Divebomb wrote:I believe one of the big inexplicable questions is that people want a "God" in order to explain what happens after death.
Probably simply because our intellect and capacity to learn and understand is too great to accept that there can be nothing but ashes after we die.
I'm not entirely sure what you mean by this, DB. But my biggest questions have to do with origin, not death. I can accept that whatever energy that provides "life" ends after death (although the material that makes up a body will continue on through an unknown amount of time). Then again, some physicists might say that energy is never lost or gained (except for some pretty funky ideas I'm not familiar with), therefore that life energy is simply moved or changed in some way. It doesn't really matter, however, because death is inevitable, and I will either care or not care when the time comes. No, where did we come from? That is the question I am most concerned with.
Divebomb wrote:I'm sure all of have heard (or said ourselves) someone say "it must be this way because God wills it so". It's an explanation for something they have no other explanation for.
I can see this in my own arguments for God. There is no other acceptable answer for the unexplainable origin of existence, so why not make up some equally unexplainable God as its creator? If that were all that I had to go on, then I would have to slip my coat back on the hanger and go sit down again. Heaven knows that would not be enough. There are other reasons, which can be difficult to describe sometimes. I have heard some people describe the "experiential" proof of God. They claim that God exists, because they have "felt" His presence on some unseen spiritual level. While I do not doubt their sincerity, I have personally had no such divine revelations. No, in the end, I must use logic, although flawed (because it is as limited as I am). Admittedly, I cannot use logic to prove that God exists, because we are dealing with absolutes beyond my understanding. Regardless, I can only play with the cards I am dealt. My argument here is simple. Everything (according to our perspective) has a beginning and an end (because we are born and then die). While this may not apply to the universe (because I don't know what the universe really is), it is the only understandable view we have of it. Therefore, the universe (time, space, energy) had to come from somewhere. A thing cannot create itself, and the word "creation" inherently implies there is a creator. Even if we did not use creation as the word, any other word for beginning implies some source for that beginning; a mother, for the birth of a child; a mind, for the foundation of an idea.
Divebomb wrote:Just for final kicks (notice the 2 spaces between paragraphs to separate this). Here's one of the anti-God arguments. I have included the logical argument in () for those familiar with formal logic.
1) God is one and only one. (A)
2) God is all powerful. (B)
3) If God is all powerful, God can do anything. (B>C)
4) If God can do anything, God can make equal to God. (C>D)
5) If God can make me equal to God, God is not one and only one. (D > ~A)
6) Therefore: God is a self-contradiction (A&~A). This is a logically valid argument. The only challenges you can make are to prove that any of #1-#5 are false statements.
There are two ways to look at this. I’ll describe the one that flat out refutes this idea first. The reasoning behind this argument is flawed, because it suggests something that is “impossible”. God is perfect, and can do anything, right? What we need to do is understand what this really means. In order to do a thing, that thing must have some sort of value in order to be done. To say, for instance, that God can do anything, therefore He can make turn Himself into an ordinary house fly without His previous powers (and thus unable to return to His previous greatness) is to describe a situation that has no possibility because God is eternal and unequaled. There is no value to this, merely because of the definition of God. In other words, 1 does not equal 0. This is very much like that old math riddle that goes as follows:
a=b Given
a^2=ab Multiply both sides by a
a^2-b^2=ab-b^2 Subract b^2 from both sides
(a+b)(a-b)=b(a-b) Factor both sides
a+b=b Divide both sides by (a-b)
b+b=b Substitute b for a since a=b
2b=b Combine like terms
2=1 Divide both sides by b
This doesn’t work, because we know that you cannot divide by (a-b), because that has a value of 0. If something has a value of 0, then it cannot be used in Divebomb’s equation, making the whole argument valueless.
The second way to look at Divebomb’s argument is to say that God already created His equal (long before He created us), and therefore the argument cannot be used to refute His existence. In the Bible, Colossians 1:14-16 (because it is the only source I have to describe this idea), it says, “14 In whom we have redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness of sins: 15 Who is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of every creature: 16 For by him were all things created, that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things were created by him, and for him:”. Now, I’m not saying that the Bible is perfect, and you must all bow down now to its awesome wisdom. I’m just using it as a way to describe an idea accepted by many people with the purpose of suggesting that DB’s riddle has different answers. It’s not my place to tell you what to believe in. I’m sure you can make those judgments on your own.
The next question here; why in wild world of sports would God do such a thing? God is so unexplainable, so unreachable, so beyond our understanding that there had to be some mediator to reach us. I have heard some Christians say that God speaking to us is like one of us trying to speak to the fish in an aquarium. Sure, we are there to help them and feed them, but to them we are some massive and dangerous beast. We have no way to express our love to the fish because we are not on the same level. God, therefore, sent us someone who would be able to show us God on a level we can relate to.
Once again, I am not telling you what to believe in. I'm just looking for possible answers to some very good questions.
Ok, I hope I haven’t thrown anyone off here by referring to the Christian faith, but I just want to show more arguments for the existence of God (no matter what religion), which is where this conversation has led us now.
The stars brightly shine upon our world, a constant reminder of our origin. We are stars.