Tillich; something a bit new. — Banno
To me it's a way of redefining God to make the idea less easy to lampoon and heads towards a kind of pantheism. — Tom Storm
The error is that you invented the argument in the OP. It's not part of any existing theistic religion.The thread is here because I have the gut feeling that there must be something wrong with the argument in the OP; it's just too obvious. But I don't see what the eror is. — Banno
There you go. Your say-so doesn't make a statement true.Why is it a true statement?
— Daniel
Because I say. — Banno
Of course it can, provided one doesn't just invent things about God.No, I'm saying nothing can be reasonably said about god. — Banno
You seem to be operating under the notion that people who beieve in God have arrived at belief in God or at claims about God via an abstract logical reasoning (or even by empirical investigation), in a bottom-up manner, so to speak. — baker
What reminds you of that? You didn't link to a quote, but to me directly.Reminds me of when the caste system would justify poor people through ideology. — Protagoras
If there is no God, everything is permitted — Dostoevsky
Your explanation about theists being poor because of their beliefs. — Protagoras
Yeah, but flip the pillow over to the cool side ...If there is no God, everything is permitted — Dostoevsky
(Emphasis is mine.)The absurd does not liberate; it binds. It does not authorize all actions. "Everything is permitted" does not mean that nothing is forbidden. — Albert Camus
If there is no God, everything is permitted
— Dostoevsky
Yeah, but flip the pillow over to the cool side ...
The absurd does not liberate; it binds. It does not authorize all actions. "Everything is permitted" does not mean that nothing is forbidden.
— Albert Camus
(Emphasis is mine.) — 180 Proof
God does not exist. He is being-itself beyond essence and existence. Therefore to argue God exists is to deny Him. It is as atheistic to affirm God as it is to deny Him. God is being-itself, not a being. — Tillich
God is not a person in the sense that Al Gore arguably is. Nor is he a principle, an entity, or ‘existent’: in one sense of that word it would be perfectly coherent for religious types to claim that God does not in fact exist. He is, rather, the condition of possibility of any entity whatsoever, including ourselves. He is the answer to why there is something rather than nothing. — Eagleton (link updated)
All explanation consists in trying to find something simple and ultimate on which everything else depends. And I think that by rational inference what we can get to that’s simple and ultimate is God. But it’s not logically necessary that there should be a God. The supposition ‘there is no God’ contains no contradiction. — British (Christian) theologian Richard Swinburne (2009)
But this isn't how actual religious theists operate. They operate from the assumption of divine revelation, ie. top-down.
For theists, God reveals himself; it's not the case that man would discover God on his own, without God's revelation.
It doesn't matter whether you believe any of this; but it is a matter of valid reasoning about God. Otherwise, you're just busying yourself with the god of philosophers, a fiction. — baker
A "necessary fact" is only true in (all) impossible worlds. — 180 Proof
There are various entities which, if they exist, would be candidates for necessary beings: God, propositions, relations, properties, states of affairs, possible worlds, and numbers, among others. Note that the first entity in this list is a concrete entity, while the rest are abstract entities. — God and Other Necessary Beings (SEP)
God is supposed to be a necessary being. Something is necessary if it is true in every possible world.
There is a possible world in which god does not exist.
Hence, god is not a necessary being. — Banno
No doubt there were earlier ideas of higher consciousness in antiquity that Tillich probably had in mind as a model. — Tom Storm
I think these definitions were more of a church public relations matter. Or the necessary starting point for debating with theist. There are a lot of people that seem to believe they have some experience of God, so maybe there is a natural phenomena that can be mistaken for the storybook God. Considering how wide spread the belief seems to persist it must be something fairly common to the human mind. I would conjecture the frontal lobe of the brain regulates and maintains the illusion of a single mind in order to facilitate social exchange while still having the physical capacity for dialectic thought. In addicts and other recovering individuals the idea of giving up power to God seems to initiate a degree of self regulation; which is evidence-flavored in support of the idea. Which is the notion of God is actually the experience of one's frontal lobe. Do you consider yours necessary?God is supposed to be a necessary being. — Banno
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