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All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god
General Boards - Religion & Philosophy
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All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

3

Mar 2, 2024, 4:15 PM
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Prove me wrong.

Arguments from silence will not suffice.

This would include pretty much the entire Intelligent Design movement.

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It can't be proven either way.

3

Mar 2, 2024, 4:50 PM
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To believe is ENTIRELY a matter of faith in something that can't be proven. I believe there is a God, but that is shaped by a combination of my own experience, feelings, and ability to reason. I won't argue about it as trying to prove it is pointless, and all I can do is try to explain my view and people are free to agree or disagree, I really don't care.

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"Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard."
- H. L. Mencken


Re: It can't be proven either way.

2

Mar 3, 2024, 11:07 AM
Reply

"To believe is ENTIRELY a matter of faith in something that can't be proven"

Who made that rule?

If there actually was a god existing in space and time there would be physical evidence of his presence.

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It's not a "rule", it's a fact.

1

Mar 3, 2024, 3:29 PM
Reply

The existence of God can't be proven. Many think God's existence can be supported with evidence (you know those arguments), but it comes down to believing something that can't be proven, which is the very definition of faith.

If there actually was a god existing in space and time there would be physical evidence of his presence.

God could exist outside of time and space. That's exactly what many believe.

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"Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard."
- H. L. Mencken


Re: It's not a "rule", it's a fact.

3

Mar 3, 2024, 3:38 PM
Reply

“The existence of god can’t be proven”

Not based on the evidence we have now, but who’s to say we won’t have it tomorrow?

If there is a god I doubt he’s bound by what’s been written in an ancient text about him.

Maybe there is evidence to be found. Idk what that would be but if it’s possible he exist, it’s possible he can and will show himself.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

2

Mar 2, 2024, 6:08 PM
Reply

Well now...

That's a good way to fill up an afternoon. But I've got a little time today.


I'll start with two points. One related to proof. Proof is different for everyone. 12 Jurors said OJ didn't kill Nicole, but a lot of other people said he did kill her. The trial was on TV, so both groups saw exactly the same evidence, though proof was different to all of them.

So to prove something to you, we'd have to get into your "personal proof" threshold. That is, when is something proved to you, and when is it not?


Second would be a definition of what the term God means to you. For instance, if you were a Diest, and believed that God created the universe like a fine watch, and then walked away, Creation itself would be proof - the fact that there is something rather than nothing. That there is existence at all would be proof.

But, if you have a higher threshold on what the term God means, like, he involves himself in human lives, then you'd need different proof I suppose. Some might consider the existence of life, as opposed to a universe full of burning gas and cold rocks, as evidence for the existence of God.

Every different definition, or expectation, of what God is, or might be, leads down a different path.

So I'd start with those two questions.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

1

Mar 2, 2024, 6:15 PM
Reply

I'll follow up with saying to a Deist,

"All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god"

would be proof in itself to him. The fact that there is physical evidence, at all, you know.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

1

Mar 3, 2024, 8:20 AM [ in reply to Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god ]
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Ok that’s what I was getting at. So you’re saying the universe itself and living beings could be physical proof of some type of god?

That’s a fair answer. I would counter and say the evidence we have points towards slow evolution from simple to complex forms.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

1

Mar 3, 2024, 4:05 PM
Reply

As silly as it may sound, it really does come down to descriptions and definitions to some degree.

A science professor once told me "You only find what you are looking for." So, if one is looking for an old man in the clouds, that is what you will, or will not, find.

If God is more akin to say, magnetism, then you wouldn't even be looking for that and you may miss it. Because you're looking for an old man, not magnetism.


So one has to define what God even is, before they even have a chance to say if he exists or not. But the caveat to that is, YOU, (or me), are the ones deciding what he is, in our own minds. And what basis do we put that on? - our own subjective decision.

Follow that path far enough down the rabbit hole and you get into the "observer-created universe" stuff.


So let's say I expect God to be a loving old man in the clouds. Why am I looking for that, exactly? Who said he was an old man in the clouds...me, or someone else told me that, or a book I read called the Bible? Now, the odds that I find a loving old man in the clouds are pretty slim. Not outside of the realm of possibility, but slim. So that would lead me to the conclusion that God probably doesn't exist.

Well, what if I defined God as an ethereal essence that permeates my dreams and guides events in my life with a hidden hand? Ok, I might see some of that. There is surely mystery in the universe. Things I can't explain. Strange events that seem to coincide, or tie together, or whatnot. Then I say, well, maybe God does exist. I have some evidence that might lead me to think that.

And finally, lets say God is a disconnected creator. He's the strong and weak nuclear force, holding everything in the universe together. Well, in that case, I see him all over the place. In every speck of matter I can see or imagine. So of course God exists. I see him everywhere.

So the question becomes, which description is the "real" God, and why?

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

1

Mar 3, 2024, 4:15 PM
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You’re spot on as usual.

Funny I was listening to a podcast this morning about the law of attraction and how the universe gives you what you tell it to.

Some people say this power in the universe is “god”.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

1

Mar 3, 2024, 5:27 PM
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I've got a rambling post below, not as concise as my above one, but the universe is STRANGE. I mean, we simplify it into little orbs and suns floating around in a void, but that's just us simplifying it.

I couldn't quite convey that clearly in my ramble post, but what's important to realize is that we are experiencing the universe with 2 eyes, 2 ears, 20 fingers and toes, and a limited mind.

Those aren't very many, or very good, tools. Even a dog hears better than I do, and an owl surely sees better.

We HAVE to be missing so much with such limited tools. But the question is, what is it?

I'll break out another crude analogy. Imagine trying to appreciate a wall sized Monet painting with the lights out. Imagine what you miss, when you look at it this way:




versus this way:





We so often forget how limited our tools are. I can't say what all else there is to the universe, but I know my tools to experience it all are sorely lacking. That's why, although I can't say what it is, I feel like there must be more, whether it's an old man or a subatomic force.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

1

Mar 3, 2024, 5:14 PM [ in reply to Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god ]
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>I would counter and say the evidence we have points towards slow evolution from simple to complex forms.

I don't disagree with that at all, but I also don't know if evolution is necessarily directly tied to God. I mean it could be, in a creator sense, where he designed a system and then moved on to something else. Intelligent design stuff. And that's a very common belief. The fact that there is order, at all, in anything, as opposed to pure chaos.

Why do planets move in orbits rather than just fly around in any direction, etc? But the fact is that the distribution of matter in the observable universe is largely chaotic. It's driven by forces like gravity, etc., but the distribution of the matter itself is as if you dropped a deck of playing cards on the floor...clumps here, spread out there...both random and ordered.

We "see" the universe as a sphere because of the way light works, but there's nothing to say that it is a sphere, that's just a limitation of our particular perspective. Without going too far off on a tangent, my larger point is that there likely just as much chaos in the universe as order if not more. In fact, they are two sides of the same coin. That which isn't "chaos" is order. And that which isn't "order," is chaos. What else would they be - they are definitional complements of each other. 

Some just focus on the order and see that as some justification for their being a God. When the reverse could be equally true. If I use chaos as my foundation for there being no God, there's plenty of evidence for that too.

Think of a single atom. I can say "Well, that atom is completely designed and structured. It has a well-defined nucleus of protons and neutrons. It has electrons neatly arranged in S, P, D and F shells. It's a fine watch made by a creator.

But that's just a description, designed by US, to simplify a reality we can hardly grasp. The "reality" is that there are no hard particles. No point electrons. Everything is a smear of probabilities at the atomic level. Clouds of unpredictable movements layered on clouds of unpredictable movements. That miraculously(?), lead to a predictable result - an atom that can bond with others.

So there is an order of sorts, that is itself composed of chaotic elements. That's crazy.

I'm sure you have heard the analogy that hard matter is mostly empty space, because each and every atom matter is composed of is mostly empty space. I had a professor describe it to me once as "It's like building a brick house by stacking handfuls of clouds together. If you stack enough handfuls of clouds together, you eventually end up with a brick house. Electrons barely have mass at all. They are the cloud. It's their random 'movement' smeared around the nucleus, that creates "matter," so, even the hardest brick is composed of nebulous whiffs of almost nothing once you delve into its composition.

What I'm getting at is that to use order as evidence for God is to deny the chaos. And to use chaos as evidence for there not being a God is to deny the order. See the conundrum? That's why I'm not sure the "order" argument holds any more water than any other argument for, or against, the existence of God. Order, like life, may not be anything special. It just "is." And if it just 'is', and is nothing special, then how is that particularly compelling evidence for a God that can be discerned by finding "specialness" in the universe, somehow?

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

1

Mar 3, 2024, 5:50 PM
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Ok, it usually takes me about 1000 words before I can distill a concept.

What I was trying to get at in all of that is: "What if order itself is a cherry-picked construct of our minds."

Order might not be "by design," it might be "be perception."

If we have evidence that even order itself can be composed of chaotic components, like in an atom, say, then how is 'order' special in any way? And if it's not special in any way, then how can it be used as evidence for God, if one is defining God as someone who might leave special "clues" to be found in the universe as evidence of his existence.

It took a lot of words to get there, but that's what I've been chewing on, trying to get out.


A similar concept would be that if we ever find another pale-blue dot, like Earth, in the universe, or life anywhere, for that matter, then we're no longer "special."

That would not in itself disprove the existence of God, but it would undermine the "special" argument. That's why I keep saying the definition is so important. One doesn't want to bank on the "special" argument if that rug might be yanked out from under you. God could very well still exist, by another definition, but the "special" argument would no longer hold any water.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

1

Mar 3, 2024, 6:05 PM
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Here's a visual example of what I'm trying to express in words. Are the words in this picture ordered, or chaotic? It depends on your perspective. Two sides of the same coin, and which you see is dependent on your perspective. The picture is neither inherently ordered or chaotic, only your perspective makes it one or the other.




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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

1

Mar 4, 2024, 6:57 AM [ in reply to Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god ]
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I should have been more clear when I mentioned evolution.

There is evidence that that the big bang occurred naturally, and that all the complexity we see today evolved from simple life forms, in a chaotic, destructive process that didn't have any sympathy for life.

The majority of all the species that ever lived have gone extinct. If there is a god that was guiding that process, he doesn't seem to be a loving one.

You're right, that doesn't prove there wasn't something behind it, but to me it seems to point away from that idea.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

1

Mar 4, 2024, 2:22 PM
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> he doesn't seem to be a loving one.

Yes, that's a WHOLE different branch of discussion, the morality side. Good thing we've got a board to talk about all this, it might take some time. Ha ha ha.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

2

Mar 2, 2024, 6:13 PM
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I personally wouldn't put it that way. God is not falsifiable, you can't disprove it. That is the same for any god/gods.

The better question is what physical evidence is there for god(s). What would it even look like?

As of right now, we only have testimonial evidence and we know that is the least reliable type of evidence. That's why courts prefer to have physical evidence.

Ask any religious person on this board for physical evidence of their god. They don't have it. They only have testimony. But so do other gods.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god


Mar 2, 2024, 6:19 PM
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You make some good points but I do think it goes beyond physical.

What I mean is that something like love, or order, are not tangible, physical items. We see order in our solar system, but 'order' isn't something one can place on an evidence table. It exists, in some theoretical or observational sense, but it's not exactly physical.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

1

Mar 2, 2024, 6:49 PM
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Sure, but every instance of love that i’m aware of in my life does have some accompanying physical evidence. My family tells me they love me. The do things for me that I can unequivocally say came from them.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

1

Mar 2, 2024, 7:03 PM
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Still, you have to take it on faith that they love you - despite their actions.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

1

Mar 2, 2024, 7:08 PM
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No, it’s not. I have adequate evidence of love from my family.

It’s because of this evidence i don’t need faith to believe they love me.

You are conflating the faith required to believe something that doesn’t have evidence

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god


Mar 2, 2024, 9:48 PM [ in reply to Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god ]
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Yes, I agree with that. In fact, to take that to its extreme and pose a rhetorical question I ask myself all the time.

"If there were no people, would love (or any other emotion, for that matter) even exist? If space was an empty void, save for rocks and stars, would there be love, or hate, or sadness, or joy?"

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god


Mar 2, 2024, 6:31 PM [ in reply to Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god ]
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Testimony, or I'll call it the personal experience that leads to testimony, is a conundrum in a way.

It's probably the thing that is most convincing to one's self, but also potentially the least convincing to others. Precisely because it IS personal.

I got into a raging argument with a dentist once over a toothache. I told him "I'm experiencing pain. There is no doubt in my mind whether it's pain or not. I assure you, my jaw hurts like hell."

He looked around a bit and said "There's nothing there. You can't be in pain."

I re-iterated to him that although the pain might not his personal experience, it was mine. And while the pain might not be real for him, it was for me."

We went back and forth a bit, and he finally gave me a few shots and sent me on my way. My point being, one can't always convey a personal experience, but when something happens to you, you know it.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

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Mar 2, 2024, 6:47 PM
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Sure. And I’m not here to tell anyone whose had a personal experience whether it was real or not. I’m only interested in others experience on this topic insofar as they can provide evidence for it. It’s easy to say “god speaks to me”, Ive spoken with people who believe in different gods who have said this. So that right there tells me personal testimony won’t get you to the truth.

What I have never seen one iota of is substantiated testimony of anything supernatural. Not one single thing. I’ve asked for it personally, ive asked others, ive searched for it. Literally nothing. So in my experience at least, it’s either extremely hard to find, doesn’t want to be found or doesn’t exist.

You know what does have hard physical evidence? Big bang theory, evolution, and many other natural phenomena. Why would I think the things with hard evidence are likely wrong vs people simply saying their religion is true?

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

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Mar 2, 2024, 10:50 PM
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I'm with you on a lot of that, but with a few reservations, perhaps.


>So that right there tells me personal testimony won’t get you to the truth.

Sure, another person's experience may not be your path to understanding, or truth, or whatever term one wants to use. If there even is a singular truth. But, their experience may open some understanding for you. I try to think of what others tell me as clues, not necessarily solutions, for myself. Maybe it's helpful, maybe it's not - it all depends, you know.


>What I have never seen one iota of is substantiated testimony of anything supernatural.

This is a bit tougher because supernatural phenomenon may be right in front of our eyes, we just don't recognize them, or describe them as such. Or, familiarity makes us overlook them. We see them all the time, so they are no longer "mysterious" to us. What I'm getting as is, "what's in a name?"

And it can be the seemingly most familiar, or simple, things. For instance, and I've used this example before, a seed and water. Now, I can take a seed, which is decidedly unliving, and might sit unliving for 30,000 years in a prehistoric cave. And I can add just a few drops of equally unliving water, and I can create something I can't explain.

Now how in the hell does that happen? Dead + Dead=Live? Call it natural or call it supernatural, but I'm not sure we can explain it. We can describe it. We can go right down to the molecular level and discuss electrons in their various shells bonding with other electrons. But at what point, and how, does all that subatomic swapping create life?

I can't drop H2 and O on a seed, it must be H20. And it can't be H2O2, or any other combination that we know of, on this world. That just blows me away. And I need photons of light. Dead photons of light, to create life. So the equation is really Dead Seed + Dead Water + Dead Light = Living Plant.

And that's just one example of something right in front of our eyes, that we see all the time. But because it's everywhere, and so prevalent, we overlook the "miracle" quality of it.


>Big bang theory, evolution

These I see as slightly different cases. Evolution, yes, we have physical, fossil evidence, and even living cases, like the moths in London, to support the theory. The Big Bang is more observational, and thus more theoretical, since there's nothing we can physically touch, of course. Not that it's any less accurate, based on what we know. It's just the difference of dealing with the tangible vs. the intangible

I happen to believe in both given the evidence we currently do have. But, that always comes with the caveat that if the evidence changes, the theory may as well; a bedrock of science.

It's kind of ironic to me that the Big Bang theory was first proposed by a Catholic priest of all people, and later strengthened by Hubble's observations, both in the 1920s. Science is no longer typically associated with religion, though it was for centuries, and there's no reason it can't be again, really. The Vatican operates an observatory over in Arizona, if you can believe that.

I'm scalp a quote from the Godfather 2 for my own purposes. "If history has taught us anything, it's that our understanding of the universe will change."

And a better one from John Haldane: "Not only is the universe stranger than you imagine, it's stranger than you CAN imagine."

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

1

Mar 2, 2024, 11:17 PM
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To put a slightly finer point on my seed example, when I mix those three elements, why don't I simply get a wet, sunlit, dead seed?

I get something more. I get life. What exactly is the Atomic Number of Life? Or the Chemical Equation of Life, if it's a compound and not an element? Can I have Molecules of Life?

All that's a real mystery. And sure, it could all be completely mechanical and reproduceable, given like circumstances and all. I even posted an article positing if life was inevitable, given the right conditions.

It could just be "nature." But it's weird, and again, just because we name something nature, that's just our way of categorizing it. It doesn't mean that there isn't something more to it than what we see in it.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

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Mar 3, 2024, 5:53 PM
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I think that's totally reasonable, maybe there is more than we see in it, I have no idea.

My intuition about it though is that introducing something even more complex to explain something complex just adds more questions than answers.

How did this complex thing get here? Oh.. this more complex thing. Oh.. well, how did that complex thing get here? Well.. it always was. Ok now wait a minute...

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god


Mar 3, 2024, 6:34 PM
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I get that. When I was an Atheist that was one the most appealing aspects. The pure simplicity of it. It simply removes so many questions, so many apparent contradictions, so much baggage. I miss that <img border=">

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When I accepted Jesus as my savior back 53 years ago God...

2

Mar 2, 2024, 11:19 PM
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sent His Holy Spirit to dwell within me. My life changed directions and not of my power but His. I tried to live a 'good,' life as a 'good,' man and even at times justified myself with rationalizations but I couldn't do it.

God worked in me both to will and do His good pleasure.

That's my proof. Anyone arguing about it is a fool. I know what I know by God's grace and mercy.

You guys forget, I've been where you are so I know how you feel. You have no clue how I feel for had you ever been where I am in the Lord you, like me, would never have turned back.

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Re: When I accepted Jesus as my savior back 53 years ago God...

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Mar 3, 2024, 5:29 PM
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>You guys forget, I've been where you are so I know how you feel. You have no clue how I feel for had you ever been where I am in the Lord you, like me, would never have turned back.

Yep, the no true Scotsman fallacy, I'm familiar.

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So someone coined a name for experience?

1

Mar 4, 2024, 5:29 PM
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Why not just say experience rather than making me look it up?

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Re: So someone coined a name for experience?


Mar 4, 2024, 9:24 PM
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Why have names for things at all? Who knows

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

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Mar 4, 2024, 8:47 AM
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We are the 3rd planet from the sun. Roughly 93 million miles away. Any closer or further away, we would not be here. The moon is +/- 250,000 miles from earth. Any closer or further away and we would not be here. If all the planets in our system were not where they are (especially Jupiter with it's massive gravitational pull) we would not be here. If anything in our own solar system was not where they are, doing what they're doing (rotations, gravities, etc) we would not be here.

And yet, here we are. Questioning our our existence. For thousands of years we have questioned who we are, where we come from and where we're going. We are the only animals on this rock that can do that.

You can chalk all this up to random acts of physics. I can't.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

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Mar 4, 2024, 8:57 AM
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>We are the 3rd planet from the sun. Roughly 93 million miles away. Any closer or further away, we would not be here.

First of all, the distance from the earth to the sun ranges by MILLIONS of miles of the course of a year. Also, the "habitable zone", which is what you are referring to isn't a single value, it's a huge range and depends on a few factors including the intensity of the star and how far the planet is from it.

According to my quick google-fu, scientists have discovered half a BILLION planets in the habitable zone in our galaxy alone. So these phenomena is the opposite of rare.

I realize how unlikely it all is and seems, but given the ridiculously huge size of the universe, these configurations you are referring to are bound to happen.

I would understand your point better if we found ourselves in a position where it was just the solar system and nothign else. But the fact that there are countless stars/planets means it's not suprising at all that we find some subset of them in a configuration that is friendly to life.

>You can chalk all this up to random acts of physics. I can't.

Ok, but then you are just chalking it up to random acts of god(s). I'm not sure what problem that solves.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

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Mar 4, 2024, 9:08 AM
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One thing I'll say. You're quick. I couldn't possibly think, search and type all that in 10 minutes.
I really wasn't fishing for a science lesson. And I do not believe we are alone in the universe. I was simply expressing how there are an awful lot of tumblers that had to fall into place for us to even be having this exchange.

I'm not trying to "solve" anything per se. But I'm not afraid of learning or trying to understand. And certainly not implying that you are.

The search continues daily to find planets like ours or simply hospitable ones. I'm just saying that there are a lot of parameters to include to find one that would even come close.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

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Mar 4, 2024, 9:14 AM
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>One thing I'll say. You're quick.

I have LOTS of practice is all. It is literally my job to quickly find information and react.


>I really wasn't fishing for a science lesson.

I know I come off that way but i'm not trying to teach you anything, I'm just giving my point of view.

Your point of view is just as valid as mine, I'm just "putting mine out there too".

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

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Mar 4, 2024, 9:30 AM [ in reply to Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god ]
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"You can chalk all this up to random acts of physics. I can't."

I agree, it's hard to fathom.

However, if you accept all the science you just mentioned, you also have to accept the fossil record and evidence for evolution, no?

Also, if you look at the history of the earth it has been far from perfect. If we were created, it seems like our creator was learning or is not very good at his craft.

Ice ages, asteroids, mass extinctions...it's been an ugly 4.5 billion years to say the least.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god

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Mar 4, 2024, 10:34 AM
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And I do. Hard to accept from someone that refers to himself as a Christian I know. And I'm not sure I can reconcile the two, or even if it's necessary.

Someone once said to me, "you're a good Christian." When I asked them why they think that they said, "Because you go to church." I laughed and said, "No, I go to church because I'm not". I don't believe we were meant to go through life without questioning. I can't defend a position on God. I don't have physical evidence.

I recommend Don Miller's "Blue Like Jazz". Religion to me is kinda like jazz. You have to meet it half way and give a little of yourself to it. You can't sit back and say "ok, entertain me". Through that participation, it becomes real. That's what makes it real.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god


Mar 4, 2024, 2:51 PM [ in reply to Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god ]
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I'll add that we live in a band, between roughly between the 20-degree latitude lines, in a wafer-thin atmosphere, mostly close to sea level beside a wafer-thin ocean.

When I was in middle school my science teacher stacked up 16 reams of paper, each 500 sheets to a pack, on the floor by the wall. The stack was a little more than 2 and a half feet high. He said "that's the earth, each sheet is 1 mile thick. 8000 sheets, 8000 miles.

Then he took 2 sheets of blue construction paper and laid them on top. 2 sheets. "That's the ocean. Average depth, 2 miles. And then put 6 sheets of clear acetate on top of that. "That's most of our atmosphere, 6 miles high, and where planes fly.

That was a very illuminating class. So yeah, we may or may not be unique, but we are exceedingly, exceedingly, rare. We might not be able to draw any certain conclusions from that rareness, but that class certainly put a perspective on earth that I have never forgotten.

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Re: All the physical evidence we have points away from there being a god


Mar 4, 2024, 3:33 PM
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>but we are exceedingly, exceedingly, rare.

I might not have been clear on this, but my point was that even on our home planet, which we are most attuned to, we only live on a small part of. Mostly by water, near sea level, for the vast majority of life. And there's not that much water.



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On the sciency side...


Mar 4, 2024, 5:32 PM
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How did something come from nothing? Matter and energy can be neither created nor destroyed. How did the universe come to exist if there was nothing before it was created?

That's sciency.


Message was edited by: ClemsonTiger1988®


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Re: On the sciency side...


Mar 4, 2024, 9:27 PM
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Who is making the claim something came from nothing?

>Matter and energy can be neither created nor destroyed.

If you are going to use science, can you at least not pick and choose when to apply it?

>That's sciency.

No, that's your straw man, lol

Science does not claim the universe came from nothing. That's not what the big bang is or claims.

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Show me.***


Mar 5, 2024, 8:51 AM
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https://www.britannica.com/science/laws-of-thermodynamics




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Re: Show me.***


Mar 5, 2024, 10:02 AM
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I'm aware, now, using the exact same scientific method that got us the laws of thermodynamics, we also got the big bang.

Why do you inconsistently apply it?

Rhetorical question, I'm aware of why.

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So show me!***


Mar 5, 2024, 10:05 AM
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Re: So show me!***


Mar 5, 2024, 10:09 AM
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Show you what? You gave me a link to thermodynamics and said show me.

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I supported my statement that nothing comes from nothing by explaining....


Mar 6, 2024, 10:47 AM
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that matter and energy can't be created or destroyed. It's foolish to think otherwise and it's also a factor of thermodynamics that neither matter no energy can be either created or destroyed.

'If there is one law that is immutable it's the law of thermodynamics.' That is a paraphrased quote from Albert Einstein.

Show some respect and explain what the big bang is, how it happened, where the energy came from to create our universe and other details which might enlighten the ignorant.

SHOW ME!

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Re: I supported my statement that nothing comes from nothing by explaining....


Mar 6, 2024, 11:13 AM
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>It's foolish to think otherwise and it's also a factor of thermodynamics that neither matter no energy can be either created or destroyed.

Why is it foolish to think otherwise, what are you basing that on? Science? Again, you are picking and choosing when to believe science.

Furthermore, the laws of thermodynamics do not contradict the Big Bang. Hope that helps.

>'If there is one law that is immutable it's the law of thermodynamics.' That is a paraphrased quote from Albert Einstein.

And he also believed the Big Bang, what's your point?

>Show some respect and explain what the big bang is, how it happened, where the energy came from to create our universe and other details which might enlighten the ignorant.

Why? I'm not telling you to believe it or someone will punish you for eternity, I could gaf if you believe it or not.

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You can't explain the big bang?***


Mar 6, 2024, 11:26 AM
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Re: You can't explain the big bang?***


Mar 6, 2024, 11:30 AM
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In layman's terms, I could.

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