someone attributes something to God doesn't mean they know anything about God, or that somehow it's a reflection of everyone who says they experience God.

If someone says he has an invisible white cat, does that mean all people who claim to own a white cat are deluded? Joe McCarthy claimed to be a patriot. Does that mean John McCain, who claims to be a patriot, is just like him?

Mental confusion was exactly my point. I believe that personal experiences lead to biases and irrational thinking. To further my statement, I would say that the fact that we have sense perceptions really makes it impossible to have an objective thought, but we can dwell into that more if you wish.

Les Sleeth said:
That doesn't make sense. You cannot possibly escape your personal experience. It is you every waking moment (and maybe even while you sleep). Take that away and you are nothing but a computer. Of course, that is one's right, and some people do seem so afraid to feel they choose to become like a computer.

Correct you are. The thing that seems to make us as humans so distinct from the rest of the animal kingdom are our complex thoughts, emotions, and importance of our personal experiences. I believe that this is our greatest attribute because it gives us independence, free thinking, and imagination, but I also consider it to be our greatest flaw. We could never think as rationally as a computer.

Les Sleeth said:
How do you know you love your mother? Do you "just know"? Can you prove it in a laboratory? If not, then is your love an illusion? Love isn't rational, love is a feeling and there are legitimate feelings and deluded feelings, just like there is rational thought and irrational thought. Why mix up the two realms (feeling and rationality)? They are completely different, each with its own rules for knowing.

I would love to talk about love for days, no pun intended. Just to post a little comment, I think the reason love is such a hard ground to debate on is because most people's definition of love is completely different from other's, which makes it hard to define generally. I would call love a combination of emotions felt for someone and the understanding of acceptance and forgiveness even when the person does not deserve it. I cannot prove my mother loves me, as I cannot prove many things, but I do not believe she loves me purely based on my senses, but more of what I see her do - her actions.

Les Sleeth said:
Ahhh, but we weren't talking about religion, we were talking about God. And that was one of my points, that people can't seem to distinguish between the two.

Sorry to not be clear, but I wasn't implying that you were talking about religion. I was merely giving a common example of personal experiences giving as a reason - faith versus other methods of knowledge.

Jameson
 
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  • #99
PIT2 said:
U might suspect this, but i was merely wondering if there is any science behind this suspicion. For instance any research that indicates meditation can indeed cause seizures, or even that breathing techniques can cause seizures. I suspect if these were the case, meditation would be banned by now.
As I said, the hallucinations that some beginners experience during meditation are ascribed by the roshis to poor breathing techiques. They instruct the novice to adjust their breathing accordingly.

Seizures can, indeed, be caused by anoxia, lack of oxygen, and also by hyperventilation. It is standard practise during an EEG to have the patient hyperventilate to see if this triggers any seizure activity that can be picked up by the electrodes.

In addition, seizures seem to arise most easily during sleep, or during periods of rest after exertion. Part of the EEG involves telling the patient to relax as much as possible and calm their mental activity in so far as they can, much as a person does in meditation, to see if this produces any seizure activity.

Meditation isn't banned because, if people are having seizures from meditation, they're never more serious than simple partials, which most people in the general population already have once in a while anyway. In general the benefits of it outweight any risk of seizure harm. The focus and discipline the meditator acquires, and the general mental calm they can bring from it to their daily lives, is really what it's all about.
I do not think this example is relevant. U talk about it being "the best case against jumping to the conclusion that everything that comes out of meditation is automatically good".
The relevance is that a pathology was mistaken for enlightement.
Well first of all, of course not everything that comes out of meditation will be good. (there must be some bad side effects :wink: )
Some people get serious hemorroids, yes.
Secondly, the fact that this guy developed a brain-tumor, cannot be seen as a result of the meditation itself, neither can the fact that it was discovered too late.
No one is blaming the brain tumor on the meditation. Don't erect straw men.

The fact is wasn't discovered earlier was, in fact, directly related to the meditation. It was a bunch of idiot amateurs who didn't know what they were doing, and couldn't tell the difference between his odd behavior and an enlightenment.
Thirdly, the link between braintumor and the sensation of enlightenment cannot solidly be demonstrated by this case.
The connection between his feelings of bliss and the brain tumor are not in any doubt whatever. It is the typical symptom of frontal lobe syndrome.
Im sure there have been people that meditated while having a migraine, a headache, an ear-infection, or a broken leg for that matter.
I'm sure there have, but what do these have to do with anything?
 
  • #100
Jameson said:
That is where I usually have disagreements with people. Having an experience may be a great way to justify something to one's self, because you yourself went through it, but to everyone else I wouldn't say is credible. I can't understand your experience (I mean you in a general sense) and I just don't see how that can be used as an explanation.

People have weird feelings all of the time. We all worry about our loved ones. We all think of the worst case scenarios in our head and dread them, only to find out most of the time nothing bad happened. But what I've noticed is that the few times someone has one of these feelings and it does happen, that's all he/she can remember. It's like God spoke to that person and gave him/her a message.

Personally, and I know this is not a happy way to look at it, I think people's feelings and personal "experiences" cloud judgment and rational thinking.


you cannot prove God exists based on someone else's experience, I fully understand it when people say that. Alot of people, however, claim they have had some sort of experience with God. It is hard to say from a scientific aspect weather or not God exists. I personally believe there is a devine being that exists. Yes, I am a Christian, but do I claim to know that God exsits with 100% assurity, not at all. I know its still theoretical, that's why we call it "faith", not "fact". Although some people may say its "blind faith", but I don't agree with this notion.

I guess only you can judge weather or not God exists. In my opinion, its imposible to be a true atheiest beacuse you cannot prove God doesn't exist. And you can't say he doesn't exists just because you don't want him to exists.
 
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