Light isn't pure energy that's sort of a misnomer. substantivalismsubstantivalism
What do you mean by serious thinkers? — turkeyMan
It is important to see this because it's the psychological motivation behind our drive to prove their transcendence, and this motivation stops us from comprehending reality. — JerseyFlight
To assert that art, music and literature are higher in any way than science and mathematics is merely a personal opinion to which anyone is entitled to have or not to have. As to primitive, I think archeology would indicate that art preceded mathematics and thus is more primitive based on the depictions on the walls of caves. — Marco Colombini
I see art, music, literature, and emotion as being soft, malleable, unreliable, and thus rather useless tools if one wants to know anything with any confidence. — Marco Colombini
I think you are forgetting that established physics are nowhere near to explaining everything in and about our universe so using god to explain what is unknown is not a realistic explanation for his existence. — Leiton Baynes
A serious thinker, among other things, is a person who wants to comprehend reality even if that comprehension results in the total negation of their vital, positive belief structure. It comes down to truth over comfort. — JerseyFlight
Science is concerned with the invisible order behind the physical world. Religion is concerned with the invisible order behind the image that human life is. In this respect science and religion are both attempts to grasp the 'world beyond the world'. — EnPassant
I actually agree with most of what you said. Outside of one's area of expertise one can be rather ordinary in skill and insight. One should never put anyone on a pedestal, accepting statements without making one's own judgement.EnPassant
Light is not grace. We are asking for proof of a supernatural order. So you know what that means? — Gregory
*sigh** Why have an interesting and provocative notion and then misstate it? Of course and obviously we can and do translate ancient texts. Give it a moment's thought and you will recognize that is all we can do with them. What I think you mean is that what was meant by the writer of the text and the meaning of the text itself can both be elusive. But there are whole sets of techniques for dealing with those problems.you can't translate ancient texts. — Gregory
I don't think god is simply invented to explain things. Belief is often based on intuition. Yes, people may use god to 'fill in the gaps' but even then they are not necessarily wrong because God really does move the planets. It is just that God's actions are more complex then we originally thought. — EnPassant
Your expressed opinion that God is used to explain away natural phenomena that are not yet understood, is a frequently held opinion. Yet, if one reads the Bible one does not see that at all. Nowhere does it try to explain natural phenomena by appealing to God. It is true that Genesis describes the beginning with acts of God but that story is a way of telling us that God created the universe but in a way that could be understood both by primitive peoples and more sophisticated ones. Note that the Bible says that light came before the Sun and the stars. That notion could be ridiculed up to about 100 years ago. Now we know that it is true. Separation of light from darkness is what we now believe happened early in the expansion of the universe...interesting. Otherwise, the Bible is a story about the relationship between God and man. It is not a science book.Leiton Baynes
don't see how you get from natural light, even if it's pure energy, to a superconsciousness people call God — Gregory
Grace is a substance of sorts that presents God to you. Natural light does no such thing as far as I can see. God might be an energy, rarified or whatever. Or he might be all the energy in the world as Spinoza and Teilhard might put it. Or maybe he never existed? — Gregory
"the world could have any shape, size, qualities, anything you can imagine" In fact, that is not true unless one does not care about the consequences. The restrictions are extremely tight if one wants to have a world that can support life. It that requirement is not necessary then yes, there are many possibilities but there are still restrictions. For example, it is impossible to make a coffee cup the size of Earth. Gravity would cause it to collapse into a ball-like structure. By the way, one can calculate the size of the largest living organism that could exist on the surface of the Earth just based of the strength of interaction between atoms. (I cannot do that but I've read the paper that reported the calculation).Gregory
Maybe not "simply" meaning only. But think about it: every god is an account of something. And what's missed in these discussions is that the idea of one god undergirds science in the sense - and opposed to polytheistic belief systems - that science can presuppose that what works here also applies there. That is, one god, one set of rules, v. many gods, many sets of different and differing rules, in which case science becomes impossible.I don't think god is simply invented to explain things. — EnPassant
Otherwise, the Bible is a story about the relationship between God and man. — Marco Colombini
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